In the News
As published in USA Today, October 21, 2004.
Motion Researchers Want to Know What Throws Pitchers
By William Hathaway, The Hartford Courant
As 14-year-old pitcher Michael Spracklin of Farmington winds up, he
has more television cameras trained on him than Barry Bonds at the
All-Star game.
Researchers at the Center for Motion Analysis at Connecticut
Children's Medical Center in Hartford hope that what they learn by
analyzing the moves of Spracklin and other young baseball pitchers will
keep their young arms healthy enough to face down the next generation of
sluggers.
Studies of young pitchers are desperately needed because more and
more of them are showing up at doctors' offices with damaged shoulders
and elbows, said Dr. Carl Nissen, an orthopedic surgeon at the
University of Connecticut who is conducting a study of young pitchers at
the children's hospital.
"It's an epidemic," said Nissen, who has performed surgeries on at
least a dozen young pitchers' elbows in just the past half-year.
Nissen and other researchers are using imaging technology to find out
exactly what goes wrong with young pitchers' arms.
The most common explanation for arm injuries is that young pitchers
play too many innings and throw too many pitches such as curve balls and
sliders that put too much strain on their underdeveloped bodies.
Though those explanations may turn out to be correct, "the reality is
that it is almost all folklore," with few scientific studies to support
the conclusions, Nissen said.
Already, motion analysis of five young pitchers in a pilot study has
challenged at least one long-held Little League canon - that the curve
ball puts undue strain on a young child's arm and shouldn't be thrown
until at least puberty.
Nissen said detailed motion analysis of Spracklin and other young
pitchers shows that, when properly thrown, the "12-6" curve ball - one
thrown straight overhand with a snapping motion of the wrist - generates
less force on the arm than a fastball, the stock pitch of pitchers of
all ages.
But at least one study has found that pitchers using curve balls and
sliders when young experience more arm problems.
"That's very clear," said Glenn S. Fleisig, chairman of research at
the American Sports Medicine Institute in Birmingham, Ala., a leader in
the field of pitching mechanics.
Though Fleisig's own motion studies have shown that the curve ball
exerts about the same force on the arm as a fastball, it demands the use
of a different set of muscles than a fastball, and that can generate arm
pain, Fleisig said.
Fleisig, Nissen and other experts do agree that throwing an excessive
number of innings is probably the chief cause of arm problems in young
players and that extended seasons of six months, nine months or even
all-year participation in organized baseball are taking a serious toll
on young arms.
Old-time professional pitchers may have been able to throw a high
number of innings later in life because they did not play organized
baseball on a year-round basis, Nissen and Fleisig suggest.
Nissen said more scientific study is needed to confirm common wisdom
- or to debunk it.
What happens to a fatigued arm is just one question the Center for
Motion Analysis wants to answer with its sophisticated imaging
technology.
When the young pitcher throws with motion sensors attached to his
body, images from a dozen cameras translate data from the sensors into
digital images - which show up as a mobile, three-dimensional
green-tinged skeleton on a computer screen.
Nissen, along with Slyvia Ounpuu, director of the motion center, and
other researchers then can examine from many angles the complex set of
movements that make up a single pitch, picking up movements that are
invisible even to the most well-trained pitching coach.
"We really don't know exactly how kids actually pitch," said Ounpuu,
who says the center wants to conduct more research on young pitchers.
Pitching mechanics in adults have been well-studied, especially in an
era when top major-league pitchers can demand annual salaries in excess
of $10 million, but young pitchers have not been extensively examined,
she said.
For instance, experts say that youngsters often get hurt because they
fail to use the lower part of their body to generate power in their
pitches and instead rely solely on their arms.
And carefully studying pitching mechanics may help coaches find new
ways to prevent injuries to youngsters, she said.
For now, coaches and parents should take precautions to protect young
pitchers from injuries - and from their sometimes pushy parents.
"If he says his arm is tired, don't blow him off as a little kid,"
Fleisig said. "Take it seriously."
Bill Spracklin said he carefully monitors his son Michael's innings
throughout the year and often talks to his coaches about his workload.
And, Nissen says, parents who envision their child throwing at Fenway
Park or Yankee Stadium someday should realize that an elbow operation
resulting from overuse can end that dream quickly.
"They are never the same," he said. |