Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child is a pitcher, be sure to rest his arm. Just strength training and possibly hitting until February.
There are competing thoughts on this. My kid trains with a guy that trains several D1 and MLB pitchers and the belief is that you never go 100% cold-turkey.
Start training in November with light bullpens (~70% max) at least once per week. Start ramping up to 100% in January.
If you read the information provided by Driveline and other folks, something like 90% of all pitcher arm injuries (at all levels) happen during the first month of full training. Doesn't happen as much at the MLB level (though the emphasis on crazy velocity is of course causing tons of injuries), but prior to folks like Driveline coming onto the scene, you would see tons of Spring Training arm injuries.
Around hear, working with R&D or The Bullpen (both in Sterling) are good ideas during the offseason.
But he’s not a D1/MLB pitcher. He’s much less developed and risks more. Rest your kid’s arm. Too many high schoolers going into surgery by Senior year.
He will be pitching D1 next year, though not Power 4.
The surgery and arm injuries are from throwing too many pitches at too many games during the season and the focus on crazy velocity.
Again…Driveline has made many advancements that were controversial at first and now are generally accepted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child is a pitcher, be sure to rest his arm. Just strength training and possibly hitting until February.
There are competing thoughts on this. My kid trains with a guy that trains several D1 and MLB pitchers and the belief is that you never go 100% cold-turkey.
Start training in November with light bullpens (~70% max) at least once per week. Start ramping up to 100% in January.
If you read the information provided by Driveline and other folks, something like 90% of all pitcher arm injuries (at all levels) happen during the first month of full training. Doesn't happen as much at the MLB level (though the emphasis on crazy velocity is of course causing tons of injuries), but prior to folks like Driveline coming onto the scene, you would see tons of Spring Training arm injuries.
Around hear, working with R&D or The Bullpen (both in Sterling) are good ideas during the offseason.
But he’s not a D1/MLB pitcher. He’s much less developed and risks more. Rest your kid’s arm. Too many high schoolers going into surgery by Senior year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child is a pitcher, be sure to rest his arm. Just strength training and possibly hitting until February.
There are competing thoughts on this. My kid trains with a guy that trains several D1 and MLB pitchers and the belief is that you never go 100% cold-turkey.
Start training in November with light bullpens (~70% max) at least once per week. Start ramping up to 100% in January.
If you read the information provided by Driveline and other folks, something like 90% of all pitcher arm injuries (at all levels) happen during the first month of full training. Doesn't happen as much at the MLB level (though the emphasis on crazy velocity is of course causing tons of injuries), but prior to folks like Driveline coming onto the scene, you would see tons of Spring Training arm injuries.
Around hear, working with R&D or The Bullpen (both in Sterling) are good ideas during the offseason.
But he’s not a D1/MLB pitcher. He’s much less developed and risks more. Rest your kid’s arm. Too many high schoolers going into surgery by Senior year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child is a pitcher, be sure to rest his arm. Just strength training and possibly hitting until February.
There are competing thoughts on this. My kid trains with a guy that trains several D1 and MLB pitchers and the belief is that you never go 100% cold-turkey.
Start training in November with light bullpens (~70% max) at least once per week. Start ramping up to 100% in January.
If you read the information provided by Driveline and other folks, something like 90% of all pitcher arm injuries (at all levels) happen during the first month of full training. Doesn't happen as much at the MLB level (though the emphasis on crazy velocity is of course causing tons of injuries), but prior to folks like Driveline coming onto the scene, you would see tons of Spring Training arm injuries.
Around hear, working with R&D or The Bullpen (both in Sterling) are good ideas during the offseason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child is a pitcher, be sure to rest his arm. Just strength training and possibly hitting until February.
This! DS's coach said no throwing at all until the new year.
Anonymous wrote:Our school has the boys spend the winter sports season in the weight room for 2 hours each day after school for "winter conditioning". I think they also do some batting practice during this time.
My son goes to the cages several days a week with a friend and also lifts at home another few days per week. He's been doing this all fall (did not play travel ball). He's a varsity starter and likely captain.
Anonymous wrote:Our school has the boys spend the winter sports season in the weight room for 2 hours each day after school for "winter conditioning". I think they also do some batting practice during this time.
My son goes to the cages several days a week with a friend and also lifts at home another few days per week. He's been doing this all fall (did not play travel ball). He's a varsity starter and likely captain.
Anonymous wrote:If your child is a pitcher, be sure to rest his arm. Just strength training and possibly hitting until February.
Anonymous wrote:If your child is a pitcher, be sure to rest his arm. Just strength training and possibly hitting until February.