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All of you pitchers out there PLEASE BE CAREFUL this upcoming season.

LOCAL SPORTS
ECCC pitcher injured in scrimmage

By Robbie Robertson / EMG sports writer

Jan. 30, 2004

DECATUR — East Central Community College pitcher John Fortenberry always thought he had what it took to be a major leaguer.

At 6-foot-4, 227 pounds, he had the frame. Now the Carthage native hopes to live a normal life.

During an intra-squad scrimmage last Friday, Fortenberry was hit in the face by a line drive, crushing the right side of his face.

“It was something he couldn’t have reacted to,” said ECCC coach Jake Yarbrough. “It was so quick and so unfortunate. Our guys immediately went over to the side and said a prayer. Luckily his parents were there to give the paramedics information.”

His parents, Dawn and Cookie, accompanied Fortenberry to Laird Hospital were the cuts on his face were stitched up. He was then transported to the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson where he underwent a five-hour surgery.

Yarbrough said after the practice, most of the team loaded on a bus and went to Jackson to check on their fallen teammate.

“(The doctors) said he was very fortunate to be alive and this was the worst eye injury they had ever seen,” said Dawn. “They told us the eye socket had been crushed and they would try to save the eye. On Saturday, they checked the eye and told us it was lost.”

Fortenberry’s mother said her son is scheduled for another surgery on Thursday where doctors will attempt to reconstruct the right side of his face and the orbital area with titanium plating.

“You could just see it in his face when the doctors came in and told him that he was going to lose his eye,” Dawn said. “”He had every intention of going all the way (to the major leagues). Only God knows what the plan may be for him now. We do thank everyone for the support and love that they are showing.”

Yarbrough said Fortenberry was one of his top incoming freshmen. As a high school pitcher at Carthage, Fortenberry was a Mississippi Association of Coaches All-Star and participated in the State Games of Mississippi.

“It is devastating to our whole baseball team,” Yarbrough said. “Our hearts and prayers go out to John’s family. We hope for a quick recovery. John was a very athletic young man and one of our top freshmen. We will miss him but the most important thing is how he is doing.”

“He was probably one of the best kids that’s come through here,” said Waid Prather, editor of the Carthaginian. “Not only was he a great baseball player, he was a good kid. He was a yes sir, no sir, kind of kid. He was a real talented kid and managed to keep his feet on the ground.”

Fortenberry’s mother said she doesn’t know how she will go about it but hopes that the accident will prompt some discussion over using aluminum bats in college and perhaps some kind of protection for pitchers.

“I don’t know what we will do but I don’t want this to happen to anybody else,” Dawn said. “Chances are if it had been a wood bat, they might have had a chance. He even said as a player, he wished they would change to wooden bats.”

"If you don't know where your going, any road will take you there".
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Not to beat a dead horse here, but as you all know I have been an advocate of going back to all wood in high school ball, if the high schools would do it, it would not be long before little league, Babe Ruth, AAU, etc would all be holding ash or maple instead of @&#$&^$.

If the high schools would do it, that would mean colleges would be the only teams with @#$^$% bats. It would put some pressure on the colleges to switch back to wood as well.

MONEY is what makes the world go around so they say. Big bucks in those rocket launchers you know.

Some say metal bats are more durable and so on. I think for what a couple of those darn metal bats cost now a days you could buy several quality wood bats.

Go back to wood, the way the game is supposed to be played in the first place, much better baseball and just think, the colleges would not have to keep moving the fences back every year.

Give the pitchers a chance.

CV

"It's what you learn after you know it all that counts."

Earl Weaver

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My heart goes out to this young man.
cvsting, I agree. By the grace of God, my own son has not been hit as of yet. I've also had my breath taken away by some of the line drives sent his way. he has always reacted to them. It scares me that the odds are changing in favor of him being hit though.



"There is among us a far closer relationship than the purely social one of a fraternal organization because we are bound together not only by a single interest but by a common goal. To win. Nothing else matters, and nothing else will do." Sandy Koufax


I hate to hear about the injury. Is it any wonder we don't hear more of these horror stories each year. When will the NCAA get the point. These kids are using rocket launchers at the plate. But, in the last issue of Baseball America it took me 17 pages to get to the DeMarini ad and then 10 more to get to the TPX ad. Like football and basketbal, baseball dances with the one who brought it, money. As long as these bat companies foot the bill, these bats will be around. I remember collecting the teeth of a 14 year old pitcher who had been hit in the face. Hope nobody else has to do this.
My prayers go out to John and his family. Being a pitchers dad of course I want wood.

I agree it's all about the money. Baseball America, which I love to read, has endorsed the aluminum bats. Duh! They average 5 full page ads including a double page TPX ad for these rocket launchers. Their back page ad with the pitcher peeing in his pants while having to face aluminum was a bit much. While they might give other reasons, IMO it's about the money.

Hate to say it, but maybe if they don't do anything about it the pitchers should start wearing facemasks. I also realize the same thing can happen with wood, but at least the odds are better than with aluminum.

Frank

PASSION - "There are many things in life that will catch your eye, but only a few will catch your heart...pursue those."
Think of this, the four people directly involved in each pitch and closest to one another, The pitcher, the hitter, the catcher, and the home plate umpire. Three of those are protected to varying degrees. The pitcher is left to chance and has no protection and is the closest fielder in front of the batter. Now odds are the pitcher in his career is going to get dinged.

If pitchers need protection and we can send spaceships to Mars some scientist should be able to come up with a doable gadget(s) to protect the pitcher, if it comes to that.

I would rather see a switch back to wood as a start though.

CV

"It's what you learn after you know it all that counts."

Earl Weaver

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