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Baseball
Related: About this forumJust a thought. Do catchers get arm trouble? They throw the ball...
as much as the pitchers do, even more since they usually play the whole game and don't come out for closers or middle relief guys.

Hugh_Lebowski
(33,643 posts)most of the stress comes from I have to imagine. I have a buddy who's a former MLB pitcher, I'll ask next time we chat
redwitch
(15,180 posts)I dont know how catchers last so long!
CanonRay
(15,532 posts)They throw a lot, but they squat a couple hundred times a game.
brush
(61,012 posts)rurallib
(64,070 posts)The likes of Yogi Berra and Johnny Bench have had to learn new positions because of their knees.
The few I can think of that tasted most of a career at catcher were Carlton Fisk, Ivan Rodriguez and currently Yadier Molina. And I am probably wrong about them.
kairos12
(13,388 posts)Most arm troubles comes from the different action placed on the ball by the pitcher, and most especially, throwing from a mound.
The mound is an elbow killer.
Ex-pitcher here.
brush
(61,012 posts)college softball help?
kairos12
(13,388 posts)The action and force placed on the arm from moving from an elevated position is quite unnatural. That is one reason, as you noted, softball pitchers do not have the same problems and can pitch on consecutive days.
One thing Ive noticed is classic drop and drive pitchers like Seaver, Ryan, and Clemens seem to have fewer arm problems. If you look at their motions their left knees are practically touching the ground when they release the ball. That seems to leave their arms on a flatter trajectory relative to mound height which might lead to less arm strain. Just my thoughts.
malthaussen
(18,281 posts)Catchers don't throw curves.
-- Mal