Thread: Bill Terry Bat
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Old 07-13-2021, 11:58 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sladge34 View Post
Mark, thanks for the reply. Bats are not my expertise, I’m just doing a little research each day. But I found this on PSA’s website.

Side Writing
Refers to the writing, usually in grease pencil, on the barrel of a bat, written by a manufacturer employee, to document the receipt of a bat by a player, in making future player bats in the same or similar specification. When legible, the writing will indicate the player who shipped the bat back to the manufacturer, the city/and or team name, the league of the team, and the date the bat was received at the factory. Side written bats are usually found on bats of the pre
model number era.

By no means do I think this was game used. But according to psa, it has the players name, the date, New York, and ntl league all in grease pencil. There are no other markings or branding on it. I can’t find anywhere that to be side writing, it has to be game used.
The PSA statement is saying that side-writing is the grease paint writing on the side of a bat that was shipped to the factory by a player. If there's side-writing on a used bat, it's assumed that this player whose name appears used the bat. Srictly speaking, what you have is not a bat. It is a lathe bat. It was not shipped by player to the manufacturer to serve as a model for future bats. H&B would not oridinarily ship a bat out until the ends were carefully turned and smoothed. H&B made the lathe bats in their factory in order to use them to turn actual, useable bats on a lathe. That is why I would say that you (or your friend) have a lathe bat with identifying writing on it, but I, at least, would not call it a side-written bat. Of course, I know that this is merely how I understand things.
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