More Content | Blog

What Spring Training Means for Back Injuries

It’s springtime again – or nearly there, anyway – and all sports fans know what that means: spring training and the return of Major League Baseball’s players to their winter training grounds. Unfortunately, as players come back to the stadiums, they also return to a heightened risk of back injury. Commonly known as overuse injuries, these lower back injuries can be subtle and usually occur over prolonged periods of time. They are the result of repetitive micro-trauma to the tendons, bones, and joints, typically caused by training errors involving a too-rapid acceleration of the intensity, duration, or frequency of a given activity. Studies show the majority of injuries occur in the beginning of the season due to lack of conditioning in spring training. These injuries decrease steadily each month starting in April and going through September, the first and last months of the season. According to Dr. Douglas Comeau, a sports medicine physician and assistant professor at Boston University School of Medicine, the most common injuries among fielders include hamstring and groin strains, and pitchers tend to strain or tear ligaments in the elbow or rotator cuff. “Major league baseball players might not take spring training seriously, but then need to play a whole game in

Read More »

It’s Baseball Season, and Injuries Abound

Injuries are common in all sports, and this is especially true in professional baseball, where players engage in repetitive movements on the field for 162 games each season. Back injuries can be detrimental for baseball players, often affecting an athlete’s swing or pitch. As this season kicks off, serious injuries and long-term recoveries are keeping a number of players off the field. Baltimore Orioles left fielder Nolan Reimold is still recovering after undergoing a cervical fusion surgery in July. He is now in physical therapy and remains on the disabled list until he is fully recovered. Texas Rangers pitcher Matt Harrison is still on the disabled list after having surgery to repair a damaged disc last May. This was his third surgery over the past two years and he is still recovering. Clayton Kershaw, starting pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers, has been on the 15-day disabled list since March 30due to a muscle strain in his upper back that could affect his rotator cuff, but he is expected to return to the mound in May. Here in New York, Brendan Ryan, the Yankees backup shortstop, is currently on the disabled list for a minor “back issue” that he believes

Read More »