uruk: Thanks for clearing the helm part up. Only things i know about baseball are you throw a ball and try to hit it.
Ah, ok. Yeah, it's... a funny thing given the preponderance of high-speed hard objects flying around everywhere, but when it comes to protective headgear, at any point on a baseball field, you'll only find like three people wearing helmets: the catcher, the batter, and the home plate umpire. Everyone else? Soft caps. It's partly, I imagine, due to the fact that helmets are heavy and it's harder to see with the things on. And aside from the pitcher, other players are really far enough away that they can react in time to a ball hit in their direction, so there's no need for the helmets, anyway.
Sielle: Ahh someone was talking about little league. My mistake. Still sucks for the guy that hit it, but at least he should be able to grasp that there wasn't anything he could do about it.
I was. I was simply mentioning that when I played baseball as a kid (in Little League) I wasn't allowed to use a wooden bat. My coach told me that the league rules said it was because aluminum bats were safer since even if they broke, they wouldn't crack and splinter and you wouldn't have flying shrapnel all over the place. I wasn't sure if that was the same reasoning behind aluminum being the standard for other amateur leagues, or if it was simply a performance thing: as in, aluminum bats perform better. And like I said, unquestionably, they do.