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I get FaceBook ads about a program called Armcare.com. Its intriguing, as it seems to have a device that measures strength and Range of Motion in the pitching shoulder,and takes these measurements and forms a program that is suppose to instruct on how to increase the strength where needed and improve velo.  Anybody here familiar with this device/program? any thoughts or recommendations?

C H Adams

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My son always thought it was better to go to a reputable baseball trainer/facility (Cressey, Champion, etc), get an assessment, and then pay them to develop a custom program.  That does cost a couple hundred dollars (but not more than about $150 for an assessment and $120 for an eight-week program), and he thought it was better than making a mistake.  I don't know if armcare.com is a good program, but my son thinks that because every pitcher is different, the trainer needs to "see" you.  There's no one device that could do that.  Also, a pitching coach could be helpful, although personal coaching can get expensive.  Sometimes just a lesson or two helps a lot.  Just one opinion, FWIW.

Last edited by RHP_Parent

My son uses Armcare.com in addition to what he does at school. It is not going to be a program that fixes your mechanics. What it looks for is the weaknesses in your arm, strength wise. Then it provides you a program to address those weaknesses. Their measurement tool is pretty much the same tool that a PT for an MLB doctor used in when assessments on my son when he was doing rehab for his arm. The velo a pitcher will pick up is from addressing those strength deficiencies and in theory, create a healthier arm. But if you are looking for something to improve mechanics, you do need to go to someone like a Cressey, Baseball Ranch, Tread, etc.

Not familiar with Armcare.com other than their ads. Having devices collecting data and measurements are nice, but need people interpreting that data and coming up with a program. The device is just a tool.

Both my kids use the Driveline pulse device (previous Motus sleeve) but neither train with them. Very helpful coming back from from UCL surgery. One son has done remote training with Tread with very good results, and other is doing his RTT program with Dean Jackson.

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