Why Pitching Injuries Happen and How to Avoid Them | Keith Meister, M D

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  • čas přidán 8. 04. 2024
  • Pitching injuries are on the rise and Keith Meister, M.D. is one of the top orthopedic surgeons in the world working to repair UCLs on a regular basis. In this interview, he explains why chasing "designer pitches" is largely responsible for the rise in pitching injuries.
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Komentáře • 159

  • @SimAlex20000
    @SimAlex20000 Před měsícem +48

    “What’s the value of 0.8 whip if it lasts two weeks”
    Bingo. Meister is spot on

  • @ScottyBraun-FoulTerritory
    @ScottyBraun-FoulTerritory Před měsícem +42

    1 of the best interviews we've done on this show. VERY IMPORTANT for all pitchers to watch this

    • @michaelrowland6336
      @michaelrowland6336 Před měsícem +7

      I just learned more about pitcher arm injuries in twenty minutes than I did the previous 30 years watching baseball and its coverage. Keep up the great work guys.

    • @ScottyBraun-FoulTerritory
      @ScottyBraun-FoulTerritory Před měsícem +2

      Thank you!!

    • @EthanNiedorowski
      @EthanNiedorowski Před měsícem +1

      Have Mike Marshall on to talk about arms it will be worth it trust me

    • @EthanNiedorowski
      @EthanNiedorowski Před měsícem +1

      But agreed this was 👍 great thanks for trying to help the sport we all love ❤️

    • @donniebrooks21
      @donniebrooks21 Před měsícem +1

      @@EthanNiedorowski He died in June of 2021. He understood a lot as well and had a friend who was his college coach. He said interesting guy and thought him the screwball, a pitch that is gone now.

  • @duncanhensley7166
    @duncanhensley7166 Před měsícem +27

    Great interview, lot of moving pieces but think the pre-tacked baseballs are an important first step.

  • @Rocks_a_Rolex
    @Rocks_a_Rolex Před měsícem +12

    Freaking awesome guest guys...A+++. Dr. Meister not only has the expertise to add insight into this serious topic but he also has the balls to be brutally honest.

  • @LoydChampion
    @LoydChampion Před měsícem +22

    Keith Meister, M.D. is spot on. It's the things that these pitchers are throwing today that is the key difference to 10 years ago. I've really watched Dustin May of the Dodgers for some time. I was able to review film of him in High School, and up through the minors to the big leagues. A great talent, but you could see changes he made along the way to be that major league stud. Everyone would remark how nasty his stuff is in the show. He's now on his second surgery. I hope he pulls the nasty back a little so he can have a good career and life.
    I've told young pitchers to look at pitchers of the past such as Greg Maddux, Don Sutton, and Tommy John. They lived on the ball changing speeds, and great control.

    • @mondoseguendo6113
      @mondoseguendo6113 Před měsícem +1

      You don’t want to hurt yourself pitching, learn how to throw a knuckleball.

    • @emmanuelwood8702
      @emmanuelwood8702 Před měsícem

      @@mondoseguendo6113 That's probably a quicker way to get injured.

    • @TheRoadLessChosen
      @TheRoadLessChosen Před měsícem +1

      @@emmanuelwood8702how so?

  • @cmm30
    @cmm30 Před měsícem +22

    Most important interview I have seen in recent times.

  • @NoelG702
    @NoelG702 Před měsícem +24

    I've been saying the MLB needs more pitchers like Greg Maddux.

    • @riltalk4055
      @riltalk4055 Před měsícem +5

      Mad dog!!

    • @user-bmw528
      @user-bmw528 Před měsícem +3

      And more hitters need to just be Barry Bonds 🙄

  • @orlandogriego2898
    @orlandogriego2898 Před 15 dny

    I just completed my 29th year as a Head High School Baseball Coach and have never had a single elbow or shoulder surgery. I appreciate your input as I try to grow my knowledge.
    RGHS BASEBALL
    O. GRIEGO

  • @SimAlex20000
    @SimAlex20000 Před měsícem +8

    This is a fascinating interview. Baseball has a huge problem

  • @serafinacosta7118
    @serafinacosta7118 Před měsícem +16

    That makes Trevor Bauer, with his wacky kinetic exercises and drills , a genius. Yes , he is off the kilt, but boy does he ever analyses his craft.

    • @my2l
      @my2l Před měsícem +2

      nerds are good for baseball after all.

  • @Radbra712
    @Radbra712 Před 21 dnem

    Dr. Meister repaired my throwing shoulder and bicep tendon in 2008when I injured it in college baseball. I have not had any issues since. His rehab team is fantastic and sport specific.

  • @cgreek1
    @cgreek1 Před měsícem +1

    The most insightful baseball pitching discussion I have ever seen. Why does no one remember the Braves trio who pitched together for nearly a decade under pitching coach Mazzone? They were never max effort pitchers.

  • @anthonyreyes8868
    @anthonyreyes8868 Před měsícem +10

    Kratz, Chapman's elite mechanics are also important. His utilization of his bottom half increases speed and alleviates pressure on his arm. Guys like Carlos Rodon are strictly upper body. He doesn't use his legs, which is a big reason why he has back and shoulder problems. Sandy Alcantra is another pitcher who has poor mechanics, and you can see precursors for Tommy John if you know what to look for. I also disagree with the notion that velocity is a problem. You can have guys throwing harder than they are currently throwing and still be completely healthy. There is a large list of pitchers and hitters who have developed inefficient ways to throw and hit balls far, not just pitchers. Through improper mechanics, they overexert themselves and cause unnecessary pressure to ligaments and muscles. From my perspective, either the teams are extremely ignorant and don't comprehend this aspect of the game, or they comprehend it and don't care because they get to keep the price down of pitchers as cheap and expendable . I do not see this lack of understanding of such a basic thing as technique in other sports.

    • @pjny21
      @pjny21 Před měsícem

      Chapman's mechanics are good. Billy Wagner (at only barely 5'10") got it up there with compact mechanics too. I found it so puzzling that people praised Mark Prior's mechanics when he came up. But he was so straight up I didn't really see it. And alas........ Strausburg was awkward too - reliant on centrifugal force from a 3/4 angle just wasn't going to hold up. (I dunno how Pedro's held up but he had massive hands to manipulate the ball).

    • @TheRoadLessChosen
      @TheRoadLessChosen Před měsícem

      @@pjny21are bigger hands good for pitching? How would that help take pressure off the arm?

  • @jeffgo5742
    @jeffgo5742 Před měsícem +3

    I pitcher timeout is a great idea. Just like the batter they get one. Also let pitchers use something for grip

  • @LDQBBQ
    @LDQBBQ Před měsícem +2

    Great video. Very fascinating. Would love more with Keith Meister.

  • @wdlambert3
    @wdlambert3 Před měsícem +4

    Good stuff and hits deep, considering some point today or this week he's probably doing Strider's surgery

  • @jamesmichael5475
    @jamesmichael5475 Před měsícem +9

    The reality being, muscle fibers hypertrophy and strengthen at a rate exceeding that of tendons and ligaments. So as athletes train to enhance strength and power, but the tendons and ligaments do not strengthen proportionately, this leads to overload forces applied to these tissues at near max efforts. We can observe a pitcher and predict their future injures, based upon biomechanical loads and the efficiency of their kinesiology. Pitches who develop their lower extremities, have a strong core and use such efficiently, sparing loads on the upper extremities. Baseball teams in general have employed a philosophy where management has realized the exorbitant cost of pitching in free agency and they collectively made business decisions that have impacted player development and care. Management has decided that because acquiring starting pitching in free agency is so expensive, and resigning even your own player when they enter free agency can be cost prohibitive, better to ride then hard while you have them under control, because who cares what happens to them once they leave to sign with another team. This has resulted in a trickle-down phenomenon, wherein training, coaching staff, and analytics staff instruct plays to push themselves and their bodies to throw certain pitches at certain pitch frequencies, which induces tremendous overload forces on the ligaments and tendons, with insufficient recovery time between pitches and performances. The team figures get what you can out of them, who cares what happens later. It has become the assembly-line mentality of pitching. Just have a readily available supply of young fresh arms, capable of throwing 100 mph waiting in the minors, to replace the pitchers you lose to injuries or free agency, and don't worry about actually coaching and teaching them the art of pitching. Just have them throw as hard as they can, with max spin rates for as long as they can, then once they are injured, bring up the next guy. It has been known for 50+ years that youth should not throw curves and breaking balls for good reason. Similar principals apply to adults. Combine that with that fact that training, nutrition, and lets face it Performance enhancing drugs, now permits pitchers to routinely exceed velocities that were once the l=thing of legends, exceedingly rare and attained by a very select few, introduces overlord forces to the shoulder and elbow that predispose to injuries.

    • @heavilymeditated2263
      @heavilymeditated2263 Před měsícem +2

      100% agree with your analysis. I can't believe despite all the information & knowledge we have, it's something not focused on

  • @joshuawellwerts2078
    @joshuawellwerts2078 Před měsícem

    Thank you for this video. My son is a sophomore in high school and we have been dealing with inner elbow pain for the last 3 years. Physical therapy pictures and nothing. Great information

  • @user-ue4bw8fl7w
    @user-ue4bw8fl7w Před měsícem +1

    This is the best baseball story I've heard this year. BOOKMARKED!

  • @olig7336
    @olig7336 Před měsícem +4

    This channel is KILLING IT right now

  • @tonyrame7548
    @tonyrame7548 Před měsícem +1

    You only need 2 pitches if you throw hard, just look at Nolan Ryan, fastball and curveball, both were thrown with over the top delivery from the greatest power pitcher of all time that also was an Iron horse one time even throwing 200+ pitches in one game. The increase in UCL injuries definitely have something to do with arm angles and how hard the pitchers are throwing and trying to spin it.

  • @radamrussell
    @radamrussell Před měsícem +4

    Great question from AJ. I was wondering what Doc's take is on at least allowing some form of 'stick'em' for pitchers...rosen or a range of products/substances that could be allowed across the board?

  • @dougp9806
    @dougp9806 Před měsícem +2

    Finally.....you don't need analytics to know spin rate and velocity are the problem. Not pitch count or clock.

    • @mbdg6810
      @mbdg6810 Před měsícem

      Pitch clock is a factor if one is throwing hard too. If you do the same movement tear at a faster rate, of course your arm problems can be worse.

  • @rhgamecock1
    @rhgamecock1 Před měsícem +2

    Great interview and information. I think pitchers are headed in the direction that RB's in the NFL are currently at. Go hard 3-5 years and on to the next guy. Just running them through a meat grinder so to speak.

    • @BruceEdmonds821
      @BruceEdmonds821 Před měsícem +1

      Pitchers should only have to do 3-4 years of service time before FA then. Because it's so difficult to remain healthy for 6 years plus minors/college/high school

    • @rhgamecock1
      @rhgamecock1 Před měsícem

      @@BruceEdmonds821 Agree

  • @Sammy_Boy_Smith
    @Sammy_Boy_Smith Před měsícem +1

    This Dr. Needs to be lecturing to all 150 MLB & MiLB teams.

    • @user-bmw528
      @user-bmw528 Před měsícem

      Why? No one can prevent elbow injuries over the last 30 years.

  • @EruptTelevision
    @EruptTelevision Před měsícem

    Great interview

  • @soundhead18
    @soundhead18 Před měsícem +3

    Pivetta has a sweeper now and look when happened to him today. He’s having elbow recovery issues and is on the 15-Day IL

  • @maxxramas5770
    @maxxramas5770 Před měsícem +2

    As a pitcher in high school I found it to be common sense knowledge that virtually any non fastball (maybe a standard 3 finger change up too) will cause more pain and result in injury. The curveball particularly is the most vicious pitch on the elbow and shoulder.

    • @TheRoadLessChosen
      @TheRoadLessChosen Před měsícem +1

      Curve ball that injures the arm is not being thrown correctly.

    • @maxxramas5770
      @maxxramas5770 Před měsícem

      @@TheRoadLessChosenthe curveball is widely considered to be the most dangerous of the standard pitches. It’s why so many kids and even high schoolers are not advised to throw it.

  • @redbeard2952
    @redbeard2952 Před měsícem +1

    I would love to hear what the reason for the increase in position players needing TJ surgery. Surely they can't blame the pitch clock on that can they? And talking about having the pendulum swing back in the other direction, maybe players need to put the baseball down in the off-season, lay off the designer pitchers and work on the beer belly. Worked pretty good for Boomer Wells

  • @TKO-1503
    @TKO-1503 Před měsícem +2

    I think those super fast pitches should be reserved for the best of hitters and for when you’re in a traffic jam. The human arm is not meant to exude this much force, whatever it is I hope health and safety for these pitchers who bring us valuable entertainment.

  • @gregthegroove
    @gregthegroove Před měsícem +2

    1. Analytics have made the performance translate into numbers and digits. Then every pitcher tries to achieve spin rate numbers and they simply cannot. They try to throw hard all the time and they can’t. They try to be like the stars and they’re not. People need to understand that not everyone can be a star folks. Some guys can throw 100 all their careers but they’re built for it or whatever the case may be. That’s why they get paid big $ Stay in your lane. Be the best you can be at a level where you’re actually playing in the field. Chasing the dragon and the numbers and spin rates.
    2. I’m not sure how much this applies or calling out any players but it’s been noted quite clearly that some coming off steroids or PEDs or whatever you call it can subject themselves to injuries because they’re trying to perform like before with no drugs.
    3. Throwing MAX velo all the time. There’s no need for it. Get to the playoffs. Get on the big stage. When you face the stars in postseason then bring out the guns. You don’t need to be hurling 99 mph all game long on a Tuesday night at Tropicana when you’ve got the 5-0 lead. It’s like guys aren’t playing the game anymore by looking with their eyes on the conditions. Why do I need to throw this 100 right now? To keep stats elevated and get paid. DUMB. STUPID.

  • @wind_runner6836
    @wind_runner6836 Před měsícem

    Very informative and it seems that the MLB really should take action.

  • @dougwbenson
    @dougwbenson Před měsícem

    Wish we had more pitchers like Jamie Moyer in the game.

  • @jonivey1972
    @jonivey1972 Před měsícem

    have we studied the Pitchers with 5 plus years MLB service with no elbow injuries. What type of pitches thrown, weighted ball training, sleep, hydration, weights- All the whole thing??? What is a common in those non injured pitchers. This is such a hot topic... No quick fix, need to start at youth level. Are they on the mound too soon? Would machine pitch be a better altenative until balls drop? Too little throwing? Too much throwing? No answer here just want solutions. I had my oldest with MLB service time that got hurt and out of the game. he saw Dr. Meister multiple times. I now have a 15 year old lefty that was born to throw hard and does, I am worried about him. I take precaution, no year around pitching, train hard and prep great....... I can do all the right things and still get him hurt.

  • @SuperReviews4you
    @SuperReviews4you Před měsícem +3

    The problem the MLB has is that we all know velocity and spin equals outs. There is no putting that cat back in the bag.

    • @gumball3D
      @gumball3D Před měsícem +2

      The next market inefficiency: Less emphasis on velocity and more on changing speeds and control

    • @SuperReviews4you
      @SuperReviews4you Před měsícem

      ​@@gumball3D Sure control and changing speeds matter too but velo and spin is a big factor too in how hittable is a pitch. There just is no simple recipe because a player knows if he can throw 97 and have a couple of ok secondary pitches he has a good shot at the MLB.

  • @wizardoferror9942
    @wizardoferror9942 Před měsícem

    MLB needs to see this!

  • @davidmacgown321
    @davidmacgown321 Před 8 dny

    Are managers getting it wrong about pitch count? Paul Skenes recently had a no hitter going and was pulled after 6 innings. He was dominating (14 strikeouts I think) but as soon as he reached the magic number of 100 pitches thrown his manager pulled him in spite of his no hitter. My belief is its not the number of pitches thrown you should be looking for but rather the number of stressful pitches thrown. In this case he hadn't been in any stressful situations, he was cruising right along. Am I wrong or right about this?

  • @theycallmehoipilloi5495
    @theycallmehoipilloi5495 Před měsícem

    I've been around long enough to remember when the slider was losing popularity because it was said that it would blow your arm up. I'm not sure when it changed, if it was Steve Carlton's and Ron Guidry's success or what. Nolan Ryan never had arm trouble and basically went fastball and 12-6 curveball. He was also fanatical about working on his legs. He'd throw 100++ pitches in 7 or 8 innings then ride an exercise bike for another hour after the game. Are pitchers still working on their lower bodies as much?

  • @black17fireup
    @black17fireup Před 24 dny

    All that body extreme forces are stopping the arm drastically. The muscle are crying in pain!🚨🚑
    No arm, no pitcher!

  • @arkansasrebel348
    @arkansasrebel348 Před měsícem +2

    Need to go back to teaching the art of pitching!!

  • @MIKEDOMO
    @MIKEDOMO Před měsícem

    Biomechanics are the key, I have two bulging discs, my symptoms are improving everyday, the first thing told me my PT avoid the things are hurting you, that apply to the pitchers.

  • @TheRoadLessChosen
    @TheRoadLessChosen Před měsícem

    Randy Johnson had horizontal movement on his sweeping slider. He was tall but not bulky. How did he do it without injury?

    • @tonyrame7548
      @tonyrame7548 Před měsícem

      probably because he was 6'10 and he was the tallest player in MLB history so his UCL tendon was remarkably longer then normal pitchers, also he could throw hard with very little stress, just watching him warm up he would throw in the 80s which look like he was in slow motion. He was a freak and not normal in any sense.

  • @joelneedham7589
    @joelneedham7589 Před měsícem +4

    Dr Mike Marshall in 1975 figured out pitching injuries. His videos are all on CZcams explaining the cause of all pitching injuries. It’s just no one cared to listen.

    • @JamesAvila-xu7ds
      @JamesAvila-xu7ds Před měsícem

      Do you have any links

    • @joelneedham7589
      @joelneedham7589 Před měsícem +1

      @JamesAvila-xu7ds just type in Dr mike marshall causes of pitching injuries part 1 and 2

    • @TheRoadLessChosen
      @TheRoadLessChosen Před měsícem

      I’ve searched and searched for good info and never ran into any of his videos.

    • @rudivanrooijen7611
      @rudivanrooijen7611 Před 24 dny

      Just some remarks:
      1) Athletes will always be willing to put their health at risk to reach elite levels; generally that is a feature of what sets them apart from the regular crowd;
      2) the pitch clock being a factor with regards to injuries is speculation at best. Furthermore, traditionally pitchers were taught to work quick without that leading to excessive injuries in the past;
      3) Could it be that nowadays players that are injury-prone reach the big leagues in spite of their propensity to get injured, because of improved medical treatments ? If so that could be part of the explanation that average velo has increased as well as the risk of injury. Back in the day more hardthrowers would blow out their arm before reaching the big leagues and were done;
      4) The TJ- surgery is a reconstruction of the elbow, which means the UCL is not repaired, but it's function is taken over by an added tendon that provides said function through a mechanically different action. Fundamentally the TJ-procedure could (or should ?) be considered 'performance enhancing surgery';
      5) I'm not convinced that squeezing the grip harder will lead to higher spin rates.
      I do think many players falsely assume they have to squeeze to generate more spin. My take is that the last phase of release and the start of pronation need to overlap to finish the fingers' pull;
      6) Wasn't the usage of 'sticky stuff' getting out of hand ? Pedro only needed rosin and sweat to have a HoF career.
      He knew how to put movement and velo on the ball.

  • @JADiaz10
    @JADiaz10 Před měsícem

    I think it’s lack of Cardio. This is a problem for all positions. Position players can pull something running to first cause they pump iron but don’t keep the body loose because they think static stretching gonna work. Running also helps pitchers heal in between days. Wish I knew this sooner but I remember hearing about James Shields habits. he threw gas and had a healthy career because he was running after every start. Once I started doing that I noticed it was way easier to heal in between starts. No im not a ML and don’t throw anywhere near 100 but it was a significant difference in how long soreness lasted…

  • @toucantango1
    @toucantango1 Před měsícem

    Goose Gossage threw VERY hard. He told me his most impressive achievement in his 20+ years in MLB is that he never had an injury.

  • @makeplays
    @makeplays Před měsícem

    this problem can't be understated and it's going to get worse

  • @jgould30
    @jgould30 Před měsícem +2

    Throwers, not pitchers. And they're building and used like an F1 car. Tear the engine down after 100 miles. Not like a reliable truck to run thebsand dunes for 100k+ miles.

  • @nofurtherwest3474
    @nofurtherwest3474 Před měsícem

    Random ques - but I've been wondering - can someone pitch without a UCL? Like, maybe it tears completely but they just don't get surgery, what would happen?
    I play soccer. I ruptured my ACL and never got surgery, but I still play alot of soccer. I just am more mindful and go about the game differently. And of course did some rehab.

    • @anthonyreyes8868
      @anthonyreyes8868 Před měsícem +1

      You can't dude it hurts and you lose velocity

    • @nofurtherwest3474
      @nofurtherwest3474 Před měsícem

      @@anthonyreyes8868 ohh ok. i was just wondering. like maybe it becomes loose but that's ok, it just becomes more like a whip

    • @nofurtherwest3474
      @nofurtherwest3474 Před měsícem

      @@anthonyreyes8868 i would like to experiment, to have a doc remove my UCL and let it heal and see how it goes

    • @GDavis49
      @GDavis49 Před měsícem

      RA Dickey didn’t have a ucl

    • @nofurtherwest3474
      @nofurtherwest3474 Před měsícem

      @@GDavis49 interesting

  • @kjorlaug1
    @kjorlaug1 Před měsícem

    Give the pitchers a timeout in at-bats that last longer than 6 pitches. But keep the pitch clock. The injuries are clearly linked to spin and velo, not the pitch clock.

    • @mbdg6810
      @mbdg6810 Před měsícem

      The pitch clock can be a factor, if one is throwing hard at a faster rate.

  • @Ayouguys
    @Ayouguys Před měsícem +1

    They'll have to bring back the ball tack.

  • @GH-ru9kk
    @GH-ru9kk Před měsícem

    I think they should increase the roster size and allow teams to increase bullpen sizes and limit pitches.

  • @emmanuelwood8702
    @emmanuelwood8702 Před měsícem +2

    The issue is training they need to get back to teaching pitching properly the way they used to. None of the analytics number crunchers are going to reinvent the wheel all they're doing is injuries these players.

  • @chazbedlam
    @chazbedlam Před měsícem +1

    How pervasive are pitching injuries in Japan or Korea? They throw disgusting breaking stuff, but don't they use balls that come out of the box with some kind of tack on them? That might be the simplest quick fix for this problem.

  • @seamsWILD
    @seamsWILD Před měsícem

    thumbnail title is real

  • @JimmyFlorida337
    @JimmyFlorida337 Před měsícem +1

    The MLB for years has tried to De-emphasize starting pitching. Whether it is the Openers. Pitch Counts. 5 inning starts. Bullpen games. Pitch clocks. Checking their hands for substances. Why??? $$$$$$$$. MLB doesn't want to pay starters big money. Blake Snell and Montgomery found out this off-season. When you tell your starters go out and throw Max velocity for as long as they can that is not pitching. That is throwing.

  • @vivalavivarium
    @vivalavivarium Před měsícem

    Tbh I’m not worried, these pitchers will stop getting huge contracts and the smart duravble pitchers who don’t push it will become more valuable. Yeah this gen might have to be a sacrificial gen but it will be a great experiment to tell the future pitchers where the max is and they can find a good medium. Sucks but they know they will get hurt and they still choose to do it cause they’ll get the bag, so not really the same as runners twisting ankles of the bags

  • @markdecarolis8714
    @markdecarolis8714 Před měsícem

    Keeping legs strong.

  • @jgould30
    @jgould30 Před měsícem

    The way you throw a cutting pitch is with proper arm slot but the big thing is the lower half. Your pitch plane and how you open your hips. Note thet some of the really special pitchers that lasted had beefy lower halves. The guys that are tall and skinny tend to tear things because they have no bottom half. Pitching velocity and movement is heavily controlled by your liwer half but it seems like everyone is teaching to open your hips and torque the heck out of the shoulder and elbow like a slingshot. And then you wonder why you have injuries? 🙄

  • @MatthewSmithA2K
    @MatthewSmithA2K Před měsícem

    We need more players and more rest time in the big league

    • @MatthewSmithA2K
      @MatthewSmithA2K Před měsícem

      And tools to test how long is a safe day

    • @MatthewSmithA2K
      @MatthewSmithA2K Před měsícem

      It's for the best a couple hand full of minors and contract extensions in minors

  • @nohalfsteppin2823
    @nohalfsteppin2823 Před měsícem

    How bout changing the ball to the ones they have in Japan how many Japanese pitchers are getting TJ surgery

    • @JADiaz10
      @JADiaz10 Před měsícem

      What are the differences there?

    • @nohalfsteppin2823
      @nohalfsteppin2823 Před měsícem

      ​@JADiaz10 the ball is tackler and smaller and lighter in weight

  • @rhgamecock1
    @rhgamecock1 Před měsícem +1

    The Commissioner should call in some of the great older pitchers for a roundtable on this while they are still living. The ones who pitched a ton of innings and never needed elbow surgery. Would include Randy Johnson, Jim Palmer, Bert Blyleven, Jack Morris, Greg Maddux, Steve Carlton, and Roger Clemens to name a few. By the way, they weren't on innings limits and pitch count limits. Seems those limits have made things worse as well.

  • @Tmalbers21
    @Tmalbers21 Před měsícem +5

    Man, it seems that these pitchers would really benefit from using a sticky substance to help them with their grip 🤔

    • @Michael-tj5bk
      @Michael-tj5bk Před měsícem +1

      Oh they sure would. They would generate super spin rates with not natural. The offense would be even worse if possible

    • @Tmalbers21
      @Tmalbers21 Před měsícem

      @@Michael-tj5bk I think pine tar and sunscreen would be just fine. Ask most MLB hitters, they want the pitcher to know where the ball is going. Added benefit would be less TJs, tough to argue with that.

    • @Mark-jm5vy
      @Mark-jm5vy Před měsícem

      @@Michael-tj5bk the thing is then average spin rate would go up so to become elite pitchers would just try and grip even harder to get an even higher spin rate. Era would fall so pitchers would need a higher spin rate to have a lower than average era or whip

    • @Mark-jm5vy
      @Mark-jm5vy Před měsícem

      @@Tmalbers21 the thing is then average spin rate would go up so to become elite pitchers would just try and grip even harder to get an even higher spin rate. Era would fall so pitchers would need a higher spin rate to have a lower than average era or whip

  • @johncrabtree8857
    @johncrabtree8857 Před měsícem

    Baseball is good for his business it seems

  • @michaelsarzen2814
    @michaelsarzen2814 Před měsícem

    The best way to avoid an injury is to never play

  • @MatthewSmithA2K
    @MatthewSmithA2K Před měsícem

    If you throw a lot you gotta find 3-4 months off a year

  • @vivalavivarium
    @vivalavivarium Před měsícem

    U know what it is, they teach how to throw hard and fancy and not how to actually PITCH!!!! Look at ever great great pitcher ever. They were smart, they knew HOW to get hitters out not just blow thing by them, I miss that.

  • @peterdaddabbo7110
    @peterdaddabbo7110 Před měsícem

    Great interview. Two critical points missed. One touched on, but not explained. We are taking players with the internal infrastructure to throw high 80s and teaching/training them to throw high 90s. Like putting 80 story building on 40 story infrastructure. Unsustainable.
    Point two. The market will correct this...moneyball 2....teams will start to figure out that spending 30 million plus per year on high velo guys is not cost effective as the likelihood they will break down increases. Teams will start looking for and demanding and paying more guys like Jose Quntana, who doesn't blow people away but starts 30 plus games every year.

  • @baseball-xt3uj
    @baseball-xt3uj Před měsícem +1

    I cant believe that mlb and players dont understand how to avoid injuries and why theyre on the rise. Is for one thing and very simple. They do not train for withstanding more throws they inly train for increasing velocity. Tell me which pitcher in the offseason goes all the way to 100-150 pitch bullpens? Nobody absolutely nobody. The only way to be prepared to throw 100 throws in the game is that in the offseason you slowly progress all the way to 100-150 throws. You might call me crazy to encourage offseason bullpens of 100-150 throws but its even crazier to think that 30 pitch bullpens will prepare you to throw 100 in the game. That is foolish nonsense. The arm doesnt know how many throws is doing it only knows stress. If youve only throwing 30 pitch bullpens and the increase it all of the sudden to 100 youre increasing more than double of what your body can handle. Now if you slowly progress in the offseason to 150 throws your body and arm are going to get use to that stress. But pitchers from today dont give their body the opportunity to get use to the stress. Sometimes you only need logic and common sense to solve a problem. Its ironic that sometimes common sense is the less common sense the human uses.

  • @BOOSTEDSS396
    @BOOSTEDSS396 Před měsícem

    Couldn’t break Chapman’s arm with a 4lb Plyo

  • @davidmacgown321
    @davidmacgown321 Před 8 dny

    It sounds like they're not learning how to pitch. They're just throwers today. A pitcher like Greg Maddux wouldn't even be drafted today.

  • @LDQBBQ
    @LDQBBQ Před měsícem

    Do we place any blame on youth coaches or gurus who encourage poor mechanics and/or overusage?

    • @c2itccase9
      @c2itccase9 Před měsícem

      No…there’s a pitch count for games, tournaments and for any and every other reason.

  • @mariohnyc
    @mariohnyc Před měsícem

    Easy fix. Switch to underhanded pitching, lol.

  • @jonivey1972
    @jonivey1972 Před měsícem

    Weighted balls?

  • @toucantango1
    @toucantango1 Před měsícem

    Travel youth baseball is putting those who pitch into far too many games. 125 games a year can be good for hitters and fielders but bad for young pitchers. That is the hazard that causes injuries to many young pitchers and continues until the elbow gives out.

  • @kvonzwild8979
    @kvonzwild8979 Před měsícem

    Very interesting. How did Greg Maddux remain healthy when nobody could make X's out of the plate with balls running in then away like him?

    • @samuelsuggs9751
      @samuelsuggs9751 Před měsícem

      I think it's because Maddux got the spin to make it break without throwing with 100% effort. He had the ability to throw with more velocity than he did, but he was a better pitcher with 5% less velocity, more break, and better location.

  • @ceasarblackman9501
    @ceasarblackman9501 Před měsícem

    This won’t be much different than the steroid era… the gain.. getting the contract will always outweigh the chance of just being around as a major leaguer…

  • @Zane_Zaminsky
    @Zane_Zaminsky Před měsícem

    Too much weight training. Muscles get too strong for the tendons and ligaments. As the great former world record shotputter, Brian Oldfield, said:
    “It’s like putting a Cadillac engine in a Volkswagen.”

  • @Alan-rw3ez
    @Alan-rw3ez Před měsícem +4

    Bottom line, learn to PITCH and not throw. Greinke never threw harder than 92 from his age 31 onward. Prior 2 or 3 seasons he sat at 94 most of the time. They can do it too but it takes time and effort and the short term easy way is to yank the arm for that precious 99.

  • @edgewound
    @edgewound Před měsícem +4

    Hitters can use stickum to grip the bat. Pitchers should be allowed the same advantage.

    • @islander5858
      @islander5858 Před měsícem

      Shut up

    • @Legnerps
      @Legnerps Před měsícem

      I don't think those are equivalencies.

    • @edgewound
      @edgewound Před měsícem

      @@Legnerps yes they are... grip is everything. Take away batters' grip, watch bat speed go way down.

    • @waylonmercy1533
      @waylonmercy1533 Před měsícem

      @@edgewoundno

    • @edgewound
      @edgewound Před měsícem

      @@waylonmercy1533 why? Defend your position.

  • @johnshepherd9676
    @johnshepherd9676 Před měsícem +2

    AJ caught a guy who seldom hit 90 and had a long injury free career -- Mark Buehrle.

    • @JamesAvila-xu7ds
      @JamesAvila-xu7ds Před měsícem +1

      Greg maddux he threw natural 90 not some wierd throwing program that increased 5-7 mph adding more stress to the elbow and showilder

  • @emmanuelwood8702
    @emmanuelwood8702 Před měsícem +5

    Doc is wrong about horizontal movement only achieved through pronation or supination. It is being taught that way by analytics people who have no experience, but it is wrong you can get horizontal movement without torquing the foreman. It's probably one of the reasons that pitchers are getting hurt, they're been taught by people with no onfield experience and they're been taught stuff that's getting them hurt because it's wrong.

    • @HKim0072
      @HKim0072 Před měsícem +12

      It’s literally all he does. I think we can trust his analysis.

    • @emmanuelwood8702
      @emmanuelwood8702 Před měsícem +1

      @@HKim0072 Not at all, he has a theory he doesn’t have proof of it either.

    • @emmanuelwood8702
      @emmanuelwood8702 Před měsícem +3

      @@HKim0072 He’s an expert at repairing damaged ligaments doesn’t mean he’s an expert at identifying the causes of damaged ligaments. The only thing he established was a correlation between pitching and ucl injuries . We already knew this we didn’t need him to say it.

    • @emmanuelwood8702
      @emmanuelwood8702 Před měsícem +1

      What needs to be looked at is why some cant stop snapping their ucl over and over and over and over and some never do even though they throw hard like chapman, Nolan ryan, Pedro and throw horizontal breaking pitches like Marcus stroman etc .

    • @HKim0072
      @HKim0072 Před měsícem +8

      @@emmanuelwood8702 Ok, Bozo the Clown. The dude went to Med school and then did residency for Orthopedics for 4 years. He's been involved with the Rangers since '04. Has run a Sports medical clinic since '04.
      Stop with the dime store analysis and vomiting correlation isn't causation or it's only a theory bro.

  • @jerryharris6342
    @jerryharris6342 Před měsícem

    "Will the owners use this information to pay the players less?" I love the comedy on this show. I'm dying. Yeah, tell injured pitcher, Shohei Ohtani that he could have gotten so much more.

  • @144Donn
    @144Donn Před měsícem

    If pitchers pitch to contact and do not focus on K's, the game will be A LOT more interesting! Many games have are filled with K's or HR's and nothing else VERY BORING!. Pitching to contact will reduce the stress on an arm and allow pitchers to stay in the game longer.

    • @user-bmw528
      @user-bmw528 Před měsícem

      Pitching to contact lol enjoy their ERAs of 5.50+

  • @ablank6888
    @ablank6888 Před měsícem +1

    Wait he started off saying push for more velo was issue, then went on tanget about percentage off speed pitches. I call bs. Nobody knows including Meister.

    • @user-bmw528
      @user-bmw528 Před měsícem

      Thank you. Nobody knows. They’re all guessing.

  • @tommyriam8320
    @tommyriam8320 Před 8 dny

    Let pitchers learn and practice the art and craft of _'PITCHING'_ for God's sake and *cease* indulging this perverted obsession with 'throwing'

  • @kevingross4141
    @kevingross4141 Před měsícem

    Pitching should be about DECEPTION, not power. Change speed, location, and arm slot. Not throw 100 mph hour curveballs. And yes, movement begins with the hips.

  • @poopshoes7579
    @poopshoes7579 Před měsícem +1

    If you SLAP tear it doesn’t matter, you’re most likely done…speaking from experience

    • @jmart_4
      @jmart_4 Před měsícem

      From experience, I can say the same thing. I'm fact I had Dr. Meister repair it not once, but twice since the first one didn't take. Now I have an AC joint without cartilage and reduced ROM!

  • @Michael-tj5bk
    @Michael-tj5bk Před měsícem

    Bullshit. Sticky stuff was unfair advantage. It was used to create super soin not to get a grip. Pedro and other pitchers had no problem with grip without sticky stuff. Get a clue

    • @Sliqhs
      @Sliqhs Před měsícem +2

      Buddy you really think sticky stuff is a new invention?

    • @gregthegroove
      @gregthegroove Před měsícem

      That’s essentially the problem. Every MFer thinks he’s Pedro FN Martinez. I just said this. They’re chasing spin rates because the tech is there now and everyone is trying to get to certain numbers instead of just playing the damn game in front of you. No need to throw 99 mph all game long on a random 5th starter type bullpen game on a Tuesday night in front of 7k fans with a 7 run lead for example.

    • @edgewound
      @edgewound Před měsícem

      Take away the sticky stuff from bat handles and batting gloves. Bat control AND ball control is all about grip. Take away the super sticky grip from the hitter and bat speed will decline.

    • @williamcoolidge9884
      @williamcoolidge9884 Před měsícem

      The balls are not the same.