'NBA teams have been tracking this kind of stuff for years': Why load management is MLB's next big thing
Briefly

FOR DECADES, the story of a major league game has been told by the familiar numbers in a box score: runs, hits, errors, home runs, strikeouts. But now, there is another chart your favorite team looks at after games, one that few outside the sport's inner circle have seen: color-coded grid-like documents that measure the workload of every player who took the field that day...Teams monitor everything players do, starting with the obvious -- how much distance has he covered on a given night, both on the basepaths and defensively in the field. Each bit of information helps teams get ahead of potential health problems or dips in production.
Baseball might not be the first sport that comes to mind when you hear the term 'load management,' but MLB teams are becoming obsessed with it. In baseball, the discussion is about keeping position players on the field and performing their best...Optimizing player workload is seen as one of the few remaining areas teams can gain an edge...the race to find the best information -- and how to communicate it to players -- is on.
Read at ESPN.com
[
]
[
|
]