bdutts
- Houston, Texas
This is an interesting point. Back in the 70s and 80s, guys weren't on pitch counts and there were four man rotations and there weren't really closers, at least in the same way there are closers now. So it wasn't out of the question that a guy would pitch 130 pitches in a game then go out there in four days and do it again. I realize that there is more crazy movement and pitches these days. I also know that maximum velocity and maximum spin rate are king. I wonder if there is or has been a study comparing the velocity and spin rates of the 70s and 80s to today and then correlate that back to injuries.If an organization can figure out how to keep their pitchers relatively healthy whether it be with conditioning, usage, how they throw, etc., it will have a huge advantage.
Is pitching 180 innings with more torque on the elbow and shoulder worse than pitching 300 innings with less torque? In thinking about it, would seem like less innings and five man rotations would result in less injuries but the eye test suggests otherwise. Maybe this year is an outlier, not sure. But it's an interesting discussion for sure.