It feels like Claude got dummer in the last 48 hours. Every basic task (even reviewing project memory) requires a sub-agent to do in the background and the results are far worse. More mistakes, more bad decisions.
While it’s not really related to your original post, I’m glad you posted our validity study. It shows that the ArmCare system is the first player-led arm strength assessment validated in the literature — meaning it provides an objective and repeatable way for players to track fatigue, recovery, and performance trends over time.
We’d also agree with the paper’s discussion around player-guided active ROM. It’s not a central part of our player app, but rather a feature we make available for clinicians.
I think you forgot to read the post....especially the last sentence:
"The harder and farther a young athlete can throw, the greater the stress placed on the elbow and shoulder...and that’s exactly why this research matters.
In a study of more than 750 youth baseball players, researchers found that athletes throwing 3-5 standard deviations above their peers represent an extremely rare group of throwers.
And the researchers specifically warned that the growth plates and ligaments of these athletes may not tolerate the forces they’re capable of generating.
In other words…
The athlete throwing 58 mph at 10 years old is not experiencing the same stress as the athlete throwing 46 mph, and the risk profile changes fast.
That doesn’t mean high-velocity is bad. But it does mean that high-velocity athletes need a different level of management.
That’s where arm strength testing, recovery monitoring, workload management, and individualized training become critical.
Because the goal isn’t to be the hardest thrower at 10 years old…it’s to still be throwing hard 10 years later."
#Baseball #Pitching #YouthBaseball #Velocity #ArmCare #PitchingVelocity #BaseballTraining #ThrowingVelocity #BaseballDevelopment
@LisaMo032919@garrett_TFE the jacobs engineering report clearly states no asbestos was found anywhere and any metals found were also found in the original soil on the property.
@LisaMo032919@HopeSeck this is false. the soil testing report clearly states no asbestos was found anywhere and any metals found were also found in the original soil on the property.
@Mike_kim714 The Tour should play by whatever rules and whatever equipment they believe will garner the most eyeballs - and they should just come clean and say that.