Papa Bomba is not worried about attempts to deaden baseballs.
"That's gonna be for every hitter," Twins designated hitter Nelson Cruz said. "If they were gonna keep it only for myself, yeah, I'd be worried, but that's everybody. I'll be good."
Well, Major League Baseball has been worried.
A report this week revealed details of memo sent to all MLB clubs about how baseballs to be used this season were manufactured. A study by an independent lab found that the 2021 balls travel one to two feet shorter on hits longer than 375 feet.
It's MLB's attempt to slow down the proliferation of home runs in recent seasons, 2019 in particular. That's when a record 6,776 home runs were blasted. It's also the year the Twins invented the Bomba Squad as they set a major league record with 307 home runs, including a team-high 41 from Cruz.
In 2019, 1.39 home runs were hit each game. That rate dipped to 1.28 last year in a season shortened to 60 games because of the COVID-19 pandemic, but that didn't stop the league from looking at how baseballs were made for 2021.
When the Twins set a home run record, something must be wrong. Or so it seems.
"I think the recent information, as we've learned from the league and got a memo on it the other day as has been reported, a lot of conversation around consistency associated with that," Twins President of Baseball Operations Derek Falvey said. "So I don't have any specific comments on it now. I think we're still trying to learn a little bit more about that. But I wouldn't say it's any direct reflection of the Bomba Squad."