quote:
Originally posted by Gingerbread Man:
My son learned when he was eleven that he could get through innings faster and have less fatigue when he threw his curveball. They are saying that "overuse" is the main cause of LL elbow, not throwing curveballs. So, the question I have is this- If son learned that he could throw curveballs to keep innings short and thus less fatigue on the arm, is this not a good thing? I know it doesn't apply accross the board but isn't it really about not overtaxing the arm?
I find it way more harmful for pitchers to throw fastball after fastball until their arm is hurting than it is to mix it up and throw the occasional breaking ball keeping the pitch counts lower in games.
Wow, I mean just wow. I am speechless.
You remind me of another dad who posted things about his son, the frequent use of the CB, how safe it was, how son never had an issue, justifying the frequent use of a breaking pitch when that dominant pitch in baseball is supposed to be the FB. Seems like the pitcher never really developed the velocity needed, and in the end, it was announced the pitcher had shoulder issues during his career in college.
Anyone see the new MLB gameday, it gives a neat pie graph of the percentage of the type of pitches the pitcher is using that day. Now true, on some days the pitcher's FB isn't working so it has to be abandoned, but you will NEVER see a pitcher throwing more breaking balls to get out of the game quickly as to save his arm for the next outing.
And you will NEVER hear a bona fide coach or an instructor suggest that as well. Never ever.
I agree with infielddad, you cannot make statements as to whether your method is the best way, until your son reaches a point in his bb career that you can look back and say, see I did this and it worked. Come back and tell us then....definetly reminds me of that dad saying it was ok to throw CB at a young age....
I think I remember you saying that at young ages the velo isn't high enough to cause harm? If this is true, was throwing CB because young players can't hit them and getting the win? Watching your 11 year old striking out other 11 year olds with a CB, pitch after pitch, I call that being chicken.
How is a pitcher supposed to develop his FB properly when they rely on breaking pitches, what ever happened to youth pitchers pitching FB to contact, yeah get them out in 3 throws, that by far is the least work on the arm and elbow. That isn't over taxing the arm.