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| 2,575 MLB PLAYERS | 16,375 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
2,575 MLB PLAYERS | 16,375 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
General  | Blog | 2/23/2023

Wolforth Throwing Mentorship: Article 27

                                                               Velocity Enhancement Is NOT a Scavenger Hunt

In my opinion, too many parents, athletes, and even coaches view velocity enhancement as a type of treasure or scavenger hunt.

“Look… I went online and I found velocity!”

“We went to our local academy, and we found the secrets to velocity!”



“We went to Texas in search of more ‘pop’ on our fastball!”

But in the quiet of our own minds, we KNOW something is amiss about this thought process.

We know deep in the logical, reasonable side of our brain that there is no quick fix, nor an instant solution to consistent, long-term, high-level performance. Elite performance is a very deliberate process. It can’t be hacked, cheated, or duped, no matter what is promised on Facebook, Twitter, or TikTok.

Certainly, good coaching and instruction can accelerate the process, but true skill development takes time. It takes intention and attention.

We KNOW in our heart that any velocity gains we make, the ones we can actually sustain over time, will require arm health and durability. Period. Full stop.

We can’t HOPE arm health happens, or somehow our soft tissue just magically STOPS “barking” when we step on the accelerator.

Arm health and durability, in our opinion, must be coveted. It must become an obsession. We must make it priority number one.

The essential element so often missed (in other words, “the elephant in the room”) that most seem to go to considerable lengths to ignore is that arm health and durability are the prerequisites to long-term success and performance.

The harsh reality that, in my opinion, many baseball coaches, parents, and players keep trying to dance around is that without a healthy and durable arm and body, high-level performance is far more difficult to obtain and literally impossible to sustain.

Yes, I wrote impossible, and I really mean impossible.

If your goal is to have a leading role on your high school or select travel team, a college scholarship, or be drafted by professional baseball, then you must be on the mound at game time, performing well, over a three to six-month period.

As they say in professional baseball, the best “ability” is “availability”. Meaning, of course, that it is profoundly important to be available to your team to perform in a game when your team needs you.

If you are not routinely available to your current team in their moments of need, why would anyone at the next level then covet your services for their organization? They, of course, need the exact same thing… A consistent, durable, reliable performer. Failing the current test does not get you a pass to the next level test.

In fact, it’s just the opposite; failing today’s test will actually often exclude you from getting chances at the next level.

The stories are now so frequent that they have actually become cliché to us here at the Ranch.

Tell me if you’ve heard this one before:

A young man gets a velocity program online or goes to a local academy for a weighted ball velocity program.

He makes some modest gains in velocity. His arm pain flairs towards the middle and/or end of the process. In fairly short order, he slowly gives back his velocity gains and/or is unable to transfer the gains to the mound at game time. However, what does persist is arm pain. So, in truth, even with months of hard work, he is further behind than when he began the process.

Ok, Coach Wolforth, that’s velocity. What about command and/or accuracy?

How does one actually get better at throwing more strikes? Well, by throwing of course. But if your arm is always tender or “cranky”, you simply can’t throw as much.

You don’t get better at command by reading a book or watching a video on Twitter or TikTok… You don’t get better by getting a 400lb squat… Or by simply firing a three-ounce or a seven-ounce ball into a wall… Or even by conforming to some mechanical ideal model espoused by a guru. You make lasting improvements by deep, deliberate, purposeful throwing. (By the way… To make any sustainable improvements in command, arm health and durability will be required. Just saying.)

What about stuff/spin/movement/deception? In other words, breaking balls and change-ups – how do you get better at throwing sharper, nastier stuff?

By throwing. See the trend?

So many young people sit in front of me for their video analysis and I ask them… Every single one of them… “Why are you here?”. They almost all say, “To gain velocity!”. And roughly 65% of the time, I look at their information in front of me and I say, “I see you have arm pain in your anterior shoulder or medial elbow at a four/five out of 10. And you’ve had to shut it down two times over the past 18 months. Is this correct?”

I then say, “If I had a magic wand and I touched the top of your head with it and ‘presto’ your arm and body generate five more miles per hour to your throw… But we changed NOTHING else… Everything else was the same… What do you think are the chances that your arm pain would go up with an added five miles per hour?”

“Would you agree with me that it’s pretty darn high?”

“Let’s say, on the other hand, I used that magic wand to take your pain away… All of it… Your arm felt absolutely amazing… And the pain would never come back. You had zero chance of UCL tear or labrum tear… Would you possibly immediately throw one to two miles per hour harder?”

“I will tell you the answer is almost ALWAYS a resounding yes, you would.”

“So now let me ask you… Where would you like me to use that magic wand? On velocity or on health and durability?”

1) I do not have a magic wand.

2) If you gained five to seven miles per hour over the next six months, but then you had Tommy John or a labrum tear, have we done you any good? Absolutely not.

3) If we really improved your arm health and durability and you gained, let’s say, two miles per hour, aren’t we now in a much better position to actually start a velocity enhancement program and safely add an additional two or three more miles per hour?

You see, we are, in fact, often chasing the wrong rabbit. We should be obsessed with creating a healthy durable arm and finding a movement pattern that has very little or no pain at high intensity.

My 25-year-old son is a AA catcher in the Diamondback organization. He has thrown a baseball 103 miles per hour and 89 miles per hour to second base. From high school through college, and through four years of pro ball, Garrett has been unavailable to play in only three games. Two because of sickness and one because he got hit by a pitch on the leg and it swelled up. He was the only position player in his AA, High A teams that was available every single game last year.

Why? I completely believe that, by making health and durability while moving at full speed your obsession, then you have your best chance at gaining and then sustaining velocity.

As a trainer and as a father, I would NEVER place my son’s remarkable and elite arm at risk for a quick hit of three to four more miles per hour. I would NEVER treat your son any differently than I would my own.

The great news is, there are far better alternatives than one-size-fits-all weighted ball velocity programs.

With the right process, everyone can gain velocity, improve their command, and enhance the effectiveness of their secondary stuff.

That’s the great news!

What I can’t tell you is how quickly or how much you will improve. It has been said that the way we view the problem is often the main problem. My heartfelt call to all of you reading this:

                                              Do not view velocity enhancement as some sort of scavenger hunt.

Instead, give it the careful and hyper-personalized attention it deserves.

Coach Wolforth is the founder of the Texas Baseball Ranch® and has written six books on pitching including the Amazon Best Seller, Pitching with Confidence. Since 2003, The Texas Baseball Ranch® has had over 543 pitchers break the 90mph barrier, 194 have topped 94mph or better, and 129 students have been drafted in the MLB’s June Amateur Draft. Coach Wolforth has consulted with 13 MLB teams, dozens of NCAA programs and has been referred to as “America’s Go-to-Guy on Pitching” and “The Pitching Coaches Pitching Coach”. Coach Wolforth lives in Montgomery, TX with his wife, Jill. They are intimately familiar with youth select, travel baseball and PG events as their son Garrett (now a catcher in the Arizona Diamondbacks organization) weWolnt through the process. Garrett still holds the PG Underclass All-American Games record for catcher velocity at 89mph which he set in 2014 at the age of 16.

Upcoming Texas Baseball Ranch® Summer Events

• 3-Day Elite Pitcher’s Boot Camps for pitchers ages 12 & up. Our first event will take place over the Memorial Day weekend and follow every other week through the Labor Day Weekend. More details and a free information package can be found at https://www.texasbaseballranch.com/elite-pitchers-bootcamp/

                                                                           To Learn More About the Texas Baseball Ranch, go to:
                                                                                            www.texasbaseballranch.com

General | Blog | 6/16/2026

Wolforth Throwing Mentorship: Article 66

Ron Wolforth
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  The Number That Just Killed MLB Expansion: 1,217   USA Today's Bob Nightengale dropped a bomb shell recently that the baseball world is still digesting. Major League Baseball wants to expand to 32 teams. Team executives are quietly opposing it and the reason has nothing to do with cities or money.   They cannot find enough healthy pitchers.   Between 2020 and 2024, professional baseball performed 1,026 Tommy John surgeries at the minor-league level alone. Another 191 at the Major League level. More than twelve hundred elbow reconstructions in five years on the best young pitchers in the world.   That is not bad luck. That is a system reporting a verdict on itself.   For fifteen years, the youth-baseball industry has chased one number: velocity significantly more than projectability and arm care.    Recruiters scout by it.    Social...
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Perfect Game Staff
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Brandon Shannon | Fr. | RHP | Louisville | Bourne Braves  The freshman right-hander possesses arguably the most electric arm on the Cape, pairing a lean, projectable frame with plenty of room to continue adding strength. Shannon worked an effortless 96-98 mph throughout the outing with premium arm speed. His mid-80s slider generates plenty of swing-and-miss, while his 92-93 mph power changeup gives him a quality third offering to neutralize left-handed hitters. After flashing premium stuff during his freshman season at Louisville, Shannon has carried that arsenal into the summer and possesses the type of arm talent to develop into a Day 1 draft prospect as he continues refining his command and overall polish.    Another look at 1B/P Josiah Overbeek (@HailStateBB) Pull side RBI single here. @BourneBraves https://t.co/YA17RJnFo8 pic.twitter.com/Jw7iDMliZG — PG College...
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Hudson Sage (’29, Houston, TX) had a strong start to his event, collecting three hits to drive in four including a pair of doubles. Sage operates from a medium right-handed frame with a mix of length and strength, displaying athleticism. He starts with a wide base, keeping the hands high and active, working into a deep inward leg load. The native Texan fires through a quick and compact barrel with accuracy and all fields impact. Defensively, Sage appeared in the outfield where he has proven to have a strong throwing arm. Cooper Holland (‘29, CA) deposits a solo homer to straightaway right. Upright setup from the left side, utilizing HH + an even base. Employs a hovering LL pre-launch. #WWBA @California_PG pic.twitter.com/RuPy6NR3oE — Perfect Game Scout (@PG_Scouting) July 17, 2026 Cooper Holland (’29, Mission Viejo, CA) collected two hits to kick off pool play,...
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Peyton Alvarez (2029, New Braunfels, Texas) put on a display for Marucci Elite TX Ramirez. Went 4-8 with two doubles. Worked strong at bats, drawing a total of six walks. Lot of deep counts, putting stress on opposing arms. Also swiped a staggering seven bases over the span of five games. Repeatable right-handed stroke with hands that work quickly through the zone. Was an absolute force at the top of the order all weekend. Jack Simms (2028, Cypress, Texas) put together a strong showing for Texas Brigade 2028 - Konarik. Went 3-9 with a double, a home run, and five runs batted in. Showed some quick hands, working through an uphill plane, playing well to the pullside. Frame has plenty more in the tank, impact should continue to develop as he fills out. Riley Thompson (2029, Leander, Texas) had another loud weekend for Test Black. 5-9 at the plate with three doubles and no strikeouts. Super...
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BCS Midwest Championship Scout Notes

Perfect Game Staff
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’29 INF Aarion Gould (IL) drives this ball deep to CF for a triple. Simple setup w/ a controlled load. Keeps the barrel in the zone w/ good extension through contact. Big day at the plate going 2-for-3 with 4 RBI. #BCSMW @WhitesoxAce pic.twitter.com/QL9jPCTAv8 — Perfect Game Illinois (@PG_Illinois) July 12, 2026 Aarion Gould (2029, Chicago, Ill.) earned Tournament MVP honors after helping lead Chicago White Sox ACE 2029 to the BCS Midwest Championship. The right-handed infielder displayed a direct swing path with quality barrel accuracy, using the middle of the field approach. Present strength was evident, producing two doubles, one triple, while hitting .444 (8-for-18) with seven RBI, three stolen bases and a 1.277 OPS. Gould also contributed on the mound, tossing 6.0 scoreless innings while allowing three hits and striking out six.   ’29 RHP Xavier Alvarez (IL)...
Tournaments | Story | 7/17/2026

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Perfect Game Staff
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’28 OF Caleb Wilson (IN) drives this fastball into the RCF gap for a double. Quick hands and bat-to-ball skills on display. Good game at the plate. Finished 2-for-3 with an RBI. #WWBAMW @TopTierBaseball @PG_OhioValley pic.twitter.com/IC5dmPojcz — Perfect Game Illinois (@PG_Illinois) July 13, 2026 Caleb Wilson (2028, Crown Point, Ind.) helped lead Top Tier Americans 2028 to the 16U WWBA Regional Championship and delivered one of the tournament's top offensive performances. The 5-foot-9, 165-pound left-handed outfielder displayed good plate discipline, a quick bat and barreled balls to all parts of the field. Plus speed also added another dimension to Wilson's game on the base paths, consistently putting pressure on opposing defenses. The Tournament MVP saw the ball extremely well, hitting .667 (14-for-21) with two triples, six RBI, four stolen bases and a 1.588 OPS. Brennen...
Tournaments | Story | 7/16/2026

17u Elite Scout Notes: Days 3-4

Perfect Game Staff
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Tournaments | Story | 7/16/2026

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The 21st annual 17U BCS National Championship brings together some of the nation’s top programs and elite 2027 prospects to Fort Myers, Florida, from July 17-21. With dozens of Division I commits and nationally ranked prospects set to compete, here are some of the players expected to make the biggest impact throughout the weekend. For Florida Burn 2027 Scout, which is currently ranked #5 nationally Florida Burn will be No. 107-ranked outfielder RJ Shields and No. 129-ranked third baseman Braedon Mackay. One of the premier two-way prospects in the tournament, Shields, brings one of the strongest arms in the field. The Venice, Florida native has run his fastball up to 95 mph while also showcasing a 98 mph throwing arm from the outfield, making him a weapon on both sides of the ball. On the mound this season, the Mississippi State commit has struck out 29 batters in 15.1 innings,...
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Emily Hicks
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After another week of summer baseball, Perfect Game action returns to Surprise Stadium as teams prepare for another exciting week of competition at the WWBA Championship. From July 14-18, some of the top programs in travel baseball will take the field looking to compete for a championship and showcase their talent against high-level competition.  The tournament will feature both the 15U and 16U divisions, bringing together talented teams and rising prospects from across the West and beyond. With several days of pool play and championship bracket action, teams will have the opportunity to test themselves against strong opponents while competing on one of the biggest stages of the summer.  Surprise Stadium will provide the setting for a week filled with competitive matchups, standout performances, and prospects looking to make an impact. From dominant pitching performances to...
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East Cobb Goes Undefeated, Takes 14U BCS Twenty years after winning the inaugural 14U BCS National Championship in 2006, the East Cobb Astros once again stood atop the tournament, defeating the Original Florida Pokers 7-4 at JetBlue Park. A hot, sunny afternoon set the stage for a tightly contested match between the Original Florida Pokers 2030 and East Cobb Astros 14U Orange. Although the Pokers had a two-run lead with just three innings to go, East Cobb showed their team had no quit as they pulled away with a 7-4 victory. The teams battled through a highly contested tournament field of over sixty teams from across the country, with the Pokers coming in 8-1 and East Cobb entering 8-0 in tournament play. Cohen Carter started on the mound for East Cobb, allowing seven hits and no walks while striking out three batters over four innings. His fastball sat 71-75 mph. Silas Anstett opened the...
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