The Arm

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Authors: Jeff Passan

BOOK: The Arm
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DEDICATION

FOR RICH, WHO GAVE ME THE BUG.

PROLOGUE

F
OR 130 YEARS, PITCHERS HAVE
thrown a baseball overhand, and for 130 years, doing so has hurt them. Starter or reliever, left-handed or right-handed, short or tall, skinny or fat, soft-tossing or hard-throwing, old or young—it matters not who you are, what color your skin is, what country you're from. The ulnar collateral ligament (UCL), a stretchy, triangular band in the elbow that holds together the upper and lower arms, plays no favorites. If you throw a baseball, it can ruin you.

When the UCL breaks, only one fix exists: Tommy John surgery. Over the past decade, the procedure became a frequently uttered curse word as pitcher after pitcher felt the pain of a torn ligament, huffed anesthesia a few days later, and woke up an hour after that with a fresh scar and an exasperating rehabilitation schedule. Some of the biggest names in Major League Baseball needed Tommy John. Even more kids, some barely teenagers, blew out their elbows and underwent surgery. At the highest levels of the game, a panic swelled. Not only were the arms of current pitchers failing, elite players from the next generation were going down before they could sign their first professional contract.

The culture of baseball seemed backward to me. The more I thought about the pervasiveness of Tommy John, the more I understood it needed demystifying. I heard stories of kids get
ting Tommy John surgery at fourteen years old. (They were true.) And of kids who underwent Tommy John even when they weren't hurt, because they thought it would help them throw harder. (Neither the stories nor the implication was true.)

Mostly, I wanted to understand this for my son. He was five years old. He loved baseball. He wanted to play catch every day. He was hooked, like his dad. And the more I heard stories from other parents—of their sons getting hurt or boys they know quitting baseball because their arms no longer worked—the more I needed to figure out what was happening to the arm.

So I spent three years traveling the world to find out. I saw a mad scientist in rural Florida who believes he can fix the arm and a couple of geniuses in Chicago who saw fit to spend more than $150 million on one. I went to Seattle to watch a human being throw a baseball almost 106 miles per hour and to Kansas City to see a teenager flirt with 100. I flew to Arizona to get Sandy Koufax's opinion on the greatest sports orthopedist ever, asked that orthopedist how he came up with Tommy John surgery in the first place, and learned from Tommy John himself how he once worried that his hand was going to be permanently clawed because of it. I sat in laboratories, saw doctors tend to bodies living and dead, went halfway across the globe to a place where the problem is even greater, read medical studies, and scavenged through data, all to answer two vital questions:

How did baseball fail the pitching arm, and what can be done to save it?

Eventually, I found two pitchers who allowed me to infiltrate their lives at their nadir so I could fully understand what happens when an arm—and a career—blows up. Daniel Hudson was twenty-five when his UCL burst. He threw differently from most, his arm slot a low three-quarters, his release almost like a slingshot, each pitch stoking the cauldron's fire. Even so, the Arizona Diamondbacks had never bothered tinkering with his mechanics. A pitcher is fine until he isn't. The other pitcher, Todd Coffey, was
a right-handed reliever with a personality as big as the scar on his elbow. He needed two Tommy John surgeries, the first when he was nineteen, the next at thirty-one. A study on two-time Tommy John patients showed that the ligament from Coffey's first surgery lasted the longest of any pitcher who needed another surgery. This didn't guarantee his return from the second. Nothing can.

I marveled at Hudson's and Coffey's daily existence, which toggled between triumph and failure. They balanced loneliness and tedium with excitement and redemption. Optimism got into daily head-on collisions with reality. These two men are the faces of every arm. And yet before I tell their stories, it's important to understand the arm's place in the rest of the baseball world and what's at stake beyond billions of dollars and World Series titles.

The problem is not going away. The sport's foremost doctors believe it's worsening. The current generation of pitchers is lost, the product of a broken system, their arms ticking time bombs. If that doesn't change, today's kids will be the next casualties. They throw more and harder at younger ages than ever. Do the same thing again and again and again, and no matter how natural—like many things about the arm, the idea that throwing is an unnatural motion is a complete myth—it will break.

I don't want that to be my son. I don't want that to be your son. Baseball knows it needs top-to-bottom change. The $1.5 billion Major League Baseball spends annually on pitchers' salaries is five times more than the combined cost of every starting quarterback in the NFL. It exceeds the top two hundred NBA salaries put together. When I call the pitching arm the most valuable commodity in sports, it is not an exaggeration. And yet the most overanalyzed sport in the world, with an industry of bright minds studying its intricacies, loses half a billion dollars a year to injuries. More than 50 percent of pitchers end up on the disabled list every season, on average for two months–plus, and one-quarter of major league pitchers today wear a zipper scar from Tommy John surgery along their elbows.

People in the sport call arm injuries an epidemic. Solutions do exist. They aren't easy, and they'll take the sort of overhaul baseball seems loath to implement, but they can happen. Because one thing I now know is that for all of its travails, all the heartache it can cause, all the frustration left in its wake, the arm is capable of wondrous things.

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