Smoltz last pitcher to be inducted into HOF with TJ?

Knucksie

Called Up to the Major Leagues
http://www.usatoday.com/story/sport...ltz-hall-of-fame-tommy-john-surgery/29874857/

It once was a pitcher's death sentence, only for modern medicine to turn it into a career-saver, and now we have no idea what to think.

Just when we were getting conditioned to believe that a pitcher can tear his elbow ligament, undergo Tommy John surgery, resurrect his career, and pitch better than ever, we are hit with this bolt of reality.

Take a deep breath, and examine the All-Star rosters.

Pittsburgh Pirates starter A.J. Burnett, at the age of 38, and Jacob deGrom of the New York Mets, 27, are the only pitchers on either All-Star team who have ever undergone Tommy John surgery.

"To be honest,'' Smoltz told USA TODAY Sports, "I may be the last.''

Something for Beachy to consider:

New York Yankees pitcher Chris Capuano is the only two-time Tommy John patient to make more than 10 major-league starts after his second procedure.
 
On this note, here is a good article on the source of these injuries:

http://jugssports.com/what’s-the-reason-for-all-the-tommy-john-surgeries

More than 30 years ago, a pro scout saw a young baseball player pitching in a summer youth game, and the scout was impressed with what he saw. The lefthander had nice form and got the ball over the plate. He didn’t show blazing speed, but he got batters out.

The scout cornered the pitcher after the game and asked when he could see him pitch again. “Next year in the spring,” was the answer he got, “when the high school baseball season starts.” The young pitcher was also a hockey player, and he would put his baseball gear away for five months to play other sports. But he liked baseball and returned to pitching once it was baseball season.

He excelled and was eventually drafted by a pro team. He had his first official pitching lesson after he signed his first professional contract. His name was Tom Glavine. He pitched for 22 years in the big leagues with the Atlanta Braves and New York Mets, won 305 games and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2014.
 
To me it's about technique. Before I became a tennis instructor 7 years ago, I studied baseball mechanics since I was like 9.

In tennis, the serving motion is similar to a pitcher's motion and an outfielder's arm. For pros, they serve at max effort for hours. Before actual matches they practice for 2-3 hours as well. In professional tennis though, nearly every person no matter shape, size, height, etc. has the core fundamentals of a serve. Some have different windups, but the motion from where the racket starts at the base of the kinetic chain, all the way to point of contact and follow through is similar.

Serving max effort in tennis on both the first and second serve, I'm creating as much arm speed and shoulder rotation as I was when I was playing baseball. If I had played tennis at the same time or before I did baseball, I probably would've never gotten shoulder problems. I can play baseball now and my throwing mechanics are perfect now thanks to tennis.

I don't think playing baseball year round will injure kids with good technique, but I also advocate playing other sports. Soccer and basketball are excellent for footwork (outfielders tracking and moving, infielders moving side to side). Tennis and baseball for hand eye, football for throwing and HIIT. Hockey is great for balance, hand eye, and anticipation.
 
oh ****, this came out after Harts plan to rebuild with only TJ pitchers
 
Smoltz will definitely not be the last. With the number of TJ surgeries and guys who come back from it, there will definitely be multiple guys in the future who end up with a good enough career to be in the Hall.
 
Smoltz will definitely not be the last. With the number of TJ surgeries and guys who come back from it, there will definitely be multiple guys in the future who end up with a good enough career to be in the Hall.

Not so fast. First, look at the total number of pitchers currently inducted. (You will be astonished.) Then consider the other factors involved (ie longevity. Agreed though that Wainwright is on the right track, unless he goes to an early retirement. However, we can safely say that 300 wins has already become rare.
 
Not so fast. First, look at the total number of pitchers currently inducted. (You will be astonished.) Then consider the other factors involved (ie longevity. Agreed though that Wainwright is on the right track, unless he goes to an early retirement. However, we can safely say that 300 wins has already become rare.

Well, sure, 300 wins is out the window as a prerequisite for induction, though. As roles change, so do the way we evaluate players at all positions. The steroid era meant that HR aren't valued the same way they once were. Relief pitchers will start to get in at a higher rate.

Regardless of how many innings starters are throwing, the best will still get into the HOF. And there will continue to be fewer and fewer starters who haven't had TJ. It's inevitable that guys who have had TJ will start getting in.
 
Well, sure, 300 wins is out the window as a prerequisite for induction, though. As roles change, so do the way we evaluate players at all positions.

It's how voters evaluate that counts. Here's the complete list of pitchers, who are inductees:

http://www.baseball-almanac.com/hof/hofstpi.shtml

As said before, it's the Hall of Fame, not the Hall of Very Good. So, when Mussina & Halladay don't get in, that doesn't bode well for marginal candidates.

The steroid era meant that HR aren't valued the same way they once were.

Of course not. They're not letting McGwire, Sosa, Bonds, Clemens, etc. get anywhere near the place.

Relief pitchers will start to get in at a higher rate.

Right now, you have Goose Gossage, Bruce Sutter, Dennis Eckersley (he's not in for being starter) and Rollie Fingers. No Lee Smith. Probably a few recent names like Trevor Hoffman, Mariano Rivera and maybe our buddy, Wagner, but there will not be a flood.

Regardless of how many innings starters are throwing, the best will still get into the HOF. And there will continue to be fewer and fewer starters who haven't had TJ. It's inevitable that guys who have had TJ will start getting in.

Smoltz is a pretty articulate guy and is obviously following the game now. Please read the article, if you haven't already to see what he said. His induction speech is going to be GREAT, based on his comments, regarding this subject.

For current pitchers, Clayton Kershaw is about a sure thing and Hernandez maybe Verlander with a few others at least in the discussion (Sabathia, possibly). With TJ happening at earlier stages of careers, pitchers will break down sooner, and not have the longevity that the BBWA want to see for consideration. That's Smoltz's point. He knows of what he says.
 
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