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DarrenDaily On-Demand

Your Opportunity to Help Millions

DarrenDaily On-Demand

Darren Hardy LLC

Leadership, Teams, Success, Highachiever, Entrepreneurship, Darrendaily, Personaldevelopment, Darrenhardy, Business, Careers, Selfimprovement, Productivity

4.91.8K Ratings

🗓️ 14 October 2025

⏱️ 3 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

One small act of helping turned into a $70 million empire. Darren Hardy shares a story that proves massive success often begins with something far simpler than strategy or sales. It’s a reminder that opportunities rarely shout but whisper to those willing to lend a hand.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to Darren Daly on demand, your most trusted resource to help you become better every day.

0:07.3

Here's your success mentor, Darren Hardy.

0:13.6

The story of how the iconic Louisville slugger baseball bat came to be is fascinating.

0:18.5

J.F. Hillerich opened his woodworking shop in Louisville in 1855.

0:22.7

During the 1880s, Hillerich hired his 17-year-old son, John Bud, Hillerich.

0:28.9

Legend had it that Bud, who played baseball himself, slipped away from work one afternoon in 1884

0:33.7

to watch Louisville's Major League team, the Louisville Eclipse.

0:44.6

The team star, Pete Louisville slugger, Browning, was mired in a hitting slump, and he broke his bat at his last time at the plate.

0:50.6

But invited Browning to his father's shop to handcraft him a new bat to his own specifications.

0:55.8

Browning accepted the offer and in the next game got three hits to immediately break out of his slump with his new bat. Browning told his teammates, which began a surge of

1:02.1

professional ballplayers pilgrimaging to Hillerich's woodworking shop. Daddy Hilarych was

1:08.2

uninterested in making bats. He saw the company's future in stair railings, porch columns, and swinging butter churns.

1:15.4

In fact, for a brief time in the 1880s, he even turned away ballplayers.

1:20.5

But, however, saw the potential in producing baseball bats, and Daddy Hilarych eventually relented to his son. The bats were sold under the name

1:29.9

Falls City Slugger until Bud took over his father's company in 1894 and he renamed it the Louisville

1:37.5

Slugger and it was registered with the U.S. Patent Office that year. By 1923, H&B was selling more bats than any other batmaker in the

1:46.4

country, selling more than 3,000 bats a day. Legends like Taikha, Babe Ruth, and Lou Gehrig were all

1:53.5

using the Louisville Slugger as their bats. After 130 years of home run profits, the company

2:00.6

then sold its Louisville Slugger division

2:02.7

to Wilson's sporting goods for $70 million in cash.

2:07.7

All because Bud decided to help one person.

2:12.4

You see, there's opportunity around us all, all the time.

...

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