just got home from watching Hebron and Coppell. Hebron pitcher threw 132 pitches. Is that too many for a high school game? Just curious if anyone had an opinion.
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quote:Originally posted by ironhorse:
Pitch counts should be one factor in deciding when a kid should come out. There are several others.
FWIW, if I had a kid who felt fine on the mound puss out on me because he heard he was at 110 pitches and his dad told him that was too many I would throw up in my mouth.
quote:Originally posted by MeatsDad:
I once thought as you did but then I grew up.
Unfortunately to many people like you still exist in baseball to the point that young men get hurt and many never get to realize their potential or their dreams.
I just hope I didn't let him do to much damage already at 16....because I use to think like you do.
quote:Originally posted by ironhorse:
110 pitches is a lot for a young arm. No doubt. For the record, I have had a kid throw over 110 pitches once in my career. It was a late round playoff game and he threw 123. At no point was his arm in jeopardy, but it was still something I wrestled with.
quote:Originally posted by ironhorse:
I don't like high pitch counts either. But if you're a coach, multiple factors go in to every decision on the baseball field.
quote:Originally posted by Texan:
And how do you know it was not in jeopardy? Look at pro ball (minors to majors). How many clubs cut their adult pitchers off well before 123?
quote:Originally posted by Texan:
This happens when coaches put their W-L record ahead of their concern for pitchers' arms. Some coaches do this. Others don't.
quote:Originally posted by ironhorse:
Pitch counts should be one factor in deciding when a kid should come out. There are several others.
FWIW, if I had a kid who felt fine on the mound puss out on me because he heard he was at 110 pitches and his dad told him that was too many I would throw up in my mouth.
quote:Originally posted by Panther Dad:
.... All I can ask is for a coach that cares about his kids. Only God knows the number of pitches in each arm....
quote:Originally posted by Texan:
Would you leave a kid in to pitch 120+ in a blow out? Please answer that.
If you answer "no", please explain why not?
quote:Originally posted by ironhorse:quote:Originally posted by Texan:
Would you leave a kid in to pitch 120+ in a blow out? Please answer that.
If you answer "no", please explain why not?
......
But understand this: in everything I do the safety of the kids is paramount. You can sit up in the stands and count pitches. Great. You have one kid to be concerned with. I have 80. .....
quote:Originally posted by OldDallas:
Parents may have to be the "bad guy" sometimes. Coaches should not be upset that parents are concerned about their kids health and parent should realize that coaches are probably doing the best they can and are sincere about the health of the players as well.
quote:Originally posted by ironhorse:
I'm done with the topic and we can disagree. That's fine. But understand this: in everything I do the safety of the kids is paramount. You can sit up in the stands and count pitches. Great. You have one kid to be concerned with. I have 80. Every time I put a kid in the batters' box or on the mound. Every time I hit a hard ground ball to a kid, or put him in the cages, or in front of a pitching machine, or lift in the weight room or condition I worry about safety. If one of my kids get hurt I feel responsible, no matter the circumstance. Not as many as you think coach solely for wins and losses and **** sure not for the money. It's about seeing kids achieve more than they thought they could. That's why it's called coaching.
quote:Originally posted by Texan:
When I coached, I was the adult. I made the decision to minimize the chance of injury due to overuse. I made the choice to develop and use more pitchers. That is why it's called coaching.
Big difference.
We will agree to disagree. I'm done, PD.
quote:Originally posted by deemax:
High pitch counts are over rated to an extent.... Occasionally we have had pitchers get well over 100 pitches, and when this happened we put them on 7 days rest. IMO rest is way more important then number of pitches thrown... I have more experience with pitchers coming up lame throwing 50 pitches, and trying to relieve on two days rest then high pitch counts once every 7 days.
quote:Heard through the grapevine that a Lewisville pitcher threw 126 pitches on Monday then came back and threw 66 pitches in relief on Thursday.
quote:Originally posted by deemax:
justabigfan...IMO the 126 isnt that big a deal, but 2 days rest after 126 That kid should not have pitched again until monday (friday pen).quote:...Lewisville pitcher threw 126 pitches on Monday then came back and threw 66 pitches in relief on Thursday.