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Marklaker......How about a story?...
Both mine were very tall, strong, smooth, mechanically pretty, mid/upper 80's, natural "over the top/high arm angle" pitchers through HS...one lefty, one righty...
Both had successful youth and HS pitching careers, one good, one great...championships, awards...yada, yada, yada...
Was told point blank by numerous scouts/recruiters that they liked 'em...size, grades, mechanics, upside, athleticism...BUT that the high arm angle combined with under 90 mph doomed them at the next level. Was told that a fastball coming out of a high arm angle arrived much more flat (in a single plane) than one that came both down and at an angle (two planes)...Was told that as a general rule, mid to high 90's high angle fastball worked at a high college level...any less velocity and it did not. As a result the better one got no serious interest as a DI pitcher. The other no serious 4 year interest at all. Have heard this same story from others.
Both are playing college ball now and pitching sucessfully (one at DI -primarily a position player- and one at JC and headed up). Both went through difficult, long, drawn out, arm angle changes when they got to college, neither are nearly as smooth or as "natural" as they used to be but much harder to read as a result.
Knowing what I know now?...Get him looked at by a quality pitching coach for a professional opinion, but IMO, Let him have some fun...assuming he is not "pinwheeling"...let him throw from whatever arm angle he wants, hard enough for a young pitcher to learn the craft without that added difficult change/pressure. If the young man works hard and sticks to the craft and has some talent he will likley have a nice successful, happy, youth/HS career. Anything beyond that is a bonus, the player will make changes at that point with passion if need be. MIne did.
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