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Arm Health For Pitchers.

By: eteamz

One of the most important responsibilities of a youth baseball manager is proper arm care. Especially at the early stages of a baseball season, a manager must have a plan with regard to pitch counts and arm health.

Daily and Monthly Pitch Counts

It is not the number of innings pitched which matters most. Instead, the number of pitches thrown is most relevant to significant arm health. Pitches should be counted at all times, with the manager holding strictly to a pitch limit - both per day and per week. This ensures that no young arms are compromised for the sake of winning a youth league baseball game.

Often times, leagues set guidelines to assist in monitoring athletes' throwing levels. Develop several pitchers and their arm strength, to help distribute the pitch load.

Season Plan

One of the most frustrating aspects of managing a baseball team is the topic of sore arms. Typically, sore arms are not medically serious. Instead, it is a young arm getting in shape, much like the lungs or legs of a middle aged runner after taking a considerable amount of time away from jogging. A young arm is like any other muscle in the body, it must be worked into shape at the beginning of a season. Regardless of age, size or athletic ability, a plan must be set in place to ensure that the arm has ample time to build strength and endurance.

This can be safely achieved with a simple plan. Several weeks before the first game of the season, set up a schedule designed to "ramp up" your athletes' pitch count levels. Use an increasing scale to bring arm strength from "out of shape" to "game ready" in this time. An example of pitch counts (thrown in practice bullpen sessions) follows below:

Day 1 - 25 pitches

Day 5 - 28 pitches

Day 9 - 31 pitches

Day 13 - 34 pitches

Day 17 - 37 pitches

Day 21 - 40 pitches

This does not mean, however, that a pitcher needs to be ready to throw 60 pitches on Opening Day. Instead, plan on working through a long-term schedule that will have your pitchers peaking near the later stages of league play. With a plan in place, your athletes will be safely ready to throw 50 - 55 pitches by the second or third week of competition.

This way, as other arms are growing tired from the rigors of a 20 - 30 game schedule, the arms of your pitchers are growing stronger and showing no signs of slowing down. Remember, each pitcher should still be held to strict daily and weekly pitch counts.

posted by Admin  August 4, 2008   [flag this topic]
Great time to renew this topic. Our son pitched from the age of 10 to the age of 22 and had to leave baseball with a bad shoulder. There are so many reasons to respect the guidelines listed above. You can also help youth athletes by keeping inflammation down to a minimum by keeping cellular health at a maximum. To find out how, visit my website at www.candacelea.maxgxl.com or Google "glutathione and inflammation." I wish this had been available when our son was in baseball. It might have saved his arm.
posted on  February 25, 2010 at 11:04 am by Max4Candace
the best thing to keep your arm healthy is to long toss. When you get to the high school level of play, it is key that you long toss and stretch it out. its great for arm strength and for sore arms. Also it is key to run for 15 counting minutes with alot of sprints. Icing your arm is great too along with tube exercises.

Heres what i do on a regular basis.

2 warmup poles
Stretching(hold every stretch for 30 seconds)
Throwing(On days i know im pitching i go out to 120 feet, and days im not pitching 150 feet. on my off days ill extend it to 200+ feet)
Running(I do 12 poles with 20 ab exercises at every pole then 24 sprints)
Tubing/Ice.
posted on  April 19, 2011 at 9:41 am by Chasekyriacou09