Stanford pitcher Quinn Mathews speaks after a game.
Screenshot from Twitter

College Baseball Fans Divided Over Stanford Ace's 156-Pitch Game: Heroic or Dangerous?

A Stanford pitcher threw 156 pitches in one game, and some baseball fans are up in arms over whether that's safe to do.

The NCAA's decision to implement a pitch clock this season may not be the only rule people will be talking about.

Videos by FanBuzz

College baseball fans and analysts are taking to the internet to express concern over the pitching usage of Stanford Cardinal pitcher Quinn Mathews after he threw 156 pitches in a complete game against the Texas Longhorns in the NCAA super regionals.

The number of pitches have led to a debate about whether this was an act of heroics from Mathews to keep his team alive in the postseason or a decision of stupidity from Stanford head coach David Esquer to leave him in that long. The win forced a decisive Game 3 in the Stanford Super Regional Monday night.

Additionally, Mathews appeared in two games last week, throwing a combined 180 pitches. So, in these three appearances, he's thrown 336 pitches in one week. He threw 114 pitches against San Jose State on June 2, followed by 66 pitches against Texas A&M on June 5.

The 156-pitch outing has led to outrage by fans. Some, like baseball writer Joe Sheehan, point to the fact that MLB pitchers aren't even used like that anymore. An MLB pitcher hasn't thrown 156 or more pitches since 1997. Sheehan pointed out a few pitchers who threw more than 130 pitches, some on multiple occasions. Many of them, like Kerry Wood, Mark Prior and Randy Wolf, had arm problems throughout their careers.

 

 

Keith Law, a longtime baseball analyst, points out that Tim Wakefield, a renowned knuckleball pitcher, was the last MLB pitcher to throw that many pitches. Law also points out that the previous non-knuckleball player to hit that mark was Roger Clemens in 1996.

https://twitter.com/keithlaw/status/1668111276025757696?s=20

While some called out Esquer, others called out the NCAA's lack of a pitch count limit.

Of course, there's no way to know for sure whether this single outing will take its toll in his arm. But with how unnatural pitching is on the human body to begin with, throwing 156 of them in one game — season on the line or not — cannot be suitable for future development.

According to How They Play, 32 MLB players had Tommy John surgery in 2021 and another 28 in 2022. From 1974-2022, 562 players have had the surgery. Though research is sporadic in determining what leads to a torn UCL in the elbow that requires surgery, overuse is a massive factor.

There should be a pitch count in the college ranks to protect the players and, hopefully, preserve their development as they go from college to MLB. If MLB players aren't hitting that mark, college athletes shouldn't be either.

Still, some people think this sort of usage is totally fine.

In addition to throwing 156 pitches, Mathews finished the game pitching all nine innings — allowing three earned runs on eight hits, 16 strikeouts and one walk. Mathews, 22, is 10-4 on the year with a 3.60 ERA, 152 strikeouts and 120 innings pitched. He was drafted in the 19th round of the 2022 MLB Draft by the Tampa Bay Rays but returned to Stanford. He's expected to be an MLB prospect this year as well, but an arm injury could jeopardize that.

The Cardinal won that game 8-3 and will take on the Longhorns on Monday, June 12 at 8 p.m. ET to decide who advances in the College World Series. Hopefully, Mathews isn't available to pitch Monday.

MORE: 2023 Baseball Super Regional Schedule: Teams, Game Times, TV Channels