anonlooker wrote:Not only will you get more PITCHER PARENTS, you will get more pitchers. A lot more pitchers.
I understand limiting innings pitched per day, but what about practice time? That has to figure significantly into overuse and repetitive motion injuries. Can you regulate that?
If a kid can only pitch 7 innings per day, and you have tournaments with 5 loser bracket games in a day, teams will have to carry 5 or more pitchers. That's probably about double what most teams have now. The demand for pitchers, already at a premium, will skyrocket.
In order to become an effective pitcher, with less game time available, kids will have to train even more than they already do.
Good pitching instructors will be swamped. The door will be open for marginally qualified and unscrupulous instructors, leading to poor training, poor mechanics, and increased incidence of injury.
You would also increase the risk of injury from batted balls. Untrained pitchers will make more mistakes, leading to more come backers, etc.
Additionally, ASA can mandate anything they want, but in SoCal and other parts of the country, there is very little ASA ball being played.
Finally, I find it hard to believe LL pitchers don't get injuries. Who limits practice time, or innings during non-LL play? Don't these kids also play travel ball? Does LL govern every tournamant in the country? Did Henry Owen get as good as he is pitching one game twice a week, and practicing for 20 minutes a day? I don't know, but I'm inclined to doubt it.
Limiting innings might be a start, but it's not a complete solution. And doesn't even begin to address what the college coaches are looking for from prospective pitchers. As long as that carrot is being dangled, and only the best are getting full rides, kids (and their parents) will continue to overdo it. And under this plan, there will be a lot more of them.
Feel free to let me know what I'm missing here.
Our young boy pitchers don't practice incessantly, do they? Why does it work for them, but not our little darlings?
There would be no increase in demand for pitchers, there would be a reduction in the the amount of teams....like baseball.
In the end, who gives a shit what a college coach wants, but I'm betting that they would like to see healthy pitchers throwing against high level hitters. That is exactly what would happen.



























