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General  | General | 12/20/2024

Wolforth Throwing Mentorship: Article 46

The Growing Threat to Youth Baseball:  

Understanding the Problem and Protecting Our Athletes 

Part I 

 

 

In 2010, I wrote an article titled “The Perfect Storm.” At the time, I could not have foreseen just how prescient those observations would become 15 years later. Today, our baseball community faces a critical crossroads. Without swift and intentional changes, this epidemic of injuries among young athletes will only worsen, potentially altering the game we love forever.
Our players are depending on us to get this right.
However, before we chart a healthier, more sustainable path forward, we must first examine the conditions that led us here. Only by understanding the root causes can we begin to repair the damage.
In “The Perfect Storm,” I highlighted how several seemingly unrelated factors were converging to create a crisis in the health and longevity of young pitchers. Let’s revisit those factors, now amplified in scale and impact.
The Factors Fueling a Youth Baseball Crisis
Velocity Obsession
Over the past 20 years, the spotlight on pitching velocity has intensified to unprecedented levels. More than ever, young athletes measure their velocity against their peers, chasing higher numbers to gain a competitive edge. This fixation on speed begins earlier and earlier, often before foundational skills are properly developed.
High-intensity Repetition Without Volume For many young pitchers, throwing is limited to high-effort repetitions during private lessons or games. Practices are infrequent, and consistent, low- to moderate-intensity throwing—essential for building healthy, resilient arms—is almost nonexistent. Instead, pitchers are frequently pushed to their limits, creating microtrauma and increasing the risk of injury.
Inadequate Throwing Foundations Building a durable arm requires time, patience, and systematic progression… Yet many athletes—focused on preserving themselves for high-intensity outings—neglect the gradual, longer ramp-up needed for sustainable health. This lack of foundational development often leads to physical flaws, constraints, limitations, and inefficiencies and, therefore, adds vulnerability to injury.
Mechanical Inefficiency As I have articulated multiple times over my 45+ postings on the PG website, having body segments (primarily for pitchers, it is arms and legs) working out of sequence, out of synergy, and/or from biomechanically less sound positioning is both a common and profound contributor to arm discomfort and pain.
Extended and Intense Seasons Young pitchers are now competing in longer, more grueling seasons, often playing 60-90 games annually, even at 12-16 years of age. Many simultaneously participate in multiple leagues and teams, exposing their arms to additional strain. Today’s tournaments—designed for maximum competition—naturally involve more games, face better competition, and are far more challenging to navigate from a stress management and recovery perspective.
Overuse Due to Smaller Roster To appease parents, travel teams often reduce roster sizes to ensure ample playing time. While this may limit complaints, it frequently overextends pitchers, especially during the final games of multi-day tournaments. Pitchers may try to mitigate this by throwing multiple short outings across consecutive days, but without question, this choice compromises recovery and increases injury risk.
Decline In Physical Preparedness Beyond baseball, societal shifts have reduced physical activity for young athletes. Recess and PE programs are disappearing from schools, while free play and outdoor activities have been replaced by screen time. Many athletes lack basic motor skills like skipping, bounding, or climbing… Skills that once built agility, coordination, and mobility.
Misguided Strength Training In the weight room, the focus has shifted toward size, mass, and power at the expense of agility, strength, balance, motor control, and mobility. This imbalance creates athletes who are strong but lack the functional coordination and structural alignment necessary for healthy throwing movement.
The “Rest Equals Recovery” Myth Many health professionals recommend complete shutdowns from throwing for extended periods, assuming this prevents injury. However, prolonged inactivity often leads to atrophy and leaves athletes unprepared for the demands of competition. True recovery requires thoughtful, active reconditioning that balances recuperation with preparation.
For instance, if a pitcher stops throwing in October, November, and December but starts competing in February, their soft tissue is unlikely to be adequately prepared for game stress. This drastically increases the risk of injury. In fact, the steepness of the ramp-up (the process of going from rest to competition) is one of the primary predictors of injury.
The Result: A Youth Baseball Epidemic
The effects of this “perfect storm” are alarming. Research from the Mayo Clinic and other institutions confirms a sharp rise in UCL (ulnar collateral ligament) surgeries, particularly among athletes aged 15–19. What was once a rare procedure for professionals is now commonplace for high school players.
We've seen this trend firsthand among our professional peers nationwide and at the Texas Baseball Ranch®. Injury rates are accelerating at a staggering pace with no signs of slowing down.
Why We Must Act Now
This crisis didn’t emerge overnight. It’s the result of years of systemic issues that have compounded over time. Yet, many in the baseball community remain too focused on competition and immediate results to recognize the growing threat.
But we must recognize it. Our young athletes are paying the price for our collective oversight. If we fail to address these issues, we risk not only their health but the future of the sport itself.
In Part II, I’ll share actionable strategies to reverse this trend and safeguard the next generation of pitchers. It’s time to steer this ship back on course. Our athletes deserve nothing less.

Coach Ron 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 579 pitchers break the 90 mph barrier, 208 have toped 94mph or better, and 135 of his 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 professional player) went 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.
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Fall/Winter Events at the Texas Baseball Ranch®
Join our 3-Day “Elite Pitcher’s Boot Camps”, designed for pitchers aged 12 and above. There are two dates remaining, January 18-20 (MLK weekend) & February 15-17 (Presidents Day weekend) For additional details, visit: https://www.texasbaseballranch.com/elite-pitchers-bootcamp/
Interested in learning what sets our boot camps apart? Request our comprehensive information package “What Makes This Bootcamp Different?" by emailing Jill@TexasBaseballRanch.com
Do you live in the north Houston area?  Then the Texas Baseball Ranch’s night classes could be a great fit for you. For more information, call (936) 588-6762 or email info@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...
Tournaments | Championship | 7/14/2026

SBA Bolts National Raise Trophy at 16u

Will Dembo
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After an action-packed week at the 16u WWBA Championships, the tournament came down to two of the nation’s top teams battling for one of travel baseball’s most prestigious titles. No. 5 ranked SBA Bolts National faced No. 60 Alpha Prime 2028 after both teams reached the championship undefeated, but the SBA Bolts were the sole team to exit without a loss, defeating Alpha Prime 10-2 in mercy rule fashion and capture the national title behind dominant pitching and explosive offensive performances. The SBA Bolts were perfect throughout their week, running the table and going 11-0 while outscoring their opponents by an impressive margin of 108-25. “It was awesome,” SBA Head Coach Travis Thompson said on the mercy rule victory. “It just kind of culminated our week. It's been a long week. I can't even remember our first game, which felt like three weeks ago. The...
Tournaments | Story | 7/14/2026

Coastal Region Scout Notes

Perfect Game Staff
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Ridge Whitfield (2029, Charlotte, NC) stands at 6-foot, 158 pounds with an athletic build that should allow him to maintain his mobility and quick-twitch actions as he continues to develop. He bats and throws left-handed. Whitfield locates his fastball to both sides of the plate, mixes his pitches effectively, and keeps hitters off balance. He competes on every pitch and doesn’t back down in big situations. Whitfield threw 5.1 innings, allowing three hits, one earned run, and no walks while striking out three on 75 pitches (58% strikes). He attacked the zone with a fastball that sat 73 mph and topped out at 78 mph, mixing in a 67 mph breaking ball and a 68-70 mph changeup to keep hitters off balance. Sam Jobe (2029, Charlotte, NC) stands at 6-foot-1, 175 pounds, with a lean, athletic frame and plenty of projection. He bats and throws right-handed. Jobe shows good feel for the...
Tournaments | Story | 7/14/2026

14u & 17u West Scout Notes: Days 3-5

Perfect Game Staff
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14u & 17u WWBA West Scout Notes: Days 1-2 Adryan Zaragoza (‘30 | CA) turns on this one, sending it down RF line for a 2B. Finished 2-for-3 w/ 2RBI, 2R, BB. PS approach, bat speed, raw strength #WWBAWest @California_PG pic.twitter.com/V6Ctus4CX1 — Perfect Game Four Corners (@PG_FourCorners) July 13, 2026 Adryan Zaragoza (2030, Lake Elsinore, CA) The 5-foot-9, 150-pound left-handed hitter and infielder had a great weekend for ZT Select Prospects, finishing with five hits, eight runs scored, one double, one triple, six RBI, one stolen base, and two walks during the 14U WWBA West National Championships. Zaragoza consistently ignited the offense from the top of the lineup, with a disciplined approach and the ability to create scoring opportunities. He can drive the baseball into the gaps while producing in big situations, combining quality contact with aggressive baserunning....
Tournaments | Story | 7/14/2026

14u BCS Scout Note Recap

Perfect Game Staff
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Jake Karpell (2030, Holmdel, NJ) got on the barrel a couple times in game five and totaled three rbis. Started his production with a single then later on hammered a heater down the right field and flew around the bases for a three run inside the park home run. Keeps the hands inside at contact really well and got the head around on the homer. Runs well and can hit it around the yard in the approach.  Luke Sauer (2030 C, FL)  put his hit tool on display with a well-struck double, continuing to show why he is regarded as one of the top catchers in the class. Owns a big frame with present physicality and does a good job keeping the hands connected throughout the swing. The barrel works efficiently through the zone and there is a solid offensive foundation present. Currently ranked as the No. 66 catcher nationally.  Gavin Politz (2030 OF, FL) continued a strong tournament...
Tournaments | Story | 7/14/2026

15u World Series Scout Notes: Days 1-3

Perfect Game Staff
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Connor Ashley (‘29, FL) has struck out six over six no hit innings thus far. Got the FB up to 87 w/ feel for a sharp two-plane slider. #PGWS @Florida_PG pic.twitter.com/M7mEmTH8pk — Perfect Game Scout (@PG_Scouting) July 12, 2026 Connor Ashley (’29, Minneola, FL) was stellar on Sunday, striking out seven in a seven inning no hitter. He operates from a medium-to-large right-handed frame with length, room to fill, and lower half strength. Ashley works exclusively from the stretch, starting at the belt before working into a higher compact leg lift, firing down the mound via a long arm action. He releases from a high three-quarters slot, with the fastball jumping from the hand up to 87. Ashley mixed in a sharp 11-5 breaking ball with depth and late bite, a true swing-and-miss offering.  Matthew Hernandez (’29, Miami Lakes, FL) has posted strong numbers on both...
College | Story | 7/14/2026

Coppy's Corner: July 14 Summer Edition

John Coppolella
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The amateur players in the Cape Cod Baseball League are the future stars of the 2027 MLB Draft. The league runs from June 13th through August 2nd. Games are played at historic stadiums in Old New England towns. It’s beautiful and charming. Hollywood even made a movie about the Cape Cod League ~25 years ago called Summer Catch. It scored an 8% (!) on Rotten Tomatoes, but, on the plus side, it featured 2001 Jessica Biel in a starring role.  It was so much fun writing Coppy’s Column this spring. My hope is to highlight a pitcher and position player each week from the Cape. And, who knows, maybe somewhere out there Jessica Biel is reading it.    Player of the Week: Carter White – Falmouth Commodores  Talk about making a great first impression! White introduced himself in a very loud and boisterous way this past week by going 9-17 (.529 AVG) with 6 RBI...
Tournaments | Story | 7/13/2026

17u Elite Scout Notes: Days 1-2

Perfect Game Staff
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High speed look at the FF-SL-CH from '27 RHP Liam McGeady (OH)... #NatElite @PG_OhioValley @Cincy_Legends https://t.co/hhoDL7DBbi pic.twitter.com/Ts79GLPGoU — Perfect Game Scout (@PG_Scouting) July 12, 2026 Liam McGeady (2027, Liberty Township, Ohio) had the stuff working on Saturday morning, getting the start for Legends Scout 2027. The uncommitted right-hander ran it up to 91 and sat 88-90 with a full starter’s mix. All three of the secondaries played well and project moving forward. The curveball worked in the mid-70s with good depth and healthy shape. The slider operated in the 79-82 range with gyro spin and short break. McGeady rounded out the repertoire with a changeup that showed big fade and depth, proving effective versus lefties. He ended the outing going five ⅔ innings, allowing no earned runs on four hits, striking out six total. The tall and long 6-foot-5,...
Tournaments | Championship | 7/13/2026

ZT Select Takes 14u WWBA West Title

Emily Hicks
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After a week of competitive baseball, the ZT Select Prospects have been crowned the 14U WWBA National Champions, completing an impressive tournament run with a championship victory over Swarm Red Elite National 2030 with a final score of 3-1. The 14U division brought together 19 talented teams for a week of high-level competition, with players from California, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Hawaii, and Pennsylvania battling for the opportunity to compete on one of the biggest stages in youth baseball. Throughout the tournament, ZT Select Prospects showed consistency, resilience, and the ability to compete in close games. From the opening rounds of pool play to the championship matchup, the team continued to find ways to win behind strong pitching, timely hitting, and a complete team effort. In the championship game, ZT Select Prospects was led by standout performances from Jeremy Jimenez, who...
Draft | Mock Draft | 7/13/2026

2027 Mock Draft: Way Too Early Ediition

Vincent Cervino
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With the 2026 MLB Draft officially complete, let's quickly turn our eyes to the 2027 group and do a way too early mock draft. Leading the way is shortstop Brendan Lawson out of the University of Florida, setting the trend as three of the top four names all call shortstop home with Dylan Seward and Carter Hadnot. If shortstops aren't your thing for any which reason, maybe hard throwing left-handers tickle your fancy whether it be prep Connor Salerno, Tomas Valincius from Mississippi State or Dylan Volantis, a dominant arm from the University of Texas.  Pick Team Name Pos. School 1 Los Angeles Angels Brendan Lawson SS Florida 2 Kansas City Royals Dylan Seward SS Norco (Calif.) 3 Colorado Rockies Landon Hairston OF Arizona State 4 New York Mets Carter Hadnot SS Aquinas (Calif.) 5 Athletics Connor Salerno LHP Sun Valley (N.C.) 6 Cincinnati Reds Tomas Valincius LHP Mississippi State 7...
Draft | Story | 7/12/2026

2027 MLB Draft: Initial Follow List

Vincent Cervino
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With the 2026 MLB Draft in the books, our focus now shifts to a new group of players ready to take center stage as the 2027 draft cycle begins. Our initial 2027 Follow List serves as an early snapshot of the players who should draw plenty of attention over the next year. This new crop of talent features collegiate players coming off loud spring seasons, alongside prep prospects who have already flashed big upside as underclassman.  As always, this list will evolve throughout the year. Some players will continue to elevate their stock, while others will jump onto the radar and force their way into the conversation. So, without further ado, let the fun begin.  The road to the 2027 MLB Draft starts now. Name Level Pos. B-T School Hometown State Commitment Adrian Rodriguez C 3B/OF S-R Texas Flower Mound TX Aidan King C RHP L-R Florida Bryceville FL Bino Watters C OF L-L LSU...
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