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 USA
Baseball Medical & Safety Advisory Committee Guidelines: May 2006
Position
Statement
Baseball is one of the safest sports available
for today’s youth. However,
many of the serious injuries suffered by adult baseball pitchers may have
begun to develop at the youth level.
One of the missions of the USA Baseball Medical & Safety
Advisory Committee is to provide scientifically based information to its
youth baseball members to reduce the risk of injury and maximize the
younger player’s ability to perform and advance to higher levels.
Pitch
Counts
Pitch Types Pitching
Mechanics & Conditioning Multiple
Appearances Showcases
Multiple Leagues
Year-Round
Baseball Recommendations
References
Pitches are counted and monitored for
professional, collegiate, and high school pitchers in order for them to
reduce the risk of injury. A
1996 survey conducted by the USA Baseball Medical & Safety Advisory
Committee (USA Baseball News, 1996) showed that most experts
believed pitch counts should be kept for youth pitchers as well.
In response to this charge, the committee sponsored an
epidemiological study by the American Sports Medicine Institute (ASMI) to
look at this issue. This
study – published in The American Journal of Sports Medicine in
2002 – showed a significant relationship between the number of pitches
thrown and the risk of shoulder and elbow pain in youth baseball.
It is the opinion of ASMI and the USA Baseball Medical & Safety
Advisory Committee that joint pain indicates the early development of a
potentially serious joint injury. Thus
pitch count limits are recommended for youth baseball.
If - for some valid reason - a league is unable or unwilling to
enact pitch count limits, the league should limit the number of batters
faced. Since 9 to 12 year-old
baseball pitchers average about 5 pitches per batter, pitch count
recommendations can be converted into batter limitations by dividing by 5. However, pitch limitations are a better choice than batter
limitations for accurately monitoring and controlling risk of overuse.
The 2002 study by
the ASMI also showed that youth baseball pitchers who throw curveballs or
sliders have an increased risk of elbow and shoulder pain.
Therefore, youth pitchers should avoid throwing breaking pitches in
order to reduce the risk of future overuse injuries.
Because a youth
pitcher usually stays in the game at another position after pitching, the
player is eligible to return to the mound later in the game, according to
the rules of baseball. While
it may be good strategy to have a starting pitcher come back in and finish
a game, it is not a good idea from a health and safety perspective.
Muscles, tendons, and ligaments need time to “cool down” after
physical activity, just like they need to “warm up” before activity.
Showcases are
established to give young players the opportunity to display their skills
to scouts at higher levels of baseball.
Unfortunately, showcases often occur near the end of the players’
season, when players are often fatigued and require rest and recovery.
In other instances, players participate in a showcase after a
prolonged period since their league ended and without adequate preparation
to throw hard again. It is
without a doubt that young throwers will try to overthrow at these events
in an effort to impress the scouts and coaches, which further increases
the risk of serious arm injury.
In order to get more
opportunity to develop skills, many young players play in multiple
leagues. Although the amount of pitching in a league is often limited
by league rules or the judgment of its coaches, individual pitchers
sometimes exceed such limitations by pitching in more than one league at a
time. The strength and skills
needed to be a successful pitcher are developed by repetition; however, a
pitcher must also give his body time to rest and recover in order to
optimize his development.
In certain parts of
warm-weather states (Florida, Texas, California, etc.) baseball leagues
are available in all seasons. However,
the principle of periodization states that an athlete should have
different periods and activities in his annual conditioning schedule. Specifically, baseball pitchers need a period of “active
rest” after their season ends and before the next preseason begins.
During active rest a pitcher is encouraged to participate in
physical activities that do not include a great amount of overhand
throwing.
Based upon its expertise and review of existing
studies, the USA Baseball Medical & Safety Advisory Committee makes
the following recommendations for minimizing a pitcher’s risk of future
serious arm injury and maximizing his chance of success:
-
Coaches and parents should listen and react
appropriately to a youth pitcher when he/she complains about arm pain.
A pitcher who complains or shows signs of arm pain during a
game should be removed immediately from pitching.
Parents should seek medical attention if pain is not relieved
within four days or if the pain recurs immediately the next time the
player pitches. League
officials should inform parents about this consideration.
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Pitch counts should be monitored and regulated in
youth baseball. Recommended
limits for youth pitchers are as follows:
-
Recommended limits for 9-10 year old pitchers:
-
50 pitches per game
-
75 pitches per week
-
1000 pitches per season
-
2000 pitches per year
-
Recommended limits for 11-12 year old pitchers:
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75 pitches per game
-
100 pitches per week
-
1000 pitches per season
-
3000 pitches per year
-
Recommended limits for 13-14 year old pitchers:
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75 pitches per game
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125 pitches per week
-
1000 pitches per season
-
3000 pitches per year
Pitch count limits pertain to pitches thrown in
games only. These limits
do not include throws from other positions, instructional pitching
during practice sessions, and throwing drills, which are important for
the development of technique and strength.
Backyard pitching practice after a pitched game is strongly
discouraged.
-
The risk of throwing breaking pitches until
physical maturity requires further research but throwing curves and
sliders, particularly with poor mechanics appears to increase the risk
of injury.
-
Pitchers should develop proper mechanics as early
as possible and include more year-round physical conditioning as their
body develops.
-
A Pitcher should be prohibited from returning to
the mound in a game once he/she has been removed as the pitcher.
-
Baseball players – especially pitchers - are
discouraged from participating in showcases due to the risk of injury.
The importance of “showcases” should be de-emphasized, and
at the least, pitchers should be permitted time to appropriately
prepare.
-
Baseball pitchers are discouraged from pitching
for more than one team in a given season.
Baseball pitchers should compete in baseball no
more than nine months in any given year, as periodization is needed to
give the pitcher’s body time to rest and recover.
For at least three months a year, a baseball pitcher should not
play any baseball, participate in throwing drills, or participate in other
stressful overhead activities (javelin throwing, football quarterback,
softball, competitive swimming, etc.).
Andrews JR, Chmielewski T, Escamilla RF, Fleisig
GS, Wilk KE. Conditioning
program for professional baseball pitchers.
American Sports Medicine Institute, Birmingham, AL, 1997.
Andrews JR, Fleisig GS.
How many pitches should I allow my child to throw?
USA Baseball News April, 1996
Fleisig GS, Barrentine SW, Zheng N, Escamilla RF,
Andrews JR. Kinematic and
kinetic comparison of baseball pitching among various levels of
development. Journal of
Biomechanics 32(12):1371-1375, 1999.
Lyman S, Fleisig GS, Andrews JR, Osinski ED.
Effect of pitch type, pitch count, and pitching mechanics on risk
of elbow and shoulder pain in youth baseball pitchers.
The American Journal of Sports Medicine 30(4):463-468, 2002.
Additional publications and research findings
available at www.asmi.org.
 
Copyright © 1997, American Sports Medicine Institute
May 01, 2007
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