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Worth Toxic Senior League Baseball Bat: SLTOX5: Image #323916
Worth Toxic Senior League Baseball Bat: SLTOX5: Image #323917
Worth Toxic Senior League Baseball Bat: SLTOX5: Image #323918
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Discontinued
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Features

  • -5 Length to Weight Ratio

  • 100% M7 Composite Construction

  • 2 5/8 Inch Barrel Diameter

  • 5.4L Technology Extends the Sweetspot 2"

  • Free Shipping

  • Full Twelve (12) Month Manufacturer Warranty

  • Multiwall Construction For Better Performance

  • Approved By All Leagues Allowing a -5 Bat

Description

The SLTOX5 is Worth's first 100% composite -5 baseball bat. It is constructed completely from Worth's M7 Composite Technology, which is proven to be one of the most reliable and best performing composites on the market. Built around the design of their highly successful softball line, the Toxic -5 utilizes Worth's 5.4L Technology which extends the sweetspot a full 2" toward the endcap. It is also Worth's first multiwall -5 baseball bat, giving it the extra flex of a multiwall bat and increasing the speed and distance of a batted ball. The SLTOX5 has also been lab tested to show that it can withstand more impact at elevated speeds than any other composite bat. In addition, the multiwall, 100% composite, design dissipates vibration resulting in one of the softest feeling one piece composite bats on the -5 market. This bat has a 2 5/8" barrel and is approved for play in all leagues allowing a -5 bat. This bat comes with a full Twelve (12) month manufacturers warranty. This bat is for the serious baseball player looking for game changing performance. Free Shipping.

Reviews

Average Ratings Based on 2 Customer Reviews

4.0 Stars:Overall Rating
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3 Stars: Overall Rating
dpj36

Pros: light

Cons: a bit of extra sting, barrel seems small

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5 Stars: Overall Rating
n-matts

Pros: good pop, well weighted

Cons: a bit of sting when hit the ball off center

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Questions and Answers

Have a question about the Worth Toxic Senior League Baseball Bat: SLTOX5? Ask our team of experts and they will respond within 24 hours.

dose this bat have the usssa approval scott
This bat does not have the USSSA stamp on the barrel. Most 2012 bats will have the USSSA stamp and the 1.15 BPF stamp on the barrel.
Brett

About the Brand

Worth, Inc. can trace its beginning back to the year 1912, when George Sharp Lannom, Jr. purchased a tannery in Tullahoma, Tennessee and established the Lannom Manufacturing Company. Initially, the firm tanned leather for harnesses and horse collars they manufactured. However, as the automobile grew in popularity, the demand for the company's harnesses and collars declined, so Lannom shifted its manufacturing resources toward production of leather covered baseballs and softballs under the "Worth" brand, and men's leather dress gloves under the "Craig" brand.

Charles (Chuck) E. Parish joined Lannom in 1930 as a salesman and married G.S. Lannom, Jr.'s daughter, Martha Lannom several years later. Following Mr. Lannom's death, Parish acquired controlling interest in the company, which led to a division of company assets between himself and Lannom's son G.S. Lannom III. Lannom maintained the glove works while Parish, "The Baron of Baseballs," built the Lannom baseball business into the world's largest manufacturer of baseballs.

Upon graduation from Vanderbilt University in 1959, Chuck Parish's son, John, joined the Lannom organization. He persuaded his father to expand the company's Caribbean operations and enter the baseball bat business in 1970. In 1975, following the death of his father, John Parish took over the reigns of the company. Under his leadership, the company diversified and expanded its production line and developed the personnel, technical know-how, and physical facilities to become one of the largest and most financially sound manufacturers in the entire sporting goods industry.

The WorthSports Company was formally organized in 1975 as the sales and marketing arm for all sporting goods products and divisions of Lannom. In addition to the normal marketing functions, Worth also emphasizes and provides new product research and development. In fact, the emphasis placed on this development is largely responsible for Worth's leadership role in the sporting goods industry.

When Worth entered the bat business all bats were made from Northern White Ash. Worth then established wood mills in Pennsylvania and New York to provide the strong but relatively lightweight ash wood stock. Then directions were shifted to aluminum and other composites and in 1968 Lannom Manufacturing produced its first aluminum bat. The company's Jess Heald was primarily responsible for its development. The sale of aluminum bats to amateur baseball and softball players mushroomed in the 70's, helping Lannom achieve record results. In 1994, because of market demands, more emphasis was placed on the aluminum division and an expansion was completed in Tullahoma.

One of the first and most significant results of the R&D program was the development of the Polyurethane (Poly-X™) core for baseballs and softballs. This one innovation revolutionized the entire softball world; up to this time, the traditional softball core was constructed of cork and latex. Worth, through the use of "petrochemical" formulation, created a softball that was more consistent in performance and demonstrated extended durability, thereby setting the stage for the establishment of formal specifications and standards for the industry. More recently, the expanded research and development team has made another revolutionary addition to the aluminum bats called the SuperCell EST (Exterior Shell Technology) Bat.

One product Worth is very proud of is its RIF (Reduced Injury Factor) baseballs and softballs. Introduced in baseballs in the late '80's, the RIF design features a polyurethane center that makes the ball softer than the traditional yarn wound ball, while keeping the weight, size and liveliness. The balls are used mainly in youth leagues, where safety is of major concern. The technology is now being used in Worth softballs as well. New technology is constantly being developed to revolutionize the softball industry as we know it today.

In 2007, Worth was acquired by Jarden Corporation and is now a division of Rawlings and Jarden Team Sports.

Bat Properties

Worth Toxic Senior League Baseball Bat: SLTOX5
Barrel Diameter 2 5/8
Baseball Bats Youth
Bat Type Baseball
Deals Bundle and Save
Length to Weight Ratio - 5
Material Composite
Vendor Worth
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4.9 Star Rating, Google Customer Reviews