quote:
Originally posted by AntzDad:
Do you guys think it's simply overuse, or, in some cases, are they being taught too much, too soon? In other words, trying be textbook perfect at 10, rather building upon, or enhancing, their natural motion?
Overuse... yes...whether it is private lessons, playing another position (typically the best pitchers at the younger ages are also asked to go play SS or C before/after they have pitched their game that day/weekend), and too many pitches while they are on the mound.
I think it is important for parents to realize that a private lesson on Wednesday, where little Johnny may throw 35-40 pitches at max velocity (and that is after going through some drills working on mechanics) is not always beneficial when he is then asked to throw 80-90 pitches on a Saturday/Sunday. This isn't even taking into account that he is probably playing another position full-time when he's not on the mound, or heading to practices/league games during the week.
I don't think it has to do with being taught too much, too soon, though. One reason (besides the obvious of having a younger player who is just not physically developed) for the pitch counts being lower for younger kids is b/c their mechanics are not polished, they haven't been taught much, and even if they have been taught, it just takes time. It's a catch-22... to develop proper mechanics (certainly there are natural arm angles for a given player, I'm not talking about that), you have to throw, and develop muscle memory, strength and stamina. The problem is that at younger ages (winning national championships at 8-10 is nice, but I'm not sure at that age playing 70-80 games a year is paramount) these guys are having to learn their mechanics in games, and there is often not enough time spent in dedicated practice in a controlled environment (meaning emotions of coaches, parents, players are not part of the equation). Bottom line... if little Johnny has 100 pitches in him a week, understanding how to divide that up b/w a regimented practice/work-out/training program and game-action is a challenge.
As much of a crime as the original post indicates regarding pitch-count, throwing a curveball at 10-12 is absurd as well, no matter how physically developed the player is.