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PG,
You’re making the same mistake so many others make about this. No one, not Dr. Andrews or anyone else has ever said the upper limits suggested are equally protective for every pitcher, and anyone who says they’ve said that needs to show that quote to me.
The limits are only stopgap things to try to mitigate what the true problem is. Those pitchers thought to be so much more prepared and so much “better”, from getting overused/abused to put up an almighty win.
The worry isn’t about the kid who seldom gets to pitch, because the chances he’ll ever be allowed to throw pitch numbers way over any limits are next to nothing. The worry is for the kid who’s getting shoved out there every chance the coach gets, is sought after by other teams to shore up their pitching for tournaments and such, and who’s dad or himself won’t tell the coach he’s been throwing in another venue.
And that’s the main reason there are pitchers having a lot of TJ surgeries who are on pitch counts! If pitchers could only play on one team, or it were mandatory to turn in every pitching appearance to some national database so his “REAL” workload could easily be found out, don’t you think things would be just a little different?
Nothing against PG, but I’ve seen kids throw a bunch of pitches for their team one day, go to a showcase the next day and throw again because they’d already planned the trip, then come back and 2 days later get sent back out to throw again for his team. His coach thinks he’s had 3 full days of rest, and he’s not saying anything different. For sure that’s not the fault of the people putting on the showcase, but rather the fault of the parent 1st and the child second, but that’s what goes on!
My point is, at least with some kind of limits, there’s a minimum of protection. Of course its not enough protection for someone who finds ways around them, but it does help those who don’t try to get around them.
First of all here is what I posted and I don't feel there were any mistakes.
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I actually do have a small problem with pitch counts. I understand the recommendations made by ASMI. I respect Doc andrews greatly as a top Surgeon.
I do believe in pitch counts, but not the same pitch count for each individual.
If someone said it dangerous to lift 150 lbs more than 10 times would you believe that? Surely you would if you couldn't lift 150 lbs one time. But if you were a very strong 275 lber you could easily lift that and would probably need to lift it more than 10 times to gain even more strength.
I'm not trying to compare weight lifting to throwing a baseball. Just trying to say that each individual is different. It takes work to master anything. Some break down after 50 pitches, some after 100 pitches. You work to get better, and you have to watch out for reaching that point where you have overdone it and it has reached the danger area. However, that point is different from one pitcher to the next. There are pitchers who have blown their arm in spite of the fact they threw a lot less than some other healthy pitchers.
Truth is... There are a lot of TJ surgeries to pitchers who have been on pitch counts. Perhaps the pitch count they were on was the wrong pitch count for them!
Regarding the radar gun or showcases or playing for more than one team, here is what I think.
As a coach the radar gun was very helpful in finding out when a pitcher was losing velocity. This means the pitcher is getting tired. Throwing with a tired arm is dangerous. Young kids who are capable of throwing hard... THROW HARD! With or without a radar gun. You don't start throwing harder just because a radar gun is pointed at you.
I see many more pitchers than Doc Andrews (thousands more) He is perhaps the greatest sports surgeon of our time. The majority of the pitchers he sees are already injured. I have never, not once, seen him at a showcase or tournament. Still, I would definitely consider him an expert on arm injuries. He is definitely not an expert on showcases, tournaments, or even pitching. Anyone in the medical profession will recommend things with maximum safety in mind. That is what they are suppose to do... no one would recommend 200 pitch limits. Truth is the safest pitch count is "0" if you don't want to injure your arm. Problem is "0" pitches will not lead to being a successful pitcher. It takes work to be good at anything, including pitching. That ammount of work can be different depending on the individual. Akk Major League pitchers have pushed the envelope at some point.
Playing for more than one team or attending a showcase could become an issue withy pitchers if someone is a complete fool. If people want to be an idiot they are going to make mistakes. Coaches and players that don't trust and communicate might be a problem, but both have to understand there are limitations.
So to me the biggest problem is the players are competitive and young kids think they are invincable. Too many coaches are competitive and get wrapped up in the moment. Sometimes this combination leads to stupidity.
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PGStaff,
How do you determine an individual pitch count then, if not by the statistics of probability as set forth by the best minds in medicine today?
CPLZ,
That is a great question. First of all I'm not againt ASMI recommendations as a general rule. Especially for very young pitchers. When people like Rick Peterson work with Doc Andrews that blend of pitching coach and doctor working together makes a lot of sense.
However like everything, each individual is different. Here is the way we handled pitch counts in college. Early season everyone would be on a very low pitch count. We never had a pitcher throw a complete games early in the season. No one threw over 50 pitches. We would then increase that to 75 pitches after it was obvious that a pitcher could throw 50 without mechanical breakdown and pitches 40 to 50 showed the same stuff, command, and velocity as pitches 1 thru 10.
Then it became an individual thing with a maximum 100-110 pitches. No one pitcher ever threw more than 110 pitches in a game. Some would never get to that limit. Minimum 4 days rest after throwing.
Relief pitchers were never on a strict pitch count unless they entered the game early. Those long relievers were also spot starters. Even our closer would get at least one day off if he went 20 or more pitches.
We had very few injuries. I really think the lack of injuries were mostly a result of conditioning. We instituted martial arts into off season workouts and I really would do that again if I were to coach.
Bottom line... We had guys who would be on 100-110 pitch counts, we had guys on 75 pitch counts, we had guys on 50 pitch counts. We had one guy (soft thrower) that didn't have a pitch count. We felt good about the guys who were on 100 and we felt the 75 pitch guys were in danger after 75 pitches. First sign of a problem required rest and medical advice. We wanted to win just as much as anyone else. We thought doing things this way was the best way to win. Injured pitchers don't win you many games. We didn't have many injuries and we won lots of games.
Lastly, I think even more important than pitch counts is sufficient recovery. If a pitcher is not recovered completely he shouldn't be on the mound. He is taking the mound with an arm that isn't ready. This usually pertains to time in between appearances, but rain delays and your team hitting in an extra long inning, can also create problems.