
6 Key Benchmarks Before Returning to Throw After an Arm Injury
6 Key Benchmarks Before Returning to Throw After an Arm Injury – Lewis Physical Therapy & Sports Rehab
What You’ll Learn in This Blog
When a pitcher is recovering from an arm injury, the question is always the same:
“When is it safe to start throwing again?”
In this post, Dr. Jeff Lewis, owner of Lewis Physical Therapy & Sports Rehabilitation in Point Pleasant, NJ, shares the six essential benchmarks every baseball player must meet before returning to throwing — and how rushing the process can lead to re-injury.
🎥 Watch the Full “6 Key Benchmarks” Breakdown on YouTube
Don’t risk re-injury by rushing your throwing progression.
▶️ Watch Now on YouTube:
1. Regain Full, Pain-Free Range of Motion
Before picking up a baseball, the athlete must demonstrate pain-free shoulder and elbow range of motion — both actively and passively.
Dr. Lewis checks for:
Full shoulder external and internal rotation
Full elbow flexion and extension
No pain with overpressure testing
If any stiffness or hesitation remains, the arm isn’t ready for throwing stress yet.
2. Rebuild External-to-Internal Strength Ratios
Throwing places huge demands on the shoulder’s rotator cuff, especially during the deceleration phase.
That’s why Dr. Lewis measures the external-to-internal rotation strength ratio using a handheld dynamometer.
The minimum acceptable ratio is 0.69 (69%) before throwing begins.
The goal by bullpen work is 0.80 or higher (1.1-1.2) to protect the shoulder from breakdown.
Without this balance, the stronger internal rotators overpower the stabilizing cuff muscles — increasing injury risk.
3. Restore Grip Strength Symmetry
Grip strength reflects the arm’s total kinetic chain readiness.
Dr. Lewis tests grip strength in both arms, in multiple positions (arm at side and overhead).
The goal: Equal strength on both sides or a return to pre-injury baseline.
A deficit in grip strength signals incomplete recovery of forearm and shoulder musculature — a red flag before throwing resumes.
4. Tolerate Push-Pull Strength Training
Before throwing, pitchers must handle a pain-free upper-body training routine that includes:
Dumbbell floor presses
Row variations
Landmine or overhead pressing
They don’t need to lift maximal loads yet — but they should tolerate progressive resistance through a full range of motion without discomfort.
5. Control Speed and Movement Across Planes
Throwing is a high-speed, multi-planar movement.
That’s why athletes must demonstrate control and coordination through both slow eccentrics and fast explosive motions.
This ensures that not just the arm, but the entire kinetic chain — trunk, hips, and scapular stabilizers — is ready for the dynamic demands of pitching.
6. Pass Plyometric Readiness Drills
Finally, before returning to throw, pitchers must tolerate lower-level plyometric work such as:
Medicine ball chest passes
Rotational throws
Plyo ball rebound and catch drills
These drills replicate the speed, elasticity, and endurance demands of throwing. If these can be performed pain-free and with good mechanics, it’s a green light to begin a structured throwing progression.
Key Takeaway
Rushing a return-to-throw program before meeting these six benchmarks can undo months of progress.
Every athlete’s timeline is different — some may take a week, others six or more — but the process must be individualized and data-driven.
Meeting all six readiness tests ensures pitchers return stronger, more durable, and less prone to re-injury.
🎙 Listen to This Episode on The Lewis Physical Therapy & Sports Rehab Podcast
Catch the full breakdown of the Return-to-Throw Benchmarks and how to rebuild throwing strength safely.
🎧 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4A6iBs0CzkAwSu9rUVPfGX?si=lrea2AaWQSy5USIT90KXhQ
⚡ Build Strength, Speed & Arm Durability with the Triple Threat 12-Week Program
This program helps high school baseball players:
Increase throwing velocity
Build lower-body and rotational power
Reduce arm overuse and shoulder fatigue
👉 Get started here: https://www.lewisptsr.com
🩺 Struggling with Arm Pain or Shoulder Tightness?
If throwing pain is limiting your performance, we can help.
Schedule a discovery call today with our baseball rehab specialists at Lewis Physical Therapy & Sports Rehab in Point Pleasant — where we help athletes throw pain-free and return stronger than ever.