
Youth sports have changed dramatically over the past 15–20 years. More athletes than ever are specializing in a single sport at a young age, often playing year-round in hopes of gaining a competitive edge.
But in many cases, early sports specialization is actually increasing injury risk and limiting athletic development.
As a former Major League Baseball Physical Therapist, I see the consequences of this trend regularly in my clinic.
This video explains why early sports specialization increases injury risk and what athletes and parents should do instead.
Watch on Youtube here:
Early sports specialization generally refers to athletes who focus on a single sport for more than eight months out of the year, particularly before the age of 15 in my opinion (many research states 12 years old as the cutoff but I think that is too early).
In baseball, this often looks like many young pitchers end up throwing nearly the entire year with very little time off.
Before roughly age 16, many athletes still have open growth plates.
One of the most common injuries in youth pitchers is Little League Elbow, which occurs when repetitive throwing stresses the growth plate.
As athletes mature, those growth plates eventually close, and the stress often shifts to structures like the UCL.
But when athletes throw excessively before their bodies are ready, overuse injuries become far more likely.
For youth baseball players, I typically recommend at least three months per year with no throwing.
This allows:
• The arm to recover from accumulated stress
• Athletes to develop strength and athleticism
• Other movement patterns to develop
Without this break, athletes simply continue stacking stress on the same tissues year-round.
One of the biggest issues I see with youth athletes today is that they specialize in their sport without developing basic strength.
Many players throwing year-round still struggle with:
• Pull-ups
• Push-ups
• Squats
• Basic coordination
These foundational movement patterns are critical for long-term athletic development and injury prevention.
Many professional athletes — including Major League Baseball players — played multiple sports growing up.
Playing different sports exposes athletes to:
• Different movement patterns
• Different physical demands
• Improved coordination and athleticism
This broader athletic base often translates to better long-term performance.
Early sports specialization is unlikely to disappear, given the current youth sports culture.
But athletes, parents, and coaches can dramatically reduce injury risk by focusing on:
• Taking time off from throwing
• Playing multiple sports
• Building strength and athleticism
• Following structured strength and conditioning programs
These fundamentals help athletes stay healthy and perform at a higher level over the long term.
Download the Arm Pain Blueprint to learn the system we use to help pitchers recover and return to throwing stronger.
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Learn the key mechanical checkpoints that help reduce stress on the arm.
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Catch the full breakdown of why early sports specialization increases injury risk and how athletes should structure their training.
🎧 Listen on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/4A6iBs0CzkAwSu9rUVPfGX?si=lrea2AaWQSy5USIT90KXhQ