Originally Posted by PGStaff:
Once again, we need more research. Right now all the research involves those that have suffered injury, actually required TJ surgery.
I agree more research is needed. I’m not taking a personal shot, but rather skirting around a general one. There are a lot of people/organizations making a heck of a lot of $$$$ from baseball. Do you know of any supporting pure research in any form, not just ASMI?
We need to research those that have not required surgery. What did they do as amateur players?
Again, I agree, but as of right now I don’t have much of an idea about how the resources available for research would be best allocated, mostly because I have no idea how much resources there are. Realizing you’d be opening yourself up, would you care to take a stab at how any such research should be done? I’ve been down that road several times through the years and am always stopped dead by there not being much data out there to research.
Very very few people bother to keep records of kids showing something as simple as date of pitching performance and number of pitches thrown. So many are out there screaming and hollering about how worthless HS stats are, let alone venues lower than that, it’s nearly impossible to find data to work with. And without that early information, what good does it do to study players who have been playing the game for 5-10 years before anyone bothers to look.
I don't have any answers, just a lot of questions. I am all for arm care and do believe in rest. I'm not a big believer in four months of rest. Four months of rest each year seems like starting all over every year.
Everyone who cares about the players has lots of questions, but there are just too many choices. Heck, how many battles have there been about something as simple as icing, let alone pitching load, rest, or mechanics? We just don’t have many accepted baselines to work off of.
I don’t know for sure because I can’t read anyone’s mind, but I never really took the advice to pitchers to shut down for whatever period each year to literally mean shut completely down. I always took it to be something said to get the pitchers away from competitive pitching and all that goes with it, not that they shouldn’t pick up a ball, let alone play catch. IOW, I took it as a plea to let the pedal come off the floor, not to stop driving.
I continue to consider risk and reward. What I want to know is how many highest level pitchers and players played in the fall vrs. those that did not play in the fall? How many have suffered significant injury and how many didn't?
You limited your focus to “highest level pitchers and players”, but you prolly have access to more information than anyone for that group. Do you ask those kinds of questions and store the answers, and what have you found?
We have research pertaining to those injured. Doesn't anyone want to know what the uninjured did? Then of we find out 90% of those that never suffered an arm injury took 4 months off each year, we would really have something to go by. I just don't think that is what we would find out. But we won't know until someone actually does he research.
What research do we have pertaining to those injured? Does the research cover all baseball related injuries to all players? I’d love to know what the uninjured did, but someone has to ask them!
What if we found out that 90% of those highest level pitchers that have remained healthy did play year around or at least in the fall? Would that change the way people think? What if 90% of those pitchers played only baseball and no other sports? Would that change the way people think? What if 90% had been abused by today's standards and actually had somehow pitched more with less rest than most of those that did require surgery?
Before you can even dream about what people would think or opine about what might be found out, look at all the things that have to be defined in order to look at things and expect much. What’s a “highest level pitcher”? Does remain healthy mean no baseball related injuries requiring hospital stays, does it mean no taking of pain relieving medication, or does it mean something else?
Gonna need to define “abused” as opposed to “overused”, then you’ll have to find a way to get a record of every time they pitched and the amount they pitched, and that will have to go all the way back to when they 1st started pitching. Who has that information? I have a Hell of a lot of information for all the HSV pitchers I’ve scored for, but I don’t know what they did as Fr or JV players, let alone what they do during the rest of the year. Assuming you’d be willing to share information about any of those players who performed in a PG event, look at how little information that is and how much is still left to be retrieved.
I'm not suggesting any of the above is what we would actually find. I'm guessing it might even prove that all the other current studies and recommendations are accurate. But until it is done, no one will know for sure. We need to know what the injured did. We also need to know what the healthy did. Only then will we "start" to understand!
Until then, we need to be careful. But can't be 100% careful and still expect to be rewarded. No risk usually amounts to no reward. But stupidity is never the answer.
The only way to be 100% careful would be to stop playing baseball. I’ve never met a ball player who didn’t understand that they could very easily get hurt playing the game. But there are many of them who don’t realize the amount of risk they’re taking can easily be mitigated and yet still allow them to continue to play the game.
We believe in the PitchSmart initiative. Nothing is perfect, but guidelines can help. Education is the key. The only issue I have with guidelines, though I think they are very valuable and needed, is this...
Every pitcher is different, We don't need any research to know this. Yet any guidelines are the same for every pitcher. Some can throw more pitches than others, some throw harder than others, some have better mechanics, some throw with less effort, etc. Most important, some reach the point of fatigue sooner than others. So if the guideline is a certain number of pitches, but my pitcher is completely gassed after half that number of pitches... Is it OK to leave him in there totally fatigued until he reaches the number of pitches recommended by the guideline? Of course we all know that would be stupid, and common sense needs to take over. However, we also know there are a lot of stupid people out there. So the best thing we have is intelligent guidelines that at least cover the extreme cases of over use and abuse. It would be great if everyone used the PitchSmart guidelines and at the same time used common sense.
C’mon PG, you know dang well no one is saying to leave a pitcher in that’s gassed but hasn’t reached his pitch count limit. I’ll admit there are very likely some coaches who would do that for the sake of a win, but let’s weigh the positives and negatives. Is it more likely a coach would shove a pitcher back out there knowing full well his pitcher’s gassed, or that a coach is forced to yank a pitcher because he’s reached his limits?
How many organizations have pitch count limits in all their competitions? I know LLI and Dixie are two, and there are a few state assns that use them for the HS season. By looking at the PitchSmart site I see PG, RBI, and USA Baseball comply, but only in select competitions, not across the board. But how many kids does that leave unprotected, and if everyone isn’t at least on the same page as far as limitations go, what good will it do to gather any information?
I’m really not pointing an accusing finger at you or anyone else, but it gets frustrating to see people keep demanding more research and more information when there’s absolutely no way to do it and get valid information because there are so many different rules about it.