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Originally posted by Texas1836:
This is a normal 9 yr old team where all can pitch. You know the drill though, some kids tend to be relied on to pitch more than others.
Unfortunately, that's the paradigm in 1st year of kid pitch, and if anything it gets even worse! I’ve seen HS teams with as many as 11 pitchers getting innings in a 208 inning season, but 149.67 were thrown by only 3 pitchers. That’s 73% of all innings for just 3 kids. I’m not saying its right or wrong, but I am saying there’s something that needs to be looked at.
Here’s something you might find even more strange. In the years my son pitched on the HSV, there were 379.33 total innings pitched. He threw 153.33 by himself, and with the #2 they threw 232.67. 61% for the 2 of them together, and 40% for him by himself. But to tell the truth, I seriously doubt those two situations even come close to what happens in some programs.
Much has to do with how good the coach thinks the pitchers are, and a lot of it is whether the coach feels his team can compete with pitchers who are less capable.
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Normal position is SS.
This is our first year in kid pitch and things have changed since I played 100 years ago (when we had 8 games plus two tournaments and were done) hence my inquiry.
The experience of this board cannot be replicated.
The problem isn’t so much that more games are being played, as much as it is that the workload isn’t spread around. With only 8 games, its conceivable that only 3 or 4 pitchers get to throw and no one gets overused or abused. But its something quite different if the number of games goes up to 30 or 40 and its basically the same 3 or 4 pitchers throwing the lion’s share of the innings.
As I said, not only doesn’t the paradigm change as the kids go up in levels, in many cases it actually gets worse. And that’s why its so important for parents to understand that as much as coaches say they’re watching the kids carefully, they should never be trusted completely. Its not an indictment on coaches, its reminding parents of their responsibility.