3/5/06

Magic Muscles

I guess this is a little bit of a continuation of the posts on isolating individual muscles. Can a muscle like the Glute Medius do everything the experts are saying it can do? Is this another of those magic muscles? No doubt the Glute Medius is important in many movements. If that is the case why isolate it? If is “shut off” then lets find exercises that wake it up as part of integrated movements. The whole hip girdle area and the glutes are very important in movement. Not only are they very powerful muscles but they act as important shock absorbers. The best way to train them is to understand how they function in the big picture and train those movements. I believe very strongly in daily remedial work (not prehab, whatever that is). A big focus, no pun intended, is on the hip girdle. This areas should be addressed in movements during warm-up to wake up and activate the muscles. I have found that daily remediation forestalls a lot of the little niggling tightness and restrictions that occur and go on to cause bigger problems. This work consists of walking med ball rotations (walking not lunging), mini band work, crawls, stretch cord flexion/extension, abduction and adduction standing and hurdle walkovers. On other days do hip drops, single leg squat/touch and reach and single leg squats. It totals ten to twelve minutes of work, but it is time well spent.

5 Comments:

At 3/5/06, 2:47 PM, Blogger jbeyle said...

Great thoughts. What exactly is a "hip drop?"

 
At 3/6/06, 8:36 AM, Blogger Joe Przytula said...

Don't forget good old jumping jacks. You can stimulate the glut. medias and other hip rotators simply by using different arm drives. If you program them right, you can even give your athletes a great ab burn this way.

 
At 3/6/06, 1:43 PM, Blogger jbeyle said...

Joe,
What are some varieties of jumping jacks you use? As a PE teacher, I perform them fairly often. I do it regular, with crossed feet, feet in stride position (one in front of the other), with one arm regular, one arm front and back. Thanks for your ideas.

 
At 3/7/06, 9:20 AM, Blogger Joe Przytula said...

I use dozens of different variations, depending on what I want to accomplish. Let's say you are doing a throwing sport. My feet would be moving out-of-sink in the sagittal plane/while the arms would be moving in the sagittal plane also, out of sink, the ipsilateral arm flexing while the ipsilateral side leg is extending. I'll do them as a large amplitude movement as a conditioning exercise, or short and quick steps as agility/warmup.

 
At 3/7/06, 6:20 PM, Blogger jbeyle said...

Great ideas, Joe. Already started with my PE classes.

 

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