Their pitcher, named Money, is seemingly out for the season.
Several teams have lost their best pitchers this season.
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Their pitcher, named Money, is seemingly out for the season.
Several teams have lost their best pitchers this season.
Yeah Texas too. Wild year.
Nature of how baseball is played these days. Maximum velo. Fix it. Move on.
Wonder how long it'll be before OM feels the sting of losing another pitcher...
Money was good against MSU last year. 6 foot 7 giant.
Quality depth is a must have to compete for the big prizes
This is why I'll trust the staff that pulled a guy throwing a nono in the championship game. Managed arms well last year and treated the kids with their best interests in mind.
I think we're seeing this because pitchers are being trained to throw so hard nowadays and their bodies simply can't handle it.
Back around the early 2000's I'd bet the typical SEC pitcher threw 88-90. Now it's probably 92-93 for the average ones. Heck- Tennessee has that guy that hits triple digits. You used to never see anyone like that in college. And some of these guys are like 6'1" 215 or something and not really that big like 6'5" 240 or something like that in a lot of cases.
It seems like every time we get a commitment from a high school player they're topping out at 92-94. That's what these kids have to do to play in the SEC nowadays.
Since you are more closely connected to current events of youth baseball, do you think this is a travel ball unintended consequence? When I played the pitchers didn?t have these injuries as often. But we all played 2-3 other sports and had a rest period. I played college with a dude that threw 95 and played in the Bigs 8-10 years. But we didn?t have travel baseball. I played select soccer until 9th grade and then everything else took over.
I can?t imagine playing ?select? travel baseball and the toll that would take on a pitchers arm, during development stages. At some point we have to reign in the gung ho parents and travel ball shit. Throwing a baseball puts much more stress on your body than shooting a basketball or running around playing soccer. We’ve got to stop letting these parents try to live out their childhood dreams vicariously through their gifted children. It?s hurting them long term.
Maybe I?m wrong but that?s the difference I see in now and 20 years ago.
People keep blaming travel ball and they're wrong the majority of the time. Most of these P5 guys play for good coaches/organizations. Most have parents that limit their innings. Now lesser guys, throwing multiple times on a weekend of daddy ball, sure. But those aren't your top talent guys generally unless they come from Juco and even then, their Juco coach isn't going to destroy their arms with crazy innings much. Todd is right, it's all the velo training. It's also the fact closers used to be the only guys (for the most part), throwing mid to upper nineties. They didn't throw as many innings with that velo. They also didn't throw 3 pitches & have to set up every pitch with another pitch. They came at you, and got done one way or another.
Yea it's simple. We've found the upper bound that most arms / muscles / ligaments can take with regards to velocity and how forceful of stress they can take. It's not death by a thousand paper cuts. It's death by a hundred sandpaper cuts.
Love what Foxhall told Cade last year when he was hurt. Told him to stop thinking he is 6'5" 240 lbs and trying to throw upper 90's. Good advice, just be yourself.
Yeah. There are a lot of rules with travel ball and pitch counts and things like that. Plus people need to remember that in today's environment a lot of these travel teams don't just have the one D1/SEC/draft prospect guy where they have to ride one guy the whole time.
Not saying abuse doesn't happen but it's a lot better than it was.
JT Ginn is a good example here. He was heavily monitored in high school and college. And if I remember correctly he was topping out at 100 MPH on some YouTube videos. But he's like 6'0" 200 maybe. That's because of his private training. You see it all over social media guys with these trainers throwing in the high 90's filming it and putting it on Twitter. I remember Landon Sims putting out a video of his training when he was in college.
Have y'all noticed we are throwing our starters more pitches early in the year this season than last year? Don't love it. But I'll defer
Playing to much baseball is partly to blame but the big problem is the velo training to throw 95+. Human body wasn't made to do that and guys are throwing harder earlier which obviously taxes the body much sooner than it used too. And while travel ball isn't necessarily to blame the fact these kids(even the elite kids) are throwing harder and more than kids from my generation definitely takes it toll in arms. Even players whose innings and pitch counts are monitored now are throwing more innings and at higher velocity than when i was growing up. It's a combination of the 2 in most cases. Dr Andrews Will tell you it's the increase of year around baseball that's taking a toll along with the higher velos and he knows more than
any of us on this subject.
Well all I can say is that 10 years ago it was not uncommon to see a kid with draft potential to get pushed back because there was scar tissue and diables on his ligaments even though he “never had arm issues before.” A lot of kids are still growing and having these problems and it gets attributed to growing pains. When in actuality it is small tears. It is very standard to get complete MRI scans done by a third party for MLB draft teams. As a matter of fact, this was a Kimar Rocker deal where he did not want to cooperate with the scan.
The only way for scar tissue to develop is over a 1 year span and these kids were 18 that I knew of. So do the math on when those arms were being overworked…. Yes, there are very good travel teams out there that do manage their players very well, but for every one of those teams there are 3 others trying to become that team and players be damned.
Right, Also a lot of these folks don't really start monitoring their pitch counts and innings until they become "prospects" around 15 years of age. Before that though, from ages 10-14 a lot of these kids are playing year around. I've seen to much of it happen. A lot of wear and tear can happen on an arm during those years.
My father was always one to stop kids from throwing curveballs in youth ball. Felt that messed with your development. You could always learn the arm action at 16 or older once you've developed. Fastball / change up only.
Good man and lots loved his coaching styles. Needed more people with foresight coaching children at this age but unfortunately the ones with time are the ones that need to live vicariously and win that league championship they didn't as a kid.
Your dad was a Smart man! I taught my pitchers how to locate fb first, in out up down. If you can learn to locate your fastball you can do pretty much anything you want. Locating your fastball is a must if you're gonna be a successful pitcher at any level. After that work in change up and you can do well. Plenty of time to learn breaking ball later
My Dad burned me out in baseball, I made all stars pretty much every year, we could only play one sport in high school. Coaches told me I was running track, LOL. My mother wanted me to quit football and just play basketball, should have listened to her as I had 2 knee surgeries, broke arm, broke collarbone, and broke cheek bone. I actually loved basketball the most and ended up Coaching.
Where did you see Money is out for the year? I?m in New Orleans and there is no word of that. The coach said it was no big deal (injury).