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Rockies Ian Desmond Joins Tanner Tees Team for the Day

Rockies Ian Desmond Joins  Tanner Tees Team for the Day

Summary

  1. Ian Desmond joins Tanner Tees for the day to learn how a Tanner Tee is built.
  2. The founder of the company, Joe Tanner, remembers Ian buying his first tee back in high school.
  3. The first part of building a Tanner Tee is building friction rings and preparing the upper assembly to receive a hand-rolled top.
  4. Every Tanner Tee has two patented friction rings, built only in Sarasota, FL.
  5. Every Tanner Tee is hand-rolled in Sarasota, FL.
Tanner Tees founder Joe Tanner shakes hands with Ian Desmond

Recently, we hosted  Ian Desmond from the Colorado Rockies at our facility in Sarasota, FL. Ian is a long-time supporter and user of our batting tees, and on the baseball diamond, he is a pleasure to watch.  Ian Desmond joins Tanner Tees for a day to learn how a Tanner Tee is built.

Tanner Tees founder Joe Tanner holds Flextop with Ian Desmond and Tanner Tees staff

Founder of the company, Joe Tanner, remembers Ian buying his first tee back in high school.

Station One: Friction Rings

Ian Desmond tours Tanner Tees facility

The first part of building a Tanner Tee is building friction rings and preparing the upper assembly to receive a hand-rolled rubber flextop. Every Tanner Tee has two patented friction rings, built only in Sarasota, FL.

Cutting to Size

Ian Desmond at Tanner Tees facility

Ian skillfully (and safely) operates a chop saw during component production. Not sure his agent would appreciate seeing his hands around a chop saw so close to spring training, but we made sure he worked slow and smooth.

Installing the Flange onto the Bases

Ian Desmond visits Tanner Tees in Sarasota FL

There are five screws per base. A two-man pit crew can do 240 bases per hour.

Rolling the Classic FlexTopTM

Ian Desmond sees Tanner Tees Flextop rolling process

Every Tanner Tee is hand-rolled by a skilled team in Sarasota, FL. We follow a specific process developed by Joe Tanner twenty-five years ago and refined by our current team every day.

The Technique

Ian Desmond watches tanner Tees Flextop Batting Tee Creation Process

Mike explains how to roll a tightly wound cone and attach it to the upper assembly. The cone should be about one inch in diameter so the baseball sits high on the tee. Ian rolled this one extra tight, good for baseball, softball or even golf balls - if you are Scooter Gennett you know how fun that is.

On to the "Piping" Stage

Ian Desmond tours Tanner Tees and sees batting tees assembled by hand

Not giving up on rolling tops but admitting it’s an art and a science to get it right, Ian moved to what we call “piping”. Joe created the presses in his garage years ago to reduce the effort and increase the speed of connecting tee assemblies.

Ian Desmond visits Tanner Tees and jumps in to learn

The Final Step: Labeling

Ian Desmond applies Tanner Tees label to batting tee

The final step for Ian today was to assemble his custom tee – a matted-blacked Ian Desmond Special Edition tee with a label you won’t find anywhere else in the world.

Testing it Out

Ian Desmond Tanner Tees batting practice

The final test, launching one into the Tanner Tee lake in Sarasota, FL.

Thank You Ian!

From all of us at Tanner Tees, we wish you a great season!

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