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Stadium Rant
Here's Why So Many MLB Pitchers Are Getting Hurt
By Bradley Tachco,
3 days ago
Monday was a day like too many others in baseball. We learned two more pitchers will have Tommy John surgery. Los Angeles Angels lefty Patrick Sandoval and Atlanta Braves left-hander Ray Kerr both went down.
Everyone wants to know, 'Why are so many pitchers going down with this elbow injury?'
From little league to the big leagues, pitchers are throwing fewer innings and experiencing more injuries. Major League Baseball has launched an extensive study to understand this issue.
2024 is the 50th anniversary of Tommy John's surgery, which now bears his name. The procedure reconstructs the ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) in the elbow. Data shows one thing: The harder pitchers throw corresponds to the number of elbow injuries.
In 2020, there were fewer than 500 pitches over 100mph in Major League Baseball; last season, there were nearly 4,000.
Glenn Fleisig, PhD, is a recognized expert on pitching biomechanics. He says speed kills .
He described it as pulling a rubber band. It will break more quickly the harder and further you pull it apart, and that’s exactly what pitchers are doing to their UCL.
The Human Arm Can’t Take It
Texas Rangers team physician Dr. Keith Meister warned teams before the 2024 season.
Meister says the two pitches put tremendous strain on the inner elbow . To throw those pitches effectively, you have to put an enormous amount of pressure on the ball. Los Angeles Dodgers starter Tyler Glasnow believes that's another issue that could be responsible for the injuries.
He was with the Tampa Bay Rays when umpires began checking pitcher's hands after each half-inning in the middle of the season. He said he could feel the difference immediately.
No Evidence The Pitch Clock Hurts Pitchers
The head of the baseball players’ association wants to blame the pitch clock, which is now two seconds shorter with runners on base than it was last season.
“Despite unanimous player opposition and significant concerns regarding health and safety," MLBPA executive director Tony Clark said, "the commissioner’s office reduced the length of the pitch clock last December, just one season removed from imposing the most significant rule change in decades.”
Major League Baseball responded to Clark by citing a Johns Hopkins study that found "no evidence to support that the introduction of the pitch clock has increased injuries."
As innings pitched have dropped, the number of UCL injuries has jumped. It all comes down to velocity.
Twenty-one starting pitchers averaged over 96.5 MPH in 2023, sixteen of them have had at least one Tommy John surgery. The question now is whether teams can or will have the guts to hit the breaks.
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