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Top kid injuries due to playing just one sport per Baton Rouge General.

Posted on 8/11/25 at 9:02 am
Posted by loogaroo
Welsh
Member since Dec 2005
39666 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 9:02 am
quote:

If you played sports as a kid, chances are you rotated with the seasons — football in the fall, basketball in the winter, maybe baseball or track in the spring. But today’s young athletes are often picking a single sport early and sticking with it year-round. And while focus and discipline can be great traits, this early specialization is linked to a rise in overuse injuries, which historically are much more common in older teens and adults. More and more, kids are training like pros. That means fewer breaks, more repetition, and higher risk for stress injuries — especially in joints like shoulders, elbows, and knees. According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, up to 50% of all sports injuries in youth athletes are from overuse. That means they’re not freak accidents, but preventable problems caused by too much strain on growing bodies.

The most common injuries depend on the sport, but here’s a good overview:

• Shoulder and elbow injuries in baseball pitchers
• Knee pain in soccer and basketball players
• Stress fractures in runners and dancers
• Wrist and spine issues in gymnasts and swimmers

While sports offer countless benefits like physical fitness, teamwork, confidence, and stress relief, playing a single sport 12 months a year doesn’t give the body (or mind) time to rest and recover. Cross-training through different sports or activities helps build a variety of muscle groups, improves coordination, and keeps kids from burning out.


https://www.brgeneral.org/news-blog/one-sport-too-soon-why-young-athletes-are-getting-hurt-more-often
Posted by Broski
Member since Jun 2011
79089 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 9:04 am to
quote:

The most common injuries depend on the sport, but here’s a good overview:

• Shoulder and elbow injuries in baseball pitchers
• Knee pain in soccer and basketball players
• Stress fractures in runners and dancers
• Wrist and spine issues in gymnasts and swimmers


Wonder how much of the research budget was used to discover this brand new information.
Posted by LSUballs
RayVegas LA
Member since Feb 2008
39891 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 9:05 am to
quote:

Knee pain in soccer




Likely not caused on the pitch.
Posted by i am dan
NC
Member since Aug 2011
30456 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 9:06 am to
quote:

Wonder how much of the research budget was used to discover this brand new information.


Probably a $3M NIH grant....
Posted by Oilfieldbiology
Member since Nov 2016
41412 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 9:11 am to
We are running into this now with my daughter. She wants to play every sport, but there’s just so much crossover now that practices are conflicting and we are having to choose which sport she makes.

Sports need defined seasons and should never be year round, I’m looking at you baseball and softball!!!!
Posted by Lgrnwd
Member since Jan 2018
8383 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 9:25 am to
So Travel Ball bad. Got it
Posted by jaytothen
Member since Jan 2020
8309 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 9:32 am to
bullshite.

Jaxxson is a freak and needs a minimum 500 swings every Saturday. His body can take it at 5 years old. They bounce right back.
Posted by Oilfieldbiology
Member since Nov 2016
41412 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 9:33 am to
quote:

So Travel Ball bad. Got it


Travel ball and tournament ball isn’t bad in and of itself, when it’s isolated to spring/summer.

But when you’re playing tournaments 1/2 the weekends in the fall and practicing 2-3 times a week during the fall and winter, the kids have no rest for their bodies to grow, heal, and develop.

Baseball should be over by June and practices shouldn’t start up in any serious fashion again until February in my totally unqualified opinion. But I know that’s not the case, and as long as baseball and softball know that the fall and winter are for Football, Soccer, and Basketball first there isn’t an issue. When coaches of out of season sports start insisting on being prioritized over in season sports, especially school sports, I start having a real problem.
Posted by BabyTac
Austin, TX
Member since Jun 2008
15808 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 9:33 am to
Got to make the League before worrying about getting hurt in the League. Jaxson ain’t going D1 unless he maximizes his potential and doesn’t take ‘summer breaks’.
Posted by Shexter
Prairieville
Member since Feb 2014
19164 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 9:49 am to
quote:

Shoulder and elbow injuries in baseball pitchers


Mostly preventable- There's so much bad pitching advice out there. Watched a pitcher at the Little League World Series this weekend and felt bad for him.
Posted by Sidicous
NELA
Member since Aug 2015
19296 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 10:11 am to
I used to pull muscles as a sprinter.

The last Junior Olympic Regional I ran as a 15 year old:
100 meter qualifier = left gluteus
200 meter = right gluteus finished 4th
400 meter relay 4th leg = no new pulls team finished 3rd
100 meter final = right hamstring finished 4th

After that I turned 16, got my DL, and never raced again.
Posted by Bjorn Cyborg
Member since Sep 2016
34059 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 10:11 am to
Why do swimmers have spine issues?
Posted by Boudreauboudreaugoly
Land of the Rice n Son
Member since Oct 2017
2695 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 10:21 am to
Are they maybe lumping diving in that category? I know wrist injuries are VERY common among competitive divers. Back/spine injuries are also an issue.
Posted by Porter Osborne Jr
Member since Sep 2012
43102 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 10:22 am to
quote:

Sports need defined seasons and should never be year round, I’m looking at you baseball and softball!!!!


Every sport is year round now, unfortunately.
Posted by Bjorn Cyborg
Member since Sep 2016
34059 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 10:23 am to
quote:

Are they maybe lumping diving in that category?


Must be. Swimming is low impact, so I can't see wrist or spinal injuries.
Posted by Topwater Trout
Red Stick
Member since Oct 2010
69562 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 10:28 am to
maybe all the reaching out...idk i never had issues with spine
Posted by Boudreauboudreaugoly
Land of the Rice n Son
Member since Oct 2017
2695 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 10:39 am to
Must be. Swimming is low impact, so I can't see wrist or spinal injuries.
quote:

Must be. Swimming is low impact, so I can't see wrist or spinal injuries.


On second thought, have you ever watched a swimmer’s back/spine while swimming butterfly stroke? It requires mastery of a “dolphin kick”. Extreme , continuous, upward then downward flexure of back and spine. That, I could see be a cause of problems. Repetitive, extensive duration of movement is always an issue in most sports. I did a bit of competitive club level swim competition. They tried to get me to try butterfly but I couldn’t master that dolphin kick. Couldn’t even get close to doing it correctly.
This post was edited on 8/11/25 at 11:36 am
Posted by Jim Rockford
Member since May 2011
104353 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 11:15 am to
Thats why we got in utero Tommy John surgery for Braedynn.
Posted by Obtuse1
Westside Bodymore Yo
Member since Sep 2016
30031 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 11:30 am to
Yep, butterfly and breaststroke are a bitch on the lumbar spine.
Posted by RanchoLaPuerto
Jena
Member since Aug 2023
1835 posts
Posted on 8/11/25 at 11:35 am to
The truth hurts.
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