The baseballs Hank Aaron hit during his career did not include
enlarged, rubberized centers (known as pills) found in the current,
Barry Bonds-era baseballs. The pill, according to a computed tomography
(CT) study conducted by Universal Medical Systems, Inc. of Ohio (UMS),
has increased significantly in size and density, thus improving the
distance modern Bonds-era baseballs travel.
Comparisons of the enlarged rubberized-center Bonds-era baseball and
the traditional Aaron-era baseball are clearly visualized in the
computed tomography (CT) scans conducted by UMS. With assistance from
Dr. Avrami S. Grader and Dr. Philip M. Halleck from the Center for
Quantitative Imaging at Penn State University, UMS utilized a modified
CT scanner for material testing to study Major League ("the League")
baseballs dating back to 1915.
An accepted methodology of measuring coefficient of restitution
demonstrated the hit distance of the baseball has increased
approximately 30 feet from the time Hank Aaron retired.
Rawlings became the exclusive supplier for the League's baseballs in
1977, one year after Hank Aaron retired. In the first year alone the
League witnessed a 63% increase in home runs (2,235 in 1976 vs. 3,644
in 1977) with the new baseball composition.
In 1999, one year after Mark McGwire broke the single-season home
run record, the League decided to remove the timeless imprint
"cushioned cork center" from official baseballs, according to David
Zavagno, president of UMS, a worldwide innovator of diagnostic imaging
technology for various industries.
"The League decided to juice itself so they pumped the new ball into
their system," states Zavagno. "By examining the CT images of Bonds-era
baseballs, you can see the ball has been upgraded to include a
rubberized pill, the addition of polyester in the windings and a very
hard synthetic ring or spring. As the CT images demonstrate, the League
apparently allowed the composition of the baseball to further change
from 1998 to 2001 destroying the integrity of the game's statistics,
including home run records."
Confronted with UMS' CT scans in January, League spokesman Rich
Levin told The Associated Press what UMS "calls a rubber ring is more
like a cardboard washer." The League's baseball specifications do not
state the presence of either synthetic rings or washers.
A League-sponsored study conducted in 2000 -- which included
dissecting baseballs -- reported, "In destructive tests of baseballs,
all models of baseballs failed to meet most of the construction
tolerances."
"According to our CT scans, the balls themselves are juiced," states
Zavagno. "Thomas, Sosa, Rodriguez, Griffey, Ramirez, Thome... they may
or may not be entangled in the steroid scandal, but they certainly are
members of the League-fabricated 'juiced ball generation'. Bonds'
home-run record -- along with other home-run milestones by different
players of his generation -- should have an asterisk next to their
statistics: 'achieved with League- approved juiced baseball.'"
About the Study of Bonds-era Baseballs vs. Aaron-era Baseballs
UMS utilized the same methodology of examining rock core samples for
presence of oil when examining Bonds-era and Aaron-era baseballs. The
same state-of-the-art core-analysis imaging techniques were applied to
accurately determine the properties and material changes in the
baseball.