There are two injuries I’ve seen far too often on a baseball field — and both are almost entirely preventable:
- Jumping at first base
- Sliding improperly into a base
Whether or not they’re the top injury causes in baseball and fastpitch softball isn’t the point. What matters is this: if something is common and preventable, it’s our job as coaches, league officials, and program directors to address it head-on.
Learn It – Teach It – Practice It
As coaches, we’ve got one job when it comes to player safety: learn what works, teach it effectively, and practice it with purpose. But too often, few refuse to “find the time” to teach AND REINFORCE the boring aspects of our game.
Be A Learner – Save A Player From A Lifelong Injury
In this case, not learning and not teaching and reinforcing puts your players at risk — period.
Here’s A Quick Fix To Implement Immediately?
Make it a team rule: “When in doubt… always slide.”
Why? Because hesitation is one of the top culprits behind avoidable injuries. Players who decide to slide at the last second often go in awkwardly, unbalanced, or too late — increasing the risk of ankle, wrist, and head trauma.
In fact, a 2012 study showed a higher rate of injuries in athletes who made last-second sliding decisions, especially in softball, where aggressive play and quick reactions often collide.²
Here’s a breakdown of coachable, team-wide habits that help:
✅ Sliding Smart: Key Coaching Points
- Teach early decision-making: Sliding late is a common and dangerous mistake. Drill the timing until it becomes instinctive.
- Discourage or modify headfirst slides: Either eliminate them entirely or require batting gloves in hand to help protect fingers — or go old school and keep a fistful of infield dirt to save digits.
- Encourage sliding shorts: Today’s compression sliding shorts are padded in all the right places. They’re not just for comfort — they’re a real injury prevention tool.
- Use live reps: Don’t just talk about sliding in the classroom or at the end of practice. Teach it, drill it, and integrate it into base running drills often.
The Equipment Fix That Too Many Ignore
While coaching fixes make a huge impact, some things come down to the equipment we choose — or don’t choose.
If you’re overseeing a league, school, or park facility, here’s something you should know:
Breakaway bases reduce sliding injuries. Dramatically.
A prospective study comparing standard bases and breakaway bases in college and professional baseball showed injury rates dropped from 2 injuries per 100 games to just 0.4 injuries per 100 games when using breakaway bases.⁴ That’s not a small improvement — it’s an 80% reduction in injuries.
Yet adoption remains low. Why? Cost.
Sure, a top-quality set might cost $600. But as someone who’s seen too many players suffer avoidable leg injuries that stick with them long after the season ends… I say this:
Don’t wait until an ambulance arrives or a lawsuit is filed to put this into your budget.
A Coach’s Note on Cost vs. Consequence
Yes, we do sell these bases. And no, this isn’t a hard sales pitch. It’s a practical investment in the safety of your program and the players you’re responsible for.
You can find a solid set of three breakaway bases for less than previously. It could prevent a life-changing injury.
The Bigger Picture
According to the Centers for Disease Control, $24 million could be saved annually in the U.S. just by reducing sliding injuries.³ That doesn’t even touch the personal toll — the seasons lost, the physical therapy, the heartbreak of a player who has to watch from the dugout because of something that could’ve been taught or avoided.
Sliding happens an average of 8 times per game in baseball, and 5 times per game in softball.¹ Every slide is a chance to execute safely — or risk injury.
So if you’re a coach, make sliding safety part of your team’s culture. If you’re a league or school administrator, consider what structural changes can be made — like base upgrades — that prevent injuries before they happen.
Final Thoughts
We’ll never eliminate every injury in baseball — but sliding injuries are one area where prevention is possible, affordable, and effective.
So learn it. Teach it. Practice it. And most importantly — lead by example. Because every healthy season starts with smart choices from the top down.
Sources:
[1] Hosey RG, Puffer JC. Am J Sports Med. 2000.
[2] Stovak M, Parikh A. Clin J Sport Med. 2012.
[3] Janda DH et al. MMWR. 1988.
[4] Janda DH, Maguire R. Clin J Sport Med. 1993.
Parts of this article were originally published in www.sportsmed.org. Our sole motive is sharing knowledge.