Showing posts with label Stretching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stretching. Show all posts

Thursday, February 4, 2010

The Only 6 Static Stretches You Should Really Do

The Only 6 Static Stretches You Should Really Do

Static stretches increase the range of motion you can achieve, but not your ability to stabilize in those positions. Passive flexibility without mobility can increase risks of injury. That’s why dynamic stretching is usually better.
Although static stretches have more downsides, sometimes they have their place. You can use static stretches to improve movement patterns for example. Here are the only 6 static stretches you should really do.

1. Warrior Lunge Stretch. 
Stretches your hip flexors. Get knee padding and assume the lunge position with both hands overhead. Hold for 15sec/leg.
  • Stay Tall. Don’t arch your lower back. Keep your spine neutral. Chest up, shoulder-blades back & down, push your pelvis forward.
  • Squeeze Your Glutes. Increases the hip flexor stretch. Squeeze the glute of your back leg as hard as you can.
  • Twist. Further increases the stretch. After 15sec, twist toward the up leg. Don’t overdo the twist. Keep squeezing your back leg.
Psoas Hip Flexor Stretch

2. Bulgarian Squat Stretch. 
Similar to the warrior lunge stretch, but stretches your quadriceps (rectus femoris ) more. Technique is the same. 15sec/leg.
  • Stay Tall. Don’t arch your lower back. Keep your spine neutral. Chest up, shoulder-blades back & down, push your pelvis forward.
  • Squeeze Your Glutes. Increases the hip flexor stretch. Squeeze the glute of your back leg as hard as you can.
  • Hang Your Hands. Do not support your legs with your hands. Let your hands hang next to you.
Bulgerian Squat Stretch
Image credit: Mike Robertson

3. Seated 90/90 Stretch. 
Stretches your external hip rotators. Pull your foot up, while pushing your shin/knee down. 15 sec/leg.
  • Stay Tall. Don’t bend over or slouch your shoulders. Keep your spine neutral. Chest up. Shoulder-blades back & down. Look forward.
  • Pull Gently. Don’t force the movement. You should feel this stretch in your glutes, not in your knees.
Seated 90/90 Stretch

4. Levator Scapulae Stretch. 
Tight levator scap can cause shoulder pain. Do this exercise correctly and you’ll feel it across your shoulder-blade. 15sec/side.
  • Shoulder-blades Back & Down. Chest up, shoulder-blades back & down. Put your hand behind your back, while keeping this position.
  • Look to Your Foot. Right hand behind your back, look to your left feet. Keep your chest up and shoulder-blade back & down.
Levator Scapulae Stretch
Image credit: Eric Cressey

5. Pec Minor Stretch. 
Your pecs respond better to foam rolling than stretching. However this stretch teaches you proper posture. Lean forward while pulling your shoulder-blade back & down. 15sec/side.
Pec Minor Stretch
Image credit: Bill Hartman

6. Sleeper Stretch. 
Lack of internal rotation can cause shoulder injuries. The sleeper stretch increases internal rotation by stretching your posterior capsula. You’ll feel it in the back of your shoulders when done correctly. 15 sec/side.
  • Shoulder-blades Back & Down. Very hard to do here. Make a big chest and try to keep it. Don’t let your shoulder-blade flare.
  • Push Gently. You don’t need to get with your hand on the floor. Relax and pull gently. Keep your shoulder-blades back & down.
Sleeper Stretch
Image credit: NSCA
Most of you will need exercise 4-6, especially if you have a round upper-back. If you have anterior pelvic tilt exercises 1 & 2 are yours. I’ll refer to this post in future posts. Meanwhile click here to subscribe and receive free updates.

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Great Dynamic Stretching

Dynamic stretching by defranco

Agile 8 - Lower body
#1 – Foam Roll IT Band – Start just below your hip and roll up & down to your mid-(outer) thigh 10-15X, focusing on any tight spots. Then perform 10-15 “rolls” starting at your mid-(outer) thigh and rolling all the way down to the outside of your knee. Again, focus on the tight areas.
#2 – Foam Roll Adductors – Start just below the crease of your hip and roll up & down to your mid (inner) thigh 10-15X, focusing on any tight spots. Then perform 10-15 “rolls” starting at your mid-(inner) thigh and rolling down to the inside of your knee. Again, focus on the tight spots.
#3 – Glute/Piriformis Myofacial release w/ static stretch - 1 - 2 minutes w/ ball leg bent and straight, then 0:30 - 1 minute stretch
#4 – *Rollovers into “V” sits – Perform 10 reps
#5 - *Fire hydrant circles – 10 forward circles/10 backward circles each leg
#6 - *Mountain climbers – 20 reps
#7 - *Groiners – Perform 10 reps. Hold last rep for 10 seconds…push knees out with your upper arms while dropping your butt down.
*The video below demonstrates exercises 4-7. Make sure you really focus on achieving a big range of motion with all these exercises. Don’t just go through the motions!
#8 – Static hip flexor stretch – Perform 3 sets of 10 seconds each leg. Perform all 3 sets on one leg before moving onto the other leg.

Agile 6 - Upper Body
#1 - Thoracic foam rolling - 10 times straight, 10 times left, 10 times right
#2 - foam roller in armpit - rotate body back - back and forth - lats tie in very tender spot 10-15 rolls
#3 - Shoulder capsule stretch sleeper stretch - lay on side -angle upper arm 45 degrees to body - gently push down - relax breath normally 30-45 seconds every few seconds push down more
#4 - Band pec stretch - hang band and stretch chest at 45 degree angle - 30-45 seconds
#5 - static lat stretch - lean back rotate side to side - 30-45 seconds
#6 - band dislocates - start wide and work it in 8 - 10 reps of 2 set

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Dynamic stretching

Play almost any sport at any level and chances are you will be called to stretch beforehand. The typical routine is well-known and widespread: Reach for your toes, hold the stretch for 10 or 15 or 30 seconds, release and move on to another muscle. It warms you up, limbers you up and gets you ready for tough competition, right? Not at all, according to the results of a recent study by kinesiology researchers — a study which does not appear to have taken the Yale athletic community by surprise. Staff reporter Monica Mark investigates.

Nicholas Bayless/Photography Editor
Dynamic stretching improves athletic performance.

Static stretches — stretching exercises that elongate the muscles, performed while the body is at rest — are likely not beneficial to a warm-up routine at all and could actually be dangerous, according to the research headed by scientists at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. The study, which the New York Times featured in a recent article entitled “Stretching: The Truth”, instructed participants to perform static hamstring and quadriceps stretches and then measured their muscles’ power output. The results showed static stretching produces less-than-desirable results: In fact, less force was generated from leg muscles after a static stretching regime than from muscles that were not stretched at all.

Dr. Peter Jokl, director of Yale’s Sports Medicine Center, said that it is true that static stretching may weaken muscles in the short-run. But he does not necessarily agree that it is “dangerous,” as the article claimed.

“They were talking about weakening the muscles — meaning how much power they can produce,” he said of the study’s authors. “Say you wanted to produce maximum force out of your muscles. If you disconnect links by overstretching, you can weaken the muscle in terms of how much horsepower, so to speak, you can produce.”

The primary function of a warm-up should be to increase body temperature, according to Jokl. Warm muscles use oxygen and stored energy more efficiently and can withstand more force.

“Connective tissue is like Tupperware,” he said. “If you put one in the fridge it gets stiff. When you run it under hot water, it’s more pliable.”

Increasing blood flow — another effect of warming up — also makes muscles more flexible, he added.

Experts recommend light jogging or comparable aerobic activity as a way to start a solid warm-up routine. The warm-up should last from five to 10 minutes, which will raise the body temperature between two to three degrees Fahrenheit, according to Jokl. However, the athlete should be careful to avoid too intense of a warm-up, which can itself lead to muscle strain or other injuries, he explained. Even if you do avoid injury, a burnout of a warm-upcan have a second unpleasant side effect: It could simply wear you out.

But, Jokl added, “The study overdramatized the idea that traditional stretching may not be good for you.”

Overdramatized or not, within Yale athletics, static stretching as a stand-alone warm-up went the way of leg warmers as fashionable workout gear a long time ago.

“This info is not new,” Richard Kaplan, assistant athletic trainer at Yale, said of the pitfalls of static stretching. “We have already instituted a ‘dynamic workout’ … with most of our teams and reserve the static stretching for right before our cool-down period.”

Indeed, dynamic stretching has taken the place of static stretching in many collegiate environments, though the latter still reigns supreme in amateur athletics. (Dynamic stretching is a process in which the muscles are stretched while moving — including squats, lunges, or the “Spider-Man,” which requires the athlete to get down on all fours and crawl as though he or she were climbing a wall.)

“We do a full dynamic warm-up,” Yale track and field head coach David Shoehalter said of the team’s pre-practice routine, “I’ve been coaching now for 20 years and have been doing dynamic warm-ups the entire time.”

In response to the claim that static stretching is dangerous, he added, “I wouldn’t say it’s dangerous, but it’s not helpful, and it can lead to injury.”

Alina Liao ’09, a member of the gymnastics team, said she was also skeptical of the idea that static stretches are dangerous if they are performed properly and at the right time.

“I’ve never seen anyone injured directly from static stretching,” she said in an e-mail message. “I don’t think it’s particularly harmful unless you do an extreme amount of static stretching immediately before active exercise.”

Still, according to Shoehalter, static stretching is problematic for reasons beyond muscle weakening.

While he says dynamic warm-ups wake up your nervous system, “static stretching sends the message to your brain that your muscles are done.”

“So the message the brain is getting is ‘All right, I’m finished,” he said, “and then all of the sudden, there you are redlining it, which can lead to muscle strains or pulls.”

But that’s is not to say static stretching should be nixed altogether.

Within the Yale track and field program, Shoehalter said, athletes perform an extensive static stretching routine following workouts, as opposed to preceding them.

Liao, whose warm-up routine includes both dynamic movements such as leg swings and static stretches like splits, also emphasized static stretching still has a place in a safe and healthy workout.

“Static stretching still might be important for preventing muscle tears or strains,” she said. “Especially as a gymnast, if my muscles are not already fully stretched and thus ready for the flexibility my sport demands, I certainly risk tearing a muscle.”

In the end, it may be more a question of power than of peril.

“More so than static stretching leading to injuries,” Shoehalter emphasized, “dynamic stretching enhances the ability to perform at high levels.”

In other words, static stretches won’t necessarily hurt you, but they won’t provide the performance boost of their dynamic counterparts — and could leave you sore and your muscles strained if used in lieu of an aerobic warm-up.

So if this research isn’t really new at all, then why are so many people outside the world of collegiate athletics hearing of it for the first time? Why is dynamic stretching such a well-kept secret?

“It’s hard to say,” Shoehalter said. “It’s kind of an ‘old-habits-die-hard’ situation. I think static stretching is the old school way of doing things, but if you look at any kind of major collegiate track program, they’re doing full dynamic warm-ups.”

Having come from amateur athletic environments, Shoehalter continued, many athletes have never been exposed to dynamic stretching, so when the warm-up is over, they ask why they haven’t yet had the chance to stretch.

“You just kind of have to change what they think is stretching,” he said. “You have to change their perception of what actually works.”

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Standing ITB Stretching

http://www.physioadvisor.com.au/8278950/itb-stretch-tfl-stretch-itb-flexibility-exercis.htm



ITB Stretches

Exercises > Flexibility (Muscles) > ITB Stretches


(Main muscles Involved: Iliotibial Band (ITB), Tensor Fasciae Lata (TFL), Gluteus Maximus, Quadratus Lumborum, External Obliques, Internal Obliques)


The following ITB stretches are designed to improve the flexibility of the ITB and TFL muscle (figure 1). If you are injured, you should discuss the suitability of these exercises with your physiotherapist prior to commencing them.
To begin with, the ITB stretches should be held for 15 seconds and repeated 4 times at a mild to moderate stretch pain-free. Generally you should choose one or two ITB stretches that are comfortable for you and perform them 3 times daily. As your flexibility improves, the stretches can be progressed by increasing the frequency, duration and intensity of the stretches provided they are pain-free.
ITB
Figure 1 – The ITB and TFL muscle

ITB Stretches

ITB Stretch

Cross the leg to be stretched behind your other leg, taking it as far as you comfortably can. Then push your hips to the side of your leg to be stretched until you feel a stretch in your outer thigh / hip. Keep your back straight (figure 2). Hold for 15 seconds and repeat 4 times at a mild to moderate stretch pain-free.
Iliotibial Band Stretch
Figure 2 – ITB Stretch (left leg)

ITB Stretch at Bench

Begin standing side on at a bench with your back straight. Place your leg closest to the bench behind your other leg and across your body as demonstrated. Slowly lower your body weight using your front leg and hands until you feel a stretch in your outer thigh / hip (figure 3). Hold for 15 seconds and repeat 4 times at a mild to moderate stretch pain-free.
ITB Stretch (Bench)
Figure 3 – ITB Stretch at Bench (left leg)