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The Functionally Fit Athlete 
 
by Lisa Marie Mercer June 10, 2005

Although most of us are well aware of the fact that being physically fit is crucial to sports performance, recent studies have shown that traditional training methods are not always the best way to enhance athletic skill. While strength, flexibility, muscular and cardiovascular endurance are certainly essential to our well being, when achieved within the bonds of traditionalism, these assets are “sport adjunctive," as opposed to “sport specific."

Bridging the Training Gap

Although most of us are well aware of the fact that being physically fit is crucial to sports performance, recent studies have shown that traditional training methods are not always the best way to enhance athletic skill. While strength, flexibility, muscular and cardiovascular endurance are certainly essential to our well being, when achieved within the bonds of traditionalism, these assets are “sport adjunctive," as opposed to “sport specific."

Does this mean that conditioning methods such weight training and cardio vascular machines should be avoided? Absolutely not! However, if you are attempting to create a fitness program designed to optimize your athletic performance, it may be necessary to “think outside the box”.

How many of you know someone who is incredibly fit, a “gym rat” who spends hours every day lifting weights and “doing cardio”, as they say? Are you surprised that sometimes, if you were to take this person skiing, or try to have them play a sport such as soccer, they may not always be as skillful as you thought they would be? Sports medicine expert Vern Gambetta describes “Gaposis” as the gap between how we train and how we play. In the past, if an athlete came to a trainer with an injury or some difficulty with a particular skill, the trainer would identify which muscles are tight, and which muscles are weak. The weak muscles would be strengthened, the tight ones, stretched.

Movement, not Muscles

Unfortunately, this solved only half the problem!

Many injuries, as well as difficulties performing specific skills, are the result of faulty muscular recruitment patterns. For example, ACL tears occur not only because of a muscle imbalance between the hamstrings and quadriceps, but because the quadriceps activate prior to the hamstring flexion that would have protected the knee from injury. Sport specific training involves the development of movement patterns that either resemble, or mimic some aspect of the sport. With the exception of the treatment of injures, in most cases, it will not involve muscle isolation without integration. Studies in motor learning have suggested that the brain does a better job at recognizing movement patterns than it does at recognizing isolated muscular contractions.

What other factors differentiate a sport specific program from a general conditioning program? One of the first things that come to mind is the psychological element. Most machine training is completely predictable. If you sit on a leg extension machine and straighten your legs, the machine mechanism will move upwards in a straight line, regardless of whether you are in alignment and engaging your deep core stabilizers. True athletes show a remarkable ability to respond quickly to random stimuli. A program that encourages spontaneity and quick reaction times may be far more beneficial in promoting athleticism than machine training.

When speaking about quick reaction times, it is important to consider the visual skills necessary for skillful sports performance. Many sports conditioning programs utilize medicine ball training. They can be used in simple exercise tasks, as well as in conjunction with balance conditioning. These tools are a fun and exciting way to improve reaction time in sports performance. Some trainers are starting to use exercises derived from the Feldenkrais technique, which integrate vision and movement.

Another overlooked factor in sports conditioning programs is environmental adaptation. Exercising in a gym that has been heated to 85 degrees will do very little to help you acclimate for your ski trip to Eastern Canada in January. In the same way, working out in an overly air-conditioned gym in the summer will not do much for the thermo-regulation necessary for outdoor sports in hot climates.

The most important factors to consider when conditioning for sport are dynamic balance and proprioception. If you look around any gym nowadays, you will see pieces of equipment that you would expect to find only in a physical therapists office. Wobble boards, stability balls, foam rollers and bosu all challenge balance and proprioception, making it necessary to utilize your deep core muscles. In August of 2000, the International Dance Exercise Association (IDEA) awarded Suzanne Nottingham the title of Fitness Instructor of the year. This would mark the first year that IDEA awarded this title to a “non dance-like” instructor. In addition to teaching fitness, Suzanne is a ski instructor at Mammoth resort, and a contributor to Ski Magazine. She designs fitness programs which promote, balance, stability, proprioception and alignment. Fitness instructors tend to be influenced by whoever wins the Fitness Instructor of the Year award .Therefore; it is no surprise that these types of programs have become quite popular at fitness centers.

Although many may claim to be the “originators” of this “core movement”, no one influential in the fitness industry has explored these concepts to the degree of Paul Chek. According to Chek, an exercise must satisfy many components to be labeled “functional”. Consider the equipment at your gym. You are working, for the most part, in a totally stable position, which is provided by the machine. As a result, your bodies own stabilizers have very little need for activation. Now consider an activity such as skiing. Is there some machine that holds our bodies in a stable position as we go down the slope, or do we rely on our internal stabilizers?

Functional exercise utilizes both the body’s righting and tilting reflexes. It involves keeping the center of gravity over the base of support in both the dynamic and static postural alignment. Exercises most be selected that improve motor abilities relevant to the sport. If muscle groups are isolated, they must then be integrated.

Take a Stand

Most sports injuries occur in the standing position, usually because the participant has limited balance, stability strength and power in an upright alignment. Injuries such as ACL tears happen at oblique angles, partially because the athlete is not used to training in a multi-planar movement environment. Approximately 80% of the muscles of the body are rotational, but most machine exercises are linear.

Why then, do many people still consider seated weight training machines that usually operate in singular planes of movement, the best method of sports conditioning? By eliminating the need to stabilize the body, machine training makes the use of the core stabilizers unnecessary.

Choreography

The body’s core stabilizers are at the heart of this trend toward a more functional mode of fitness. The concept of “all movement stemming from one’s center” is the credo for any cutting edge fitness instructor. So does this mean that you should start doing 200 crunches a day? I think, not.

Consider this. Observe the alignment of many skiers on the hill. You may be aware of a hunched forward position in some of them, with the neck protruding. Now, think about a classic, abdominal crunch, especially if performed with a pelvic tilt. Note the rounding of the spine, and the jutting forward of the neck. Is this a coincidence?

While crunches are adequate for strengthening the rectus abdominals, the athlete needs to be infinitely more concerned with the transverse abdominals. The transverse are what Paul Chek refers to as the “inner unit”. Their role is to support the internal organs, and assist in both static and dynamic postural stability.

Chek even has a theory about how a weak transverse abdominal muscle may eventually cause knee problems. In healthy individuals, anytime you take step, the transverse abdominal muscle should become activated. If it does not, it will affect the stability of the sacroiliac joint. This may cause a slight twisting action which in turn distorts the alignment of the femur, thereby causing an injury.

So, how do we locate the transverse abdominal muscle? Here are some easy ways. Cough. Do you feel an inner tightening of your abdominal muscle? That’s your transverse. Or take a deep breath, then, upon exhaling, press your navel to your spine. The transverse abdominals will press against the diaphragm to expel the air during an exhalation. Woman may be most familiar with the best way to activate the transverse abdominals. Lately, the concept of exercising the pelvic floor all throughout life has been given so much press, that I’m surprised that there isn’t a slogan “Kegels, not just for pregnancy”.

Most women are taught to use their pelvic floor by visualizing the muscles they would use if they were trying to stop the flow of urine. For the sake of fitness activities, I tell my students to think of the area down below as a hammock, and to draw the hammock up. The affect on alignment and balance is amazing. I have also told this to new ski students as an image for getting off a lift chair, and I have whispered it to fellow ski students who are totally hunched over. Men also have a pelvic floor. Many have told me that doing Kegel exercises prescribed by a physical therapist has improved their lower backs and thus improved their skiing. I‘ve also been told that this is highly effective for skiing moguls!

Recently, I learned that it is possible for one side of the transverse abdominal muscle to be weaker than the other. Sometimes, this may happen as a result of an injury to any body part. If someone has a weak TVA on one side, their balance and skill on that side may be impaired.

This may become apparent in how someone skis. A classic example is the student who can traverse the hill balanced on one ski, but not the other. If the student feels that they cannot balance in certain moves due to biomechanical instabilities, they will not progress, even with the best instructors available. Until they train their bodies to use the transverse abdominals and other stabilizers on both sides, their skiing may always have an uneven quality.

The transverse abdominal muscle is supposed to be a postural stabilizer. It is essentially an endurance muscle. The superficial rectus abdominus, which is utilized in crunches, is NOT supposed to be involved in endurance. By doing 100s of crunches a day, and then, sitting hunched over a computer, we have turned these spinal flexors into endurance muscles. As a result, many people walk around in what we call “upper cross” syndrome; hunched posture, neck forward. To further complicate matters, by over using our superficial muscles, we have trained our inner unit to be less functional.

Force generation begins in the core stabilizers. It then travels down to the feet, back up to the center, and then to the upper extremities. When we talk about developing power for any sort of sport, you need to strengthen your core, before anything else.

Does anyone think they can fire a cannon from a canoe?

Planes of Motion

What other factors need to be considered when speaking about functional sports conditioning? One of the most cohesive, comprehensive methodologies was developed by Juan Carlos Santana, of the Institute for Human Performance in Boca Raton Fla.

It is Santana’s observation that activity takes place in 4 Pillars of Human Movement:

  • Standing & Locomotion
  • Level Changes
  • Pushing & Pulling
  • Rotation

In designing a conditioning program for a specific sport, it is important to understand the interplay of the movements within these 4 pillars. The next step is to determine what energy system is used in the sport, aerobic or anaerobic. Assessing the strength component of a specific sport is crucial, since strength has a direct relationship with speed. At this point, it becomes crucial to bridge the gap between functional and absolute strength. Someone may be able to lift a considerable amount of weight when using exercise equipment, but they may be much weaker when they are working wit constraints of a machine or weight belt.

Since acceleration is an important aspect of sport performance, it can be helpful to perform some sports conditioning exercises at a higher speed than one would use for traditional weight training. Obviously, when working at higher speeds, use a lighter weight. While acceleration is important, deceleration fine-tunes athleticism. Unfortunately this is often neglected. Cutting edge trainers are now exploring different ways to add deceleration into the conditioning routine.

If an athlete is involved in “throwing “ sports, or activities such as golf, it is crucial that they are not given loads that are inappropriate for their grip strength, even if their muscles can handle it. To do so can cause hand injuries. Some trainers such as Paul Chek, will actually substitute the handgrips on a pulley machine for the opposite teams rugby jersey, when training rugby teams. This obviously adds an interesting psychological component to the training!

If you are already following some sort of fitness program, use these guidelines to tweak your routine, in order to make it sport specific!

Have Fun!


 




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