Rawlings Pro Preferred 125th Anniversary Series: PROS303-125
Features
12.75 Inch Pattern
Break-In: 30% Factory/70% Player
H-Web
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Rawlings 125th Anniversary Limited Edition Series
Conventional Open Back
Tennessee-Tanned Pro Laces
Wool Padding For Extra Cushion
Pro Preferred Kip Leather
Pittards Sheepskin Palm Lining for Comfort and Fit
Outfield Model
Description
Reviews
Average Ratings Based on 2 Customer Reviews
willys36
Pros: This is definitely a quality glove. It is the first top of the line glove I have owned. My most recent glove is an older PRO-H Heart of the Hide tan fast-back H-web model. It has been a great glove and in fact is still nearly like new! I got this new one just to see what the difference would be and both are great. I will resist the temptation to break it in by dipping it in water (have done this for decades and works great. Have never had glove deteriorate because of it and do it the way they suggest.
Cons: Only a couple I can think of ; first the glove is foreign made. Baseball gloves, especially Rawlings, should be US made. Second the outer fingers are formed from the factory flaring out instead of flaring in to form a closed basket. I know that is the current trend but just doesn't sit well with my old-school vision of a glove. Fortunately it appears I can train the glove the way I want so isn't a big deal.
Outfield Southpaw
Pros: If you are one of those players that slides your hand over putting two or three fingers in the pinky slot like most modern outfielders, the palm of the pocket all the way up through the tips of the fingers and the snow cone wraps completely around the ball closing thumb to ring finger. the pocket and glove was game ready in about 1-2 weeks, maybe even a little earlier depending how stiff you prefer the glove to be. The palm broke in soft and the shell as stayed stiff, so the glove is easy to close and it's retaining its shape like all Pro Preferred gloves
Cons: The only true con is that the wristband that controls the size of the opening for your hand on the glove cannot be adjusted to be bigger or smaller because it does not come with any extra holes. I would guess that among the two sizes standard gloves typically offer, it sizes somewhere in between.
Questions and Answers
Have a question about the Rawlings Pro Preferred 125th Anniversary Series: PROS303-125? Ask our team of experts and they will respond within 24 hours.
Does this glove have a deep pocket? AL
Overall, which type of pocket is better for an outfielder, the H-web or a regular Trapeze web? Frank
Do these gloves measure a true 12.75? Or do they run short like the Nokona? coaltrain44
How does the pocket size compare to the REVO 750 Series: 7SC127CD? I'm assuming they are the same? seaneeeg
About the Brand
Rawlings is a major manufacturer of competitive team sports equipment and apparel for baseball, basketball, and football, as well as licensed MLB, NFL, and NCAA retail products. Rawlings is a major supplier to professional, collegiate, interscholastic, and amateur organizations worldwide, including the Official Baseball Supplier to Major League Baseball.
The first real innovation in glove making occurred in 1912 when Rawlings Sporting Goods Company introduced the "Sure Catch" glove, which was "endorsed by leading players all over the country." The Sure Catch was a one-piece glove with sewn-in finger channels and looked better suited for a duck's foot than a man's hand. Catchers' mitts used at the time were large and bulky with a single leather thong passing for a web.
In 1920, Bill Doak, a journeyman pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals, approached Rawlings with an idea for improving the baseball glove from a mere protective device to a genuine aid in fielding. The "Bill Doak" model was so revolutionary that it stayed in Rawlings' line until 1953. Its key feature was a multi-thong web laced into the first finger and thumb, which created for the first time in baseball's young life, a natural pocket.
In 1925, Rawlings unveiled a three-fingered fielder's glove, and ten years later improved the Bill Doak model with a two-piece leather web. At the same time, the "T" web became a rage for first basemen's mitts. The pocket underwent a pronounced change in 1941 when the Trapper Mitt, also known as the Claw, appeared. The "Deep Well" pocket was so unique that Rawlings quickly patented it. The design was improved in 1950 by adding a leather piece across the top. Another significant creation occurred in 1948 with the three-fingered Playmaker. A five-fingered fielder's model, with all fingers laced together, provided greater pocket control.
The six-fingered Trap-Eze evolved in the 1960's. In more recent years, Rawlings produced the Fastback design, which gives a glove a snugger fit, greater extension, and overall control. The Holdster is a slot through which a finger can be extended for additional protection from impacts on the pocket. Then, there is the Edge-U-Cated Heel with its extended U-shaped lacing and the Pro H Web and much-copied Basket Web.
Some of Rawlings's more recent glove innovations also include the unique Spin-Stopper design which reduces ball spin when the ball hits the glove, and the Cantilever glove design feature that provides a cushioned area between the hand and the glove's palm area. In all, Rawlings has produced and patented more functionally innovative glove features and designs than that of any other glove manufacturer. The result is that the modern baseball glove is much larger, more comfortable, better padded, and made to last far longer than its ancestors. It is not uncommon to see today's Major League players wearing the same Rawlings glove they wore during their college playing days. In fact, Rawlings is the #1 glove in the major leagues. Rawlings maintains about 65 models of baseball and softball mitts and gloves in its line. The prototypes of virtually all of them have been field-tested by professionals before entering a sporting goods dealer's inventory.
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