Media releases

  • Grad student throws change up for baseball injury research

    MEDIA RELEASE: 22 October 2019 – R00164

    With the World Series set to get underway tonight in Houston, a team of Brock University researchers have uncovered information that could help teams understand what leads to fatigue and injuries in pitchers.

    Richard Birfer (MSc ’19) led the research with his co-supervisors, Associate Professor Michael Holmes and Adjunct Professor Mike Sonne in the Department of Kinesiology which detailed fatigue in baseball pitchers as a process linked to lowered physical and mental performance, injury and changes in kinematics.

    Their findings included a systematic review outlining the consequences of fatigue in baseball pitchers that was published in the open-access journal PeerJ. Birfer’s thesis also focused on the development of a tool to evaluate pitching mechanics.

    Both have garnered lots of attention, including attracting potential partnerships from several Major League Baseball (MLB) teams and baseball development facilities.

    “We provided coaches and scouts with photos of pitchers at a certain part of the throw that we know causes the most stress at the elbow,” said Holmes, who is the Canada Research Chair in Neuromuscular Mechanics and Ergonomics. “The coaches evaluated a pitcher’s posture and we compare the coach’s ability to determine joint angles to our gold standard motion capture system.”

    The result was an easy-to-use, low-cost approach to assessing pitching mechanics.

    The team created a pitching mound in the Neuromechanics and Ergonomics Lab at Brock and put reflective markers on a pitcher’s body, allowing them to track the three-dimensional motion of the markers to accurately capture movements, postures and joint angles.

    They created a system where the coaches would categorize a pitcher’s posture into a range of joint angles. The end goal is to develop a scoring system to suggest optimal pitching mechanics to maximize performance and minimize injury risk.

    “If you do the same physical thing multiple times a day with minimal rest, eventually the tolerance level of our tissues get reduced, putting us at an increased risk for cumulative loading and injury,” said Holmes. “Pitchers throw hundreds of pitches a day and injuries can develop as a result of that. We’ve been applying a lot of what we know about ergonomics to baseball, which hasn’t really been done before.”

    Sonne said Birfer’s connections to the baseball industry and general love for the game made him an invaluable addition to the project, which was sparked by an ergonomics-based model for understanding injury he created in 2016.

    Birfer, who now works as a pitch design engineer for the Baseball Development Group in Toronto, said their findings allowed them to understand pitcher fatigue in a new light.

    “With each pitch thrown, fatigue continues to accumulate,” he said. “Our research has shown that pitchers are willing to sacrifice optimal movement for maintaining performance, ultimately increasing the likelihood of injury.”

    With Birfer now graduated and additional research needed, Ryan Bench, a master’s student in Kinesiology and varsity baseball player at Brock, is continuing the work under Holmes and Sonne.

    “It has been incredibly rewarding to see the interest surrounding our pitching research at Brock University grow around the game of baseball,” said Birfer. “The attention we’ve been receiving from individuals within MLB organizations and baseball developmental facilities has been awesome.”

    Members of the research team are available for media interviews regarding their research.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

    Brock University Marketing and Communications has a full-service studio where we can provide high definition video and broadcast-quality audio.

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Fall Convocation a day of celebration, reflection

    MEDIA RELEASE: 18 October 2019 – R00162

    There were smiles, cheers and some tears of joy as more than 1,000 Brock University students received their degrees Friday, Oct. 18 during Fall Convocation.

    The two ceremonies in Ian Beddis Gymnasium marked Brock’s 106th Convocation overall and 50th Fall ceremony.

    Unlike Spring Convocation, which is spread over five days, Fall Convocation includes just two ceremonies covering all seven Faculties in a single day.

    Distinguished Teaching Award recipient Kirsty Spence, who delivered the morning Convocation address, expressed what many were feeling Friday when she said “there are few other events that I love more at Brock than Convocation day.

    “To share in the pride and joy that graduates emanate as they walk this stage and to meet parents and family members after all this time they have entrusted their own to us as Brock students is monumentous to me and I feel much gratitude,” said the associate professor of Sport Management.

    Spence encouraged the graduands to stay authentic to themselves and work to discover their purpose.

    “Be inspired with the knowledge that it is you who gets to learn what is a good enough purpose for yourself and be full in yourself in doing so,” she said.

    Delivering the afternoon address was Associate Professor of History Elizabeth Vlossak, who acknowledged that the new graduates might be feeling overwhelmed.

    “Right now, you may feel scared and alone. The world and our future may seem pretty bleak. All around us, we’re confronted with challenges that seem insurmountable,” she said.

    As a historian of 20th century Europe, Vlossak said she is sometimes saddened by society’s inability to learn from its past mistakes, but believes studying the past also provides us “with powerful reminders of the amazing achievements humans are capable of and locates the inspiration we need in these dark times.”

    “You are responsible for becoming attuned to what people are telling you is impossible and deciding if they’re actually right,” said Vlossak. “If they’re not, you must work as a society and a community to make the possibilities that will change the world for the better. You leave Brock University today equipped with the skills, knowledge and experience to take up this challenge.”

    Among the awards handed out were Governor General Silver Medals to Math and Science students Rachel Van Herk and Ashley Kapoor, the two undergraduate students with the highest academic standing of everyone in the class of 2019.

    For 22-year-old Van Herk, the award was the result of four years of early mornings, late nights and a dedication to academic achievement.

    “I think it’s really a reflection of how much effort I put into my degree, so I’m truly honoured to win this award,” she said. “It’s a great way to end my degree.”

    Van Herk finished her degree with a 99 per cent average. Of the 40 classes she completed, she had 100 per cent averages in 21 of them and 98 or higher in another 13.

    Also awarded Friday were Board of Trustees Spirit of Brock medals to students who best represent the spirit of Maj.-Gen. Sir Isaac Brock. Recipients included Media and Communication Studies student Sophie Hassanali, Social Justice and Equity Studies student Aniqah Zowmi and Education master’s student Larry Nie.

    Both ceremonies are available to watch on the Brock University YouTube channel.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews: 

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

    Brock University Marketing and Communications has a full-service studio where we can provide high definition video and broadcast-quality audio.

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    Categories: Media releases