ProNine PF Composite Fungo Bat - 34, 35 and 37 Inch - 28 Colors
The ProNine PF is a poplar and maple pro-grade hybrid composite fungo bat, built in 34, 35, and 37 inch lengths at 23 oz, and finished in 28 colors: 21 solids, mattes, fades, and tri-colors, plus 7 graphic designs including Arctic Camo, American Flag, Spider, Scorpion, Bolt, Boom, and Joker. Pick the length that fits your fungo stroke, pick the color that fits your program, and hit fungoes for seasons instead of weeks.
Composite Where Wood Fungoes Die
A fungo bat lives a brutal life: thousands of self-tossed reps, mishits included. Traditional wood fungoes crack; the PF's poplar and maple hybrid composite construction is built by ProNine for long lasting durability, and ProNine stands behind the barrel with its Fungo Bat Guarantee: a broken fungo is replaced if the barrel cracks or splinters (handle breaks are not covered).
Which Length?
The 34 inch is the quick, whippy infield choice; the 37 inch carries for deep outfield work; the 35 inch splits the difference and is the most popular all-purpose coach's bat. All three swing 23 oz, so moving between lengths never changes the workload.
A Color for Every Program
Solid team colors from Black and Navy to Light Blue and Maroon, Silver, Cobalt, and Copper mattes, fades and tri-colors, and the graphic series for coaches who want the loudest bat on the field. Match your uniforms or claim your own; no other composite fungo line comes close on color.
Where It Fits
Everything for coach-hit practice lives in the fungo bats collection. Pair long fungo sessions with the ProNine ball bucket and a dozen OLAX practice baseballs and the whole pregame routine comes from one order.
ProNine PF Fungo Bat Specifications
- Lengths: 34, 35 and 37 inch
- Weight: 23 oz
- Material: Poplar and Maple pro-grade hybrid composite
- Sold as: Each
- Barrel covered by the ProNine Fungo Bat Guarantee (handle not covered)
What is a fungo bat for?
Hitting grounders and fly balls to fielders in practice. Fungo bats are long, light, and thin-barreled so a coach can self-toss and place balls accurately for hundreds of reps without fatigue. They are not game bats and should never face live pitching.
Composite or wood fungo?
Wood feels traditional and costs less up front; composite survives the mishits that crack wood barrels. A fungo gets hit more times per season than any game bat, which is exactly where durability pays for itself.
