- Posts: 1458
- Joined: Wed Dec 26, 2012 1:51 am
Part of me is tempted to go with the injuries not being diagnosed.
But wouldn't that mean a lot of pitchers pitching with blown out elbows? And if pitching with a tear is so difficult surgery is needed how could so many pitchers do so well that it was deemed the mound had to be lowered because they were pitching too well. Something seems off about that picture.
Occasionally I think maybe the injuries just happened and the guys disappeared and we never heard about them. But seems like there should have been enough that had begun promising careers getting their careers ended it should be documentable.
That leaves the possibility you mention that the lower hill produces more stress and leads to more injuries. If there is a connection should that not be a solid reason for raising it back up again?
But how are we to objectively know? Here is an idea. Raise it only in the AL. Pitchers there have the disadvantage of having to face the DH so they deserve a break. Then in a few years we will have a reasonable body of evidence to say objectively whether it made a difference in reducing injuries.