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Should
all fall sports participants engage in conditioning
programs to reduce their risk of injury and improve
their athletic performance? The answer is an unqualified
yes! Boys and girls? Yes. Strength athletes who play
football and endurance athletes who run cross-country?
Yes. Ball handling teammates who play soccer and field
hockey? Yes.
Without
question, all young people who compete in fall sports
should perform appropriate exercise programs to enhance
their physical fitness. Of course, some of the training
procedures will vary based on the demands of the
activity. For example, football players should emphasize
power exercises such as sprinting, cross-country runners
should focus on endurance exercises such as three to
five mile runs, and soccer players should include both
sprinting and sustained running such as 100 yard dashes
and half-mile repeats.
But
when it comes to muscle conditioning, I propose that a
similar strength training program may be successfully
applied to all of the athletes. Oh, there are some
differences, such as the number of repetitions
completed. Generally speaking, power athletes respond
best to lower (4 to 8) repetitions with relatively heavy
weightloads, endurance athletes respond best to higher
(12 to 16) repetitions with relatively light weightloads,
and combination athletes respond best to moderate (8 to
12) repetitions with moderate weightloads.
However,
when it comes to the exercise selection all of these
athletes should be strong in all of their major muscle
groups. Regardless of your sport, there is no advantage
in having a weak upper body or a poorly conditioned
midsection. Going a step further, training some muscle
groups more than others can be a serious disadvantage.
Years
ago when I was a university track coach, I determined
that sprinters should have powerful quadriceps muscles
to explode out of the blocks, and flexible hamstring
muscles to prevent hamstring pulls. All winter we
strengthened their quadriceps and stretched their
hamstrings, and I couldn't wait to see the results of my
specialized conditioning program. As it turned out every
single sprinter pulled a hamstring muscle and I was
dumbfounded. What had I done wrong?
Simple.
I unintentionally promoted a serious imbalance between
the sprinters' opposing muscle groups. You see, a
powerfully accelerating quadriceps group must be
properly decelerated by a relatively strong hamstrings
group. If the hamstrings muscles are significantly
weaker they will be overwhelmed by the stronger
quadriceps muscles, and injury is inevitable in spite of
their flexibility.
So
what should I have done to better condition and
safeguard my sprinters? Clearly, I should have
strengthened all of their major muscle groups,
especially their hamstrings and quadriceps. Years later,
working with the Notre Dame High School track and
cross-country teams, I discovered how well the
comprehensive conditioning approach really works. All of
the athletes trained all of their major muscle groups,
and the result was one injured runner in four years, and
four consecutive Massachusetts and New England
championship teams.
But
why would football players train with the same exercises
as cross-country runners or field hockey players?
Because they all have the same major muscle groups.
Let's take a look at the major muscles of the body, and
the basic free-weight and machine exercises that
strengthen these muscle groups.
|
|
Major
Muscle Groups |
Recommended
Free Weight Exercises |
Recommended
Machine Exercises |
|
|
Quadriceps
(front thigh) |
Squat |
Leg
Extension |
|
Hamstrings
(rear thigh) |
Squat |
Leg
Curl |
|
Hip
Adductors (inner thigh) |
--- |
Hip
Adduction |
|
Hip
Abductors (outer thigh) |
--- |
Hip
Abduction |
|
Pectoralis
Major (chest) |
Bench
Press |
Chest
Cross |
|
Latissimus
Dorsi (upper back) |
Pulldown |
Super
Pullover |
|
Deltoids
(shoulders) |
Shoulder
Press |
Lateral
Raise |
|
Biceps
(front arm) |
Biceps
Curl |
Biceps
Flexion |
|
Triceps
(rear arm) |
Triceps
Pressdown |
Triceps
Extension |
|
Erector
Spinae (lower back) |
Trunk
Extension |
Lower
Back Extension |
|
Rectus
Abdominis (abdominals) |
Trunk
Curl |
Abdominal
Curl |
|
Neck
Extensors (rear neck) |
--- |
Neck
Extension |
|
Neck
Flexors (front neck) |
--- |
Neck
Flexion |
|
Many
people mistakenly believe that strength training
inevitably results in larger muscles and more
bodyweight. This is not necessarily true. Strength
training produces stronger muscles in all cases, but
gains in muscle size and bodyweight are very dependent
upon personal genetic factors. For example, most
football players have mesomorphic physiques that respond
to strength exercise with relatively large changes in
muscle size and body weight. On the other hand, most
cross-country runners have ectomorphic physiques that
respond to strength exercise with relatively small
changes in muscle size and body weight. Furthermore, the
heavy weightload - low repetition training followed by
football players maximizes muscle strength and size,
whereas the lower weightload - higher repetition
training performed by cross-country runners emphasizes
muscle endurance without additional bodyweight.
The
main point is that all fall sports participants can
benefit from a standard program of strength exercise,
and that the results will be specific to each type of
athlete. A stronger athlete in any sport is a better
athlete, and more importantly, a more injury-resistant
athlete. If your fall athletes are not presently
performing basic strength exercises, like those
presented in the table, you can greatly enhance their
sport safety and success by starting a sensible strength
training program. Thirty minutes a day, twice a week, is
all the time and energy requirements necessary for some
significant physical benefits.
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Wayne
L. Westcott, Ph.D.
is fitness research director at the South Shore YMCA and
author of the new book Strength
Training Past 50.
More
Books from Dr. Westcott
CEC:
Current
Strength Training Research by
Dr. Westcott
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