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Many folks and players don't realize, how intense it becomes past HS. On a 4 day rotation in milb, I am glad mine put in limited innings when he was younger because it is accumulative.
I feel that intensity after HS is more mental than physical (academics, scheduling, ect) and the pre-college years are for many much more physically intense. More often than not a college coach would cringe at the workloads, games, and ip younger kids do during the coarse of a season from LL through travel teams without conditioning. Yes, there are parents and coaches who watch the "useage" issues, but most don't, and that is why many good players do not take that next step. In my mind intensity is a factor of what the body can handle at that point in the bodies development and that is my basis of saying pre-college is much more physically intense. When a kid is hurt in college or does not make it that far it is not the post HS intensity, rather the intensity of the developing years. A small percentage make it to the college level, a large percentage of bodies burnout or fail to reach potential before they get there. That's intensity
As far as the milb, my son who finished his first year thought that intensity was less than college. Yes he was tired, but it was not the number of innings rather the conditioning that happened between games, his arm was saved, his body was sacrificed.....for the good of his arm. His MILB team had specific inning and pitch count limits and there was no gratis. His legs burned, his core was sore, but his arm was babied..... at least compared to the earlier segments of his life. As a player progresses through the professional ranks those innings will also go up but the body as a whole will be better adapted. That was at least my assessment after watching 1 complete season and I still may be way off base