As anyone who reads my posts regularly surely knows, I've
devoted a significant portion of my life to figuring out how to help young
athletes become faster, stronger, more durable and how to make guys throw
baseballs faster. Sure, having a
great change-up and a filthy curveball is nice, but let's be honest: throwing
gas is what gets scouts' attention and earns you fame, fortune, scholarships,
and, of course, intimidation on the mound.
However, my interest in velocity isn't just limited to how
to get to "X" miles per hour; it also extends to understanding how to
stay (or improve upon) "X" miles per hour over the course of a single
appearance, season, or career while staying healthy and developing the rest of
one's pitching arsenal. Erratic
radar gun readings are as much a problem as "insufficient" radar gun
readings.
My foremost observation on this front has been that velocity
is much more erratic in high-level teenagers than any other population. I've
had loads of high school guys top the 85mph mark over the years, so we've built
up a good sample size to consider.
While some of these guys are quite consistent, I find that they tend to
have more 4-6 mph drop-offs here and there than any other population with which
I've worked. A guy that is 84-87
on one day might come back at 75-81 five days later - seemingly out of the
blue.
However, I don't think it's just a random occurrence. Rather, in my experience, EVERY single
time it happens, it's because he has let his body weight drop - usually due to
being on the road for games and not packing enough food. We see it all the time in kids who
throw great up in Michigan, but then head down South for tournaments. All of a sudden, they are living out of
hotels and eating out of restaurants multiple times per day - which certainly
isn't going to be as conducive to maintaining body weight as
"grazing" around the house and chowing down on Mom's home-cooking
multiple times per day. To make
matters worse, a lot of kids lose their appetites when they get out in the heat
- and not many people from across the country are prepared for the weather in
Georgia or South Carolina in July.
So, insufficient caloric intake becomes completely inadequate caloric
intake - and that's not exactly a recipe for throwing the baseball faster.
Beyond just the body weight factor, though, you also have to
look at the fact that the advanced teenage pitchers are generally also the best
athletes - so their coaches almost always have them out in the outfield or at
SS/3B when they aren't pitching. Playing a position interferes with a solid throwing program
and just doesn't give a kid a chance to rest. There are more calories burned,
too!
What's interesting, though, is that kids who don't throw as
hard - say, 70-79 - never have variability in their velocity readings; they are
super consistent. Why? Well, for
one, they usually aren't quite good enough to get on travel teams and in
competitive scenarios that would require them to have to consciously consider
how to maintain their weight.
Rather, its Mom's home-cooking all the time - so it's easier to maintain
their weight. And, they may not be
talented enough to be able to play other positions when they aren't pitching.
This difference is really interesting because both
populations - independent of strength and conditioning - are at ages where
their bodies are changing and (presumably) getting heavier naturally as they go
through puberty and gain muscle mass.
This rarely applies to anyone who has pitched in the
professional ranks for more than a year or two. You never see a professional pitcher go out and throw 5-7mph
slower than normal unless he is hurt or coming back on very short rest. These guys have found their "set
points," and have learned over the years how to get in enough calories
when on the road (out on their own means cooking for themselves, plus eating
whatever their clubhouse dues gets them at the park). Plus, they aren't playing the field.
All that said, regardless of your age, experience level, and
current velocity, don't skimp on calories. If you look at every bit of research on the pitching motion,
body weight predicts pitching velocity. If you're on the road, make sure you
pack some shakes, trail mix, bars, fruit, nuts, jerky, or whatever other
convenience food helps you to get in the calories you need to light up the
radar gun.
In summary if you are looking to maximize your throwing
velocity specifically or more generally improve overall sport performance
quality nutrition is low-hanging fruit for all athletes. If you are putting in
a lot of effort and time into developing your body and sport specific skills it
would be a shame if you consistently put yourself behind the 8-Ball by
neglecting how to feed your body. In sport, especially baseball there is
plenty that lies outside of your control. Nutrition is without a doubt one of
the few variables you can control and those that figure it our early will
provide themselves with A HUGE competitive advantage.
This is just one of the many “details” that separates Physical
Preparation for Baseball from other performance programs. It doesn't just help you develop your athleticism
and sport specific skills; it helps you with strategies to make getting in
enough quality calories conveniently when you may be pinched for time or
kitchen access.
Stay tuned for updates on our Select Preparation for
Baseball program, the complete solution for the baseball athlete.
I don't know how this can make any sense to you. Pitchers tire on the road because they are at tournaments where schedules tend to be much more condensed. They are getting tired because they are over-used, not because of what they eat or do not eat.
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