
David Altchek, longtime Mets doctor and Tommy John surgeon, dead at 68
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Dr. David Altchek, who performed more than 2,000 Tommy John surgeries and was the Mets longtime medical director, died Thursday. He was 68.
His death was announced by the Hospital for Special Surgery, where he was co-chief emeritus. Altchek told associates last year he had been diagnosed with a brain tumor.
He was the Mets head team physician from 1991-2001 and medical director from 2005-24, physician of the U.S. Davis Cup team from 1999-2003 and North American medical director of the ATP Tour. Altchek was co-chief of HSS's sports medicine and shoulder service from 2005-14.
'While Dr. Altchek's intelligence and innovations certainly benefited his patients — and sports medicine in general — his biggest impact was his warm, friendly, caring personality,' said Glenn S. Fleisig, biomechanics research director of the American Sports Medicine Institute. 'Colleagues, friends, and patients all loved David and are thankful for the time we had with him.'
3 David Altcheck, the longtime Mets doctor who performed more than 2,000 Tommy John surgeries, has died at the age of 68.
Getty Images for Hospital for Sp
A son of orthopedic surgeon Martin Altchek, David attended Middletown High School in New York, received his undergraduate degree at Columbia and his medical degree from Cornell University Medical College in 1982. He interned at The New York Hospital and became a resident at HSS, where he had a fellowship under Dr. Russell Warren, HSS's surgeon in chief from 1993-03 and a longtime team physician of the New York Giants.
'My first Tommy John surgery was in 1993, and I did the procedure that Dr. Jobe, Dr. Frank Jobe prescribed,' Altchek said during a 2024 interview with The Associated Press. 'It took 2 1/2 hours and I was exhausted. And I realized then that we had to do something about Tommy John surgery. We had to make it a little bit easier.'
Working with residents and fellows, Altchek developed what was called a docking procedure and tested it on about 100 elbows.
3 David Altcheck (r.) with Mets manager Terry Collins (l.) at spring training in 2016.
Anthony J. Causi
'It worked and it worked amazingly well,' Altchek said. 'We really did not change it at all for 20-something years.'
Altchek estimated last year he had performed more than 2,400 Tommy John surgeries. He was a preferred surgeon for the Tommy John procedure in recent years along with Texas Rangers physician Dr. Keith Meister and Los Angeles Dodgers head team physician Dr. Neal ElAttrache.
Part of Altchek's job was to reassure a player his baseball career was not over.
'You tell them this is unfortunate, but this is your MRI. This is probably why it happened — meaning you threw outside the envelope of your tissue quality,' he explained. 'But we have a procedure that can repair your ligament and reconstruct it in a kind of belt, suspenders way that once it heals the likelihood of you going back to pitching at the same level or above is 95%.'
3 David Altchek at Mets spring training in 2016.
Anthony J. Causi
Altchek received Columbia's John Jay Award for Distinguished Professional Achievement in 2003.
He is survived by his wife, the former Anne Salmson, whom he married in 1981, sons Charles and Christopher, and daughters Chloe and Sophie. Charles is president of Major League Soccer's third-tier MLS Next Pro minor league and was the Ivy League men's soccer player of the year while at Harvard in 2005 and 2006.

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How can the hitter change his swing pattern to hit the ball farther and faster? Since then, baseball players from across levels have flocked to Driveline's facilities and those like it to learn how to improve and level up. 'Maybe five or six years ago, if you throw 90-plus, you have a shot to play beyond college,' said Dylan Gargas, Arizona pitching coordinator for Driveline Baseball. 'Now that barrier to entry just keeps getting higher and higher because guys throw harder.' MLB players have even ditched their clubs midseason in hopes to unlock something to improve their pitching repertoire. Boston Red Sox right-handed pitcher Walker Buehler left the Dodgers last season to test himself at the Cressey Sports Performance training center near Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., before returning to eventually pitch the final out of the 2024 World Series. Driveline is not alone. Ben Brewster, co-founder of Tread Athletics, another baseball development company based in North Carolina, said high-school-aged players have been attracted to his performance facility because they see the results that MLB players and teammates achieve after continued training sessions. Tread Athletics claims to have a role in more than 250 combined MLB draft picks or free agent signings, and says it has helped more than 1,000 high school players earn college opportunities. Kansas City Royals left-hander Cole Ragans achieved a 4.4-mph increase from 2022 to 2023, the largest in MLB that year. With the velocity increase after his work at Tread Athletics, Ragans went from a league-average relief pitcher to a postseason ace in less than a year. So what makes Ragans' development different from that of a teenage prospect reaching out to Tread Athletics? 'Ragans still could go from 92-94 miles per hour to 96 to 101,' Brewster said. 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There's always risk. It's all in the form. Lifting is a science, and so is pitching — finding the safest way to train to increase velocity without injury. 'The responsible way to squat 500 pounds would be going up in weight over time, having great form and monitoring to make sure you're not going too heavy, too soon,' Brewster said. 'When it comes to pitching, you can manage workload. You can make sure that mechanically, they don't have any glaring red flags.' Brewster added that Tread, as of July, is actively creating its own data sets to explore how UCLs are affected by training methods, and how to use load management to skirt potential injuries. MLB admitted to a 'lack [of] comprehensive data to examine injury trends for amateur players' in its December report. It points to a lack of college data as well, where most Division I programs use such technology. The Andrews Sports Medicine & Orthopedic Center based in Birmingham, Ala. — founded by James Andrews, the former orthopedic surgeon to the stars — provided in-house data within MLB's report, showing that the amount of UCL surgeries conducted for high school pitchers in their clinic has risen to as high as 60% of the total since 2015, while remaining above 40% overall through 2023. Meister said baseball development companies may look great on the periphery — sending youth players to top colleges and the professional ranks — but it's worth noting what they aren't sharing publicly. 'What they don't show you is that [youth athletes] are walking into our offices, three or six months or nine months later.'