LOS ANGELES, Calif. – Attackletics announced the world’s first “smart” batting tee for baseball and softball, called the Attack Tee, designed to fix three problems that stall young hitters’ development: ineffective swing paths, equipment that breaks and tips constantly, and guesswork-heavy training sessions.
Released for fall ball training and the holiday season, the Attack Tee pairs a heavy, never-tip base with unlimited bat-path angle adjustments and a free iOS app prescribing exact tee placement and optimal swing paths for all nine strike-zone locations hitters face.
Four Key Innovations
• Unlimited angle adjustment — The Attack Tee’s head tilts in dozens of precise increments, enabling hitters to match correct bat paths for any pitch location instead of training a one-size-fits-nobody swing.
• 17.2-lb never-tip base — An iron platform that doesn’t move during aggressive swings, tested with players ages 8-18. No wobble, no resetting, more quality reps per minute.
• 19-49″ height range — The largest in the game, growing with players from age 6 through high school, college and beyond.
• iOS app guidance — Choose righty/lefty, tap a pitch location, and the app shows exact tee placement relative to home plate and MLB-informed ideal bat path angles based on a decade of Statcast data.
Smart Accountability Features
The app tracks training session times, features a national leaderboard, and offers an optional AI coach for $9.99/month delivering 24/7 mental performance and hitting approach guidance including visualizations, routines and confidence-building plans. All other app features remain 100% free.
The Hidden Cost of Inadequate Equipment
Most parents start with bargain tees, then rebuy repeatedly when plastic stems crack, rubber ball holders split, or lightweight bases tip over. Including replacement tops, shipping, and weight plates or sandbags needed to stabilize flimsy models, families quietly spend $400-500 over several seasons.
The bigger issue: lost skill development. When tees tip constantly, players lose approximately 10 minutes per practice hour. Over a serious young ballplayer’s average career — 10 minutes per practice × 3 practices weekly × 30 weeks yearly × 6 years — that’s 900 hours of lost development time.
Poor equipment also leads to bad swing patterns requiring expensive, professional correction. Over six full travel ball seasons, hitting lessons alone at average rates of $40-100 per weekly lesson for 30 weeks annually range from $7,200 to $18,000.
The Attack Tee’s guided contact points and angled swing planes organically force hitters to adjust their bodies into proper swing positions without requiring any biomechanics expertise.
Founder Perspective
“Great hitters aren’t guessing,” said Mark Brooks, co-founder and former college/pro player. “With guided bat paths and exact tee placements, kids learn to get on-plane early, stay there longer, and do damage in any part of the zone.”
Mike Rogers, 18-year batting facility owner and co-founder, added: “I’ve bought every tee on the market. Every year, I fill and dump a giant box of broken tees out back — my staff calls it the ‘tee graveyard.’ We engineered a tee that doesn’t tip, doesn’t quit, and actually teaches the right swing.”
Availability
The Attack Tee back in stock and available now for fall training and holiday gifting here.
About Attackletics
Attackletics builds training tools helping baseball and softball players train smarter and hit harder. Founded by veteran coaches and technologists, the company fuses ironclad durability with data-driven design. The Attack Tee flagship features never-tip stability, the largest height range in the game, unlimited swing path angle control, and smart guidance making tee work transfer better to games.
Media Contact
Company Name: Attackletics
Contact Person: Attackletics Press Team
Email: Send Email
Country: United States
Website: www.attackletics.com