There is no limit to the drop; that only applies to Baseball.
The only requirement for a softball bat to be used in high school softball is that it must be ASA (Amateur Softball Association) approved and so marked on the bat. The current marking is the phrase ASA 2004 inside the outline of a home plate.
There is no age requirement to drop out of High School.
There is no legal requirement, although the strength of a player of that age could handle a drop 5 bat. Its not until the high school level that players are required to use a drop 3 bat. So to get players use to a bat that size, a 7th grader or 8th grader should use a drop 5 baseball bat.
In softball it's the rise and the drop.
As long as the bat make and model are not banned you can use a -12.5 drop.
Softball became an Olympic medal event in 1996. In 2005, the International Olympic Committee voted to drop both Softball and Baseball from the Summer Olympic Games of 2012. Both may reapply for 2016 consideration.
SCN7B is a -9 drop SCN6B is a -10 drop
-5 bat is legal for Central Valley Middle School's , I'm not sure if it has to be BBCOR or BESR.
Can't do it. The Army required a GED minimum when I enlisted, and has since upped the requirement to an actual high school diploma.
Definitely! That's one of the main factors in softball. If you don't have coordination, you miss the ball, drop it, and mess up all the time
I think you mean baseball bat. In the younger leagues you can get a bat that is a drop 10. In the older leagues, it is usually a drop 3.
IOC voted to drop baseball and softball from the 2012 Games
It is a 33 inch 23 oz bat.