Baseball has an overengineering problem and pitchers are dropping like flies
Many of MLB's most talented stars are falling to injury as their elbows buckle under the stress of throwing max-effort on nearly every pitch
Be warned: by the time you finish reading this piece, yet another Major League Baseball pitcher may have gone down with a significant arm injury. Unlikely? Well, consider this: just as I began jotting down this piece, news came in that 26-year-old Nationals hurler Josiah Gray is out for who knows how long with a right forearm/flexor strain. A little later we learned that Red Sox pitcher Nick Pivetta landed on the shelf with a similar injury. They join the ever-expanding list of baseball's injured pitching stock: Gerrit Cole, Spencer Strider and Shane Bieber are just a few of the big names who have made cross-country trips getting their MRIs evaluated and their arms examined.
Of course, we all want to know exactly why this is happening. Of course, it's hard to nail it down. And yes, there's lot's of competing theories out there, including some from a pair of the oldest rivals in the sport: players and owners.
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