New York – Milwaukee Brewers Starter, Nestor Cortes Jr. He believed that Giancarlo Stanton and former recipient Jose Trevino were the only two strikers to have experienced with them at various points. But he does not believe his disastrous release on Saturday, when he gave three circuits in three throws to start the match, had something to do with the kind of bat that he was trying to miss.
“I think they were going to go out, that they had a spit (from bowling) or a regular bat,” said Cortes after Sunday’s match. “I have no idea what these bats do.”
Cortes said he saw no problem with many of the Yankees, including Jazz Chisholm Jr., Anthony Volpe, Cody Bellinger, Paul Goldschmidt and Austin Wells, using Torporateur bats because they are legal. It was the general feeling of the Brewers clubhouse after their pitching staff granted 36 points and 15 circuits in the three game series.
Freddy Peralta, who started for the Brewers on opening day, said he wanted his teammates to start using bats if the club thinks that it can be beneficial for their strikers. Peralta granted two home circuits Thursday, an advance shot on the Wells bat and an opposite volpe circuit.
Brewers star Christian Yelich was not aware of Torpille bats before the start of the series. He can’t wait to learn more and perhaps experiment with them to see if he can notice a difference.
“If you could use technology to make yourself better to do as long as it is in the rules, why not?” Said Yelich. “I think that as players, especially if you want to continue playing at a high level in this league, you should always be open to making changes, making adjustments and trying to improve any possible ways.
“It will gain more traction with this kind of offensive performance they organized in this series. I don’t think that bats had a factor in the game results. I just think we had to play much better if we wanted to win. We did not do it. If it was technological progress.

Jazz Chisholm Jr., which is one of the Yankees using bats in a different form, hit two other circuits on Sunday. (Mike Stobe / Getty images)
Not all Brewers players had a positive vision of technological progress that Yankees have used. Closer, Trevor Megill told the New York Post that he thought he was terrible that Yankees use Torpille bats, saying: “I have the impression that it is something used in slow softball. It is a genius: put the mass all in one place. When he approached to comment on after Sunday’s match, McGill said he was poorly quoted, but he did not want to clarify what could have been badly reported.
His manager Pat Murphy said that he did not know why one of his launchers would be irritated if the League determined that bats were legal.
“It’s not like magic wood or anything else,” said Murphy. “It is just built with the weight in a different place. It is effective for the Yankees this weekend. They are really good strikers, and if the launchers want to be bored, then the strikers win. Make good locations.
Murphy believed that his pitching staff had fought enormously this weekend because of their decimated with injuries; Seven of the club’s 13 best launchers left, and because of this, the Brewers found themselves in “clumsy situations” during the three -game series.
“The Yankees are good and they kicked us,” said Murphy.
Murphy suggested sarcastically that his players will all go to Torpille bats after the historic beat that was given to them this weekend.
“Maybe they will do it now they’ve seen the Yankees,” Murphy said. “Maybe it’s the secret of the shot. My old ass will tell you, that’s for sure, it’s not the baguette; it’s the magician. If the bats help, I’m sure all the guys in the league will use them in a week.”
(Top photo of Jazz Chisholm Jr. Stronging a two -point circuit in the third round on Sunday: Mike Stobe / Getty Images)