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HSBBWeb Old Timer
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That is really a shame! I am against players under 14 throwing curveballs. I think it is out of the norm in most cases at this age. A good fastball combined with a good change up should be all a pitcher needs at this level. Most of these kids are probably really throwing a slider, which I have read is even worse for arms that have not matured. these coaches should be banned from baseball ... and where are the parents? Letting their kids possibly injure their arms for a plastic trophy
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| Posts: 1060 | Location: NJ | Registered: December 29, 2002 |    |
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HSBBWeb Old Timer

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At the LL level holding the fastball in varied positions can make it do different things BUT the key at LL is to learn control,location and poise on the mound There is no need for any other pitch than a fastball with control
TRhit
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| Posts: 19231 | Location: Manchester, CT USA | Registered: December 26, 2002 |    |
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Member
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I can only speak for here in Florida, but there are some pretty amazing 11:U's pitchers. And yes, they throw curveballs, sliders, knuckle curves, knuckle balls! I'm not a Dr. (nor did I stay at a Holiday Inn Express) so I won't comment on the effect on the arm, but I will tell you the comp teams are very very serious about their baseball...even at the 11:U level. It is no place for the faint hearted because these kids and coaches teach like it's high school. Also, I will say this, for the most part, the Coaches are pretty good. These aren't Little League coaches trying to relive their glory years. These are (for the most part) professional coaches and they know the game and how to develop the players.
What does that mean for the 11u arm? Let the debate begin.....
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| Posts: 85 | Location: Merritt Island, Florida | Registered: March 24, 2007 |    |
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HSBBWeb Old Timer
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What a shame! No Holiday Inn Express!!?? Don't get around much eh?  Overhand fastballs put so much stress on the elbow and shoulder, is there some way kids could play without throwing overhand until they're fully mature?
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| Posts: 646 | Location: Ohio | Registered: February 04, 2006 |    |
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Member

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quote: Originally posted by Yankeelvr: Most of the kids looked to be throwing real gosh honest pull it CB's and in most cases didn't have much of a FB. FWIW, the coaches of these teams seemed to be writing the "how not to" manual. Really lighting into the players for each and every mis-step, over-the-top cheering, contesting any remotely close call. It really wasn't hard to see who these games were most important to...
While I wholeheartedly agree with yankee (and I've seen plenty of youth coaches exactly like these) there are also parents who are complicit in this mentality. I've had 12 year old kids whose dads thought I was the reincarnation of Hitler when I discouraged curves in favor of working on a changeup. It was obvious that these parents spent a bunch of time teaching their kid how to throw curves and even sliders at the expense of developing a good fastball and change. One kid really stands out, pre-season his dad talked up what a phenomenal pitcher the kid is, and that he threw a curve, slider, knuckle curve, splitter, and cut-fastball. Yeah, the kid threw all of those, but his mechanics were so horrible he could rarely find the strike zone.
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| Posts: 392 | Location: Georgia | Registered: May 26, 2005 |    |
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HSBBWeb Old Timer

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Teams throw curves at young ages because they discover that it helps them win. If winning is what you're after, by all means, put your son's arm at risk and let 'er rip.
When your kid is 15, though, no one will care who he beat when he was 11. Just thought you'd like to know.
People WILL care if he developed his fastball's velocity and command. And they will care if he stayed healthy or if he has a history of arm trouble.
You'll see a bunch of curves at the Little League World Series this August, just like every year. For most of those kids, that's the peak of their baseball careers, so I can't begrudge them trying to win it all when they have their one shot at glory.
But if you're not one of those handful of kids, and you're just playing your standard travel tourneys, what are you doing it for? If it's for development of your son's talent for the future, then throwing all those curves right now is destroying the future you claim to be trying to build.
I can't tell you how many bragging dads I used to hear talking about their stud son and all his K's when the boy was 11, who now wonder why he can't throw 80 in high school. The coach is a jerk, he doesn't appreciate him, it's all politics, yada yada yada. Lots of excuses, no accountability.
If you're serious about a future in baseball, prohibit your son from throwing curves until he's at least 14, and insist that he be removed from games if you catch him doing it anyway.
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| Posts: 2479 | Location: Virginia | Registered: February 01, 2006 |    |
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Member
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quote: Most of the guys I know who have had arm injury are catchers and FB pitchers
Exactly! My kid is a catcher and did not pitch. I felt sorry for those 11 year old kids that were pitching 100-120 pitches per game not realizing my kid was throwing more than they were. In 12/06, he threw down to 2nd to end a practice and...pop. He torn his ulnar tendon (I guess its called LL elbow). I just didn't think about how much catcher's throw but I do now and I treat my kids arm like a pitchers. P.S. The story ends well. After being in a cast for 4 weeks and taking another 4 weeks to loosen it up and get strength back, he is as good as new. In fact, his arm is even stronger because he started arm excercises as part of rehab which he never did before.
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| Posts: 85 | Location: Merritt Island, Florida | Registered: March 24, 2007 |    |
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quote: Originally posted by Lesterclan: I can only speak for here in Florida, but there are some pretty amazing 11:U's pitchers. And yes, they throw curveballs, sliders, knuckle curves, knuckle balls! I'm not a Dr. (nor did I stay at a Holiday Inn Express) so I won't comment on the effect on the arm, but I will tell you the comp teams are very very serious about their baseball...even at the 11:U level. It is no place for the faint hearted because these kids and coaches teach like it's high school. Also, I will say this, for the most part, the Coaches are pretty good. These aren't Little League coaches trying to relive their glory years. These are (for the most part) professional coaches and they know the game and how to develop the players.
What does that mean for the 11u arm? Let the debate begin.....
Not quite sure how this makes them GOOD? They win? At U11? With young arms throwing what, 6 different pitches? Come on. Professional coaches? Are they getting paid? Lord, I hope not. If they are that serious about winning at that age with no reguard for their players futures they are exactly "Little League coaches trying to relive their glory years." Taking the best players in the league, putting them on one team, and then having a win at all costs philosophy does not make you a professional coach in that age group.
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| Posts: 68 | Location: Oak Lawn Illinois | Registered: May 14, 2007 |    |
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