Cover photo

Monday, 11 May 2015

A Doctor's View of CrossFit

An Interview with Dr. Stuart McGill

A-doctors-view-of-crossfit
NEW
LEAD PHOTO CREDIT: CROSSFIT OCEAN ISLE BEACH

Here's what you need to know...

  1. CrossFit is the fastest growing fitness pursuit, but some of the things participants do are questionable from a health standpoint.
  2. According to Dr. Stuart McGill, the spine is most at risk when it's flexed and loaded with high compression and when it extends while still bearing the high compression.
  3. Fatigue from heavy, high-rep lifts can cause deterioration of lifting form leading to a higher incidence of disc bulges and herniation.
  4. Dr. McGill says CrossFit could improve by making a few simple changes, like decreasing the number of reps required on Olympic lifts.

The Fittest on Earth... For a Year

Gym
Like it or not, CrossFit is here to stay, and in a big way. With over 10,000 CrossFit facilities and counting, it's become the household name in fitness.
And every year the CrossFit Games brings in hundreds of thousands of competitors to determine who "the fittest on earth" will be.
So what's next for CrossFit? Maybe cleaning up some of the issues that will make fittest-on-earth contenders debilitated-for-life later on down the road.

Notes From A Physical Therapist

Dr John Rusin
As a sports performance physical therapist, CrossFit has been on my professional radar for years. Both CrossFit athletes and facilities have sought my services.
One of the biggest misconceptions I hear is that all CrossFit athletes are chronically sidelined with debilitating injuries. This isn't accurate and the reason for the spike in physical therapy may surprise you.
Good physical therapists are movement specialists and coaches above all else. The focus in my professional work with high-level athletics such as CrossFit has gravitated more towards injury prevention and pre-habilitation than traditional rehab.
Screening, evaluating, and preventing future injuries makes up a majority of my cases with CrossFit athletes over the past few years. Just as with any other competitive sport, there will always be an influx of chronic and traumatic injuries. That's part of the game.

Does CrossFit Hurt People?

Ring Dips
I only have so much anecdotal evidence behind my claims that CrossFit may be one of the most debilitating forms of training.
While research is incomplete, it's important to justify or refute these claims regarding CrossFit-specific injury rates as the world's fastest growing athletic specialty continues to grow.
This is a tall task. To set the record straight, I spoke with one of the top thinkers in biomechanics to get his perspective on CrossFit.

Insights From Dr. Stuart McGill

Dr. Stuart McGill is considered one of the world's top spinal specialists and researchers.
He's been sought out by corporations, the government, elite athletes, and professional sports teams for his expertise in injury prevention, programming, and rehabilitation.

Related:  Back to McGill

Dr. McGill has made enough groundbreaking advancements in his field to carry an opinion backed by science that speaks volumes.
I had the chance to get his take on CrossFit. Here's what he had to say.
Dr. Rusin: Is CrossFit inherently dangerous?
Dr. McGill: My expertise is in back injury, so that is the perspective from which I view controversial topics such as this. For the record I have a love-hate relationship with CrossFit.
I don't think "dangerous" is the right word, but certainly "injury risk" is appropriate and it facilitates discussion of practices that influence injury risk, injury mechanisms, and injury rates.
A major component of CrossFit is Olympic lifting. Olympic lifting must find the lifter. Not the other way around given the special anatomical gifts needed to lift with efficiency and injury resiliency.
The flexibility required in the hips and shoulders in many cases is a gift from your parents. No matter how much stretching is attempted, some will never have the hip and shoulder socket anatomy to deep squat and support a bar overhead. But they will try, and their compromised form will create substantial injury mechanisms.
The majority I see are spine disc bulges and vertebral end plate fractures. Most of these fractures are undetected by radiologists reporting on MRI, CT, and x-ray scans.
Overhead Squat
Dr. Rusin: What can the average CrossFit coach without a strong background and focus on the Olympic lifts do to identify at-risk athletes while also keeping their clients and athletes safe?
Dr. McGill: This is a difficult challenge for any coach. Anyone can play basketball with little risk but this cannot be said for the Olympic lifts.
The next issue is that programming within a CrossFit routine can be problematic.
World-class Olympic lifters train with very few reps – usually just singles and doubles. They have also learned to never miss a lift, never lift when fatigued, and never compromise form.
They do not create muscle memory polluted with fatigued patterns. This approach creates faster gains in performance and less injury.
I have known several Olympic lifters over the years who are unanimous in stating that their back injury was tuition. It taught them never to lift with compromised form again. One went on to set multiple world records.
Dr. Rusin: What are the most common causes of injury?
Atlas Stone
Dr. McGill: The spine's discs are quite tough and resilient to high load when they're not bent but remain in a neutral posture. Second best is when they are flexed and then loaded, but they must not move.
Think of flexing the spine when picking up an atlas stone and the spine is curled over the stone and lifted with extension at the hips – the spine stays locked.
The injury bogeyman appears when the spine is flexed and then loaded with high compression, and then it extends while still bearing the high compression.
Here, high reps of these bending movements while under the high loads from the bar slowly delaminate the collagen fibers that form the outer rings of the disc.
Eventually the cumulative effect is the gel-like nucleus of the disc seeps through the delaminations causing a disc bulge. We have performed dozens of experiments over the years to prove this.
Dr. Rusin: It's well accepted that placing the spine in a flexed position under daunting loads is a bad thing. But don't Olympic lifters endure the same types of stresses as CrossFit athletes executing Olympic lifts within programing or WODs?
Dr. McGill: This is the distinction between the real Olympic lift competitors and CrossFit athletes.
The high repetitions and deterioration of lifting form from fatigue in CrossFit athletes causes a higher incidence of disc bulges and herniations. I rarely have to deal with these injuries in the Olympic athletes – typically they have healthy backs but succumb to shoulder, knee, and hip injuries.

Related:  4 Most Damaging Types of Training

But CrossFit compounds the risk further. Olympic athletes toughen the collagen in their spine discs by only training mobility in the ball and socket joints.
CrossFit athletes must perform exercises like burpees. Performing ten burpees before ten snatches replaces disc toughness with flexibility and softness in the matrix holding the collagen fibres together, resulting in a more potent injury risk scenario.
Many athletes have, and will, pay the price with years of back pain misery.
Spine
Dr. Rusin: So CrossFit-specific programming can be risky for lower back health. By now, don't coaches and programing coordinators over at the CrossFit HQ know this?
Dr. McGill: While attending the CrossFit competition at the Arnold Classic, one thing really stood out: the lifting technique was just awful.
I did not see one competent lift. Not one! And things only got worse with each rep and set. (I will note that I have consulted before with some CrossFit gyms and there are some very competent lifters.)
No corrections from the coaches, only encouragement to continue lifting. The injured athletes went down to the medical tent where I saw very strange and, in my view, inappropriate chiropractic and physical therapy approaches being administered.
Dr. Rusin: What were they doing?
Rock Tape
Dr. McGill: They were putting athletes into flexion positions and applying manual technique to their back muscles making the situation worse.
The clinicians appeared not to understand the mechanisms causing the athletes pain – they had disc pain.
I suspect athletes think injury will not happen to them, and that lifting form during fatigue is not going to catch up to them, but maintaining good form is that important.
Dr. Rusin: How do CrossFit athletes compare to other elite level athletes you've worked with?
Dr. McGill: I'm not able to answer the question, "Who are the greatest athletes?" But I can address the training and whether or not it creates the best athleticism in the individual.
The programming based on going to failure with speed and high load will shorten the athletic window of many of these people. But can I say anything different for MMA, American football, and many other sports?
Training to compete in the CrossFit Games is about creating a very special competency, but our work shows it does not create the best transfer. I don't know how transferable it is to other activities and sports.
Running
Fitness variables compete with one another. For example, one cannot train for maximum explosive power and still train for endurance.
It's not possible to enhance the fast twitch mechanisms for maximum speed and strength while enhancing fatigue resiliency by challenging the slow twitch metabolism. But this contrast does not necessarily lead to injury – only a poorer specialized athlete.
Dr. Rusin: So are you saying that CrossFit-specific programming can hinder an athlete's potential athletic development in sports other than CrossFit?
Ball Throw
Dr. McGill: The programming within CrossFit will only create a better CrossFit competitor. There are better ways to build a faster running back in football, a better rower, a better Olympic lifter, etc. Decreasing the volume of reps is just one variable, among many, that would need optimizing.
Some will argue that some CrossFit events requiring torso-bending power such as the seated overhead medicine ball throw creates athletic competency.
Dr. Rusin: I have argued that the GHD medicine ball toss is one of the single most risky movements in CrossFit, period. So, does the ball toss create any athletic competency?

Related:  Does CrossFit Lead to Injury?

Dr. McGill: I would argue that each individual only has a defined amount of training capacity. A much better set of exercises could be programmed to achieve the athletic competency without using up so much of the available training capacity.
Again, the programming is not designed to allow maximum athletic development while reducing the injury risk. The point is, risk could be mitigated, and athletic variables increased with more thought directed at programming.
Dr. Rusin: One of your recent studies – relevant to this discussion of fitness and injury risk – revealed that fitter police and firefighters got hurt sooner.
Dr. McGill: We tested several hundred firefighters together with a police SWAT team for athletic variables: biomechanical, physiological, range of motion, endurance – a robust battery of tests.
Firefighter Pistol Squat
Then we followed the firefighters for three years and the police for five. The results were the same: the fitter ones got hurt more.
Then we analyzed the injury mechanisms – the majority of injuries did not occur on duty but rather in the weight room, and they were training in the style of lifting to failure and compromising form.
The guys who trained more moderately were slightly less fit, but they were sufficiently fit, and more injury resilient. This just shows that programming matters.
Dr. Rusin: In your view, what's the most positive aspect of CrossFit that we can all learn from?
Dr. McGill: Of course, I see many positives. In CrossFit, I see people rallying around physical activity that may not otherwise become involved. When I was younger, I would have loved this – the tougher the challenge, the better.
In high school and college I trained for strength and size, then later for specific athleticisms involving speed and strength. But then I had to tone down the intensity as the mileage on my body was showing with pain and slower recovery from injury and training.
By my early 50s I made a conscious decision to make it to retirement with as much remaining athleticism as possible. Now I look around and see my contemporaries who still have their joints – and they were not the ones who thought intense training when they were younger would give them good fitness through the lifecycle.
This is only achieved with moderation.
But having stated that, I am equally dismayed by many of the students at my university who are so soft and untrained that they will suffer the health consequences of being physically weak.
If I could influence them, I would coach them in movement competency then send them to CrossFit; but a CrossFit facility concentrated on proper movement and science-based programming methodology, of course!
Injury
Dr. Rusin: What would you do if you could run CrossFit for a day?
Dr. McGill: That's a fair question and the right question for anyone who wants the right to voice an opinion. It puts it in perspective.
From a programming point of view, I would reduce the number of reps of Olympic lifts. Perhaps modify programming to singles or doubles at the beginning of a sequence. But there would need to be a way to test competency.
I would not add volume to an event that had an inherent risk for tissue damage, like the Olympic lifts, or the seated med ball throw up and over the roman chair. In fact I would drop that event as it steals resiliency from the lifts.
Actually, if reps were required, I would ban it. The laws of human motion with injury resiliency begin first with proximal stiffness enhances distal athleticism, and secondly, generate power at hips, not the spine. This will create a more competent and injury resilient athlete.
Ball Toss
Dr. Rusin: So we have a list of things that you would omit from CrossFit-style programming. Are there any additions that you'd like to see in CrossFit?
Dr. McGill: Some more variety in the events to include obstacle courses, and more endurance holds, like a new military plank hold. These would maintain the mental toughness element that is a wonderful feature of CrossFit.
Interestingly this seems to be the direction of the Spartan races and Tough Mudder events. The natural team-building that occurs is wonderful. No wonder participation is growing among police, firefighter, and military groups.
We're just publishing a study where we trained a group of firefighters with a program of substantial repetitions and weights but we did not coach form – the emphasis was on completing the reps. This will sound familiar to the CrossFit community.
In a second group we had a coach insist on good form for every rep, stopping when form broke, and continually correcting.
Burpees
Both groups enhanced their fitness. However, we tested their movement competency in high-demand firefighting tasks following the training sessions. The coached group moved with more competencies and fewer injury mechanisms. The high-rep, go-to-failure, form-compromising group had more injury mechanisms in their movements.
From this perspective, transference of movement skill to other events, together with fitness, required a disciplined training approach. Our data showed that performing more reps without focusing on technique did not transfer as well to other activities, while the disciplined movement form approach did.
CrossFitters interested in being better athletes with fewer injuries will be interested in this – and adjust their programming approach as a result.
Dr. Rusin: This could clean up the high incidence of injuries secondary to CrossFit programming and participation. It may broaden the scope of what CrossFit could be capable of for the transfer of athleticism into other sports.
Dr. McGill: Variety of events would absolutely assist in better transference of athleticism to other sports, and reduce injury risk.
Some strongman events would better test grip strength, frontal plane strength and isometric endurances that are lacking in many CrossFit routines. This would require the CrossFit executives to expand the brand.
Adding movement competency judging to CrossFit would reduce injury risk. Some events are currently judged for example achieving the chin to bar – but this is to count reps based on a performance metric. Judging the lifts for form and skill would be best, but difficult to administer.
Dr. Rusin: While I agree it would be great to have a metric for movement competency and execution, doesn't it all start at the foundation of coaching?
Deadlift
Dr. McGill: Coaches need a lot of training. I am so disappointed when I hear coaches yelling at an incompetent lifter to keep trying for more reps with awful form. This is common on YouTube clips and is poor press for CrossFit.
A great coach assesses their athletes for injury history, body type, current athleticisms, and training goals, then creates a program while training best technique. A poor coach beats a client up and makes them sore.

Related:  The Future of CrossFit Training

Dr. Rusin: That is one of the biggest misconceptions I see all over the fitness industry: the assumption that overly hard training methodology that routinely puts an athlete into the ground will produce optimal results when compared to more intelligently and goal-oriented programming.
There's a big difference between programming a movement to be "hard" and programming to be "challenging."
Dr. McGill: Absolutely. Clearly some people do not have the competency to pull a bar from the floor. They should be pulling from blocks. I suspect that incorporating this modification would reduce a lot of CrossFit lifting related injuries.
Dr. Rusin: So how can we protect our CrossFit athletes?
Ropes
Dr. McGill: No athlete can stay in peak fitness for very long without becoming sick or breaking down. The combat sports have instituted commissions to reduce the number of fights or to monitor a fighter before reinstating their competition status.
Legislation to limit training volume for cricket bowlers (similar to baseball pitchers) in Australia is another example that these approaches reduce injury rates while preserving high performance.
Some equivalent institutional or legislative mechanism from the CF head office would assist serious CrossFit athletes.

Monday, 4 May 2015

5 Biggest Training Mistakes in MMA


#1 There is NO coordinated plan of attack for fighters.

Ideally one person needs to be in charge of the athlete’s camp, so they can create a plan of attack, communicate expectations, create a schedule, execute and monitor progress along the way.


  • Who is the athlete?
  • What are their strength, weaknesses, etc?
  • Who is the opponent?
  • What are their strengths, weaknesses, etc?
  • What is the game plan for the fight?
  • What physical demands are needed for that game plan?

A stand up battle will have different technical and physical demands than a wrestling or grappling match.


Once the plan is in place, coaches can coordinate on how to best prepare the athlete for competition.



#2 Athletes work with a variety of coaches that DON’T communicate.

MMA requires a variety of skills, including boxing, kickboxing, muay thai, wrestling, jiu jitsu, judo, etc…not to mention strength and conditioning.

These demands usually lead athletes to train with a variety of different coaches, at a variety of gyms.

Commonly each coach wants to teach skill, but also tends to blend in their own version of strength or conditioning drills.

Coaches want to help prepare the athlete, but typically do a poor job communicating with the rest of the team.

Many athletes are sparring, rolling live, wrestling, and doing conditioning at every practice.

Left un-monitored, the athlete typically ends up exhausted, stressed, performing like crap and eventually injured.

This goes hand and hand with mistake #1.

In order for an athlete to grow physically and technically, all coaches must be on board, follow the plan and communicate their experience with the athlete along the way.



#3 Very few coaches test or monitor the athlete during camp.
CIT Boys testing during fight camp

Is the athlete getting better or just tired?

Training camp are long, grueling and taxing on the athlete’s mind and body.

In order to improve their performance, it’s important to get some benchmark numbers before and during camp.

Still is the #1 priority.

How is the athletes skill set?

How can the skill coaches help the athlete evolve, improve and best prepare for the upcoming fight?

Next is strength and conditioning.
  • Is the athlete healthy?
  • How is their weight/body fat %?
  • How good is their mobility/flexibility?
  • Are they strong?
  • Are they explosive, fast, and quick?
  • Are they in shape? (Aerobic, anaerobic?)

If the athlete is struggling with pain, strain or injury, that is priority #1.  A good physical therapist, manual therapist or other needs to assess address and communicate the plan with the rest of the team.

A GOOD strength coach can monitor body composition, resting heart rate, mobility, symmetry, strength, power, and conditioning at the beginning and during camp.



#4 Too much high intensity training

Just about everyone that trains for competition screws this one up…and honestly, I screwed this up a lot in the past.

Competitive people love hard workouts!

If they are laying in a pile of sweat and vomit, it was a great workout, right?

Wrong!

Remember, the goal of strength and conditioning is to make the athlete stronger, more athletic and to keep them healthy, so they can train!
If we always ‘smash’ them during our workouts, they are way too fatigued to perform and are vulnerable to injury.

A GOOD strength program addresses posture, stability of the joints, mobility, explosive movement, strength and conditioning, within a systematic plan of attack that allows the athlete to peak for competition.

Ideally, the intensity level of each practice should be planned and practices throughout the week should fluctuate between low, medium and high intensity work.



#5 Using conditioning to build “mental toughness”

In South Africa, we idolize ‘tough’.

Epic battles, who can last the longest and endure the most pain?

We look up to the people that put in the hours, work hard and tough it out!

When it comes to training, this can be a huge benefit, but the volume and timing must be controlled.

Wrestling for 2 hours and then doing an hour of high intensity conditioning will crush the toughest competitor, but it doesn't make them better.

What many coaches fail to consider is the impact that this type of training has on the athlete and the rest of their training.

MMA training is already tough, taxing and difficult.

Small doses of high intensity, grind sessions can be useful, but need to be part of the big picture, executed at the right time and the impact monitored, so the athlete recovers properly.
MMA is relatively new sport and how we train is evolving every year.  We try new things, learn from others and improve our programs, so our athletes are able to perform and succeed at the highest levels.  Hopefully some of these ideas will help you improve your program, so your athletes can become stronger competitors!

Monday, 23 February 2015

Are You A Trainer Or A Coach?

Since negative connotations abound and coaching is a difficult concept to define in a sentence or two, I wanted to compare it with training to help you to understand my personal definition about coaching.  As you will see, training and coaching are related, but they are not the same thing. 


Here are 12 comparisons to help illustrate the potential difference between a trainer and a coach:

 


A Trainer Lights a fire under someone.
A Coach Lights A Fire Inside Of Someone.

A Trainer affects the hour they are with someone.
A Coach affects the hours they are not with someone.

A Trainer Hopes To Get Through The Session.
The Coach Hopes To Get Through To Someone.

A Trainer Forgets The Job Is Not To Remind People About Problems.
A Coach Remembers The Job Is To Solve Them.

A Trainer Stretches your legs.
A Coach Stretches Your Limits.

A Trainer Counts Your Reps.
A Coach Discounts Your excuses.

A Trainer Is concerned with How Much time you put in.
A Coach is concerned with How Much You put into the time.

A Trainer wants you to do your best.
A Coach wants you to do better than your best.

A Trainer is concerned More With How, Where and When.
A Coach is Concerned More With Who, What and Why.

A Trainer Works For A Paycheck.
A Coach Works For A Passion.

A Trainer Develops and Delivers Your Workout.
A Coach Creates and Cultivates Your Purpose.

Training is Something You Do To Someone.
Coaching Is Something You Do With Someone.


By Martin Rooney

Thursday, 19 February 2015

Take 5 Intervals and Call Me in The AM?

Fitness professionals may be the best medical practitioners in the world. We actually do something to deal with the underlying disease as opposed to treat the symptoms. Doctors have been reduced to simply giving us something that masks our symptoms. A friend once hypothetically compared doctors to mechanics. Imagine bringing your car in for service because the “check engine” light was on and getting handed some duct tape. The mechanic looks you straight in the eye and says “put a piece over the light, you won’t see it anymore”. You’d probably laugh and never go back to that mechanic, right?

Why don’t we laugh when the doctor gives us a statin, or blood pressure medication, or Metformin? Does anyone think that statins actually do anything to deal with why your cholesterol is high? If you do, you’re crazy. They just change the test results. The reason you have high cholesterol is still there? ( PS- lets not even get into the whole cholesterol debate, just think symptom and treatment)

High blood pressure? Take this. It will lower your blood pressure. Again, the drug will change the test result so that it appears more favorable. Does the drug deal with why you have high blood pressure? No, the drug just makes you “ignore the light” until something more serious happens.
To stay with our mechanic analogy, you now back a few weeks later and say “my oil light is on now too”. The mechanic says “no problem, have another piece of tape”. You just keep driving until the car stops working, with all these pieces of tape covering your warning lights. What’s the life analogy for that scenario? Not a pretty picture is it?

I’d love it if someday you went to the doctor to complain and they said. “Here’s a prescription for exercise, take 5 intervals three times a week for six weeks and come back. And also, lose a pound per week while you’re at it. If you come back and you’re not down six pounds and have an attendance note from your trainer I’m going to cancel your health insurance”. Now that would be practicing medicine.

We can dream can’t we?
By Mike Boyle

Sunday, 1 February 2015

Life's Rules by Bill Bates

Whether  you like Bill Gates or not...this is pretty cool. Here's some advice Bill Gates recently dished out at a high school speech about 11 things they did  not learn in school. He talks about how feel-good, politically correct teaching has  created a full generation of kids with no  concept of reality and how this concept  sets them up for failure in the real world.

     RULE 1
     Life is not fair - get used to it.

     RULE 2
     The world won't care about your self-esteem. The world
     will expect you to accomplish something BEFORE you  feel
     good about yourself.

     RULE 3
     You will NOT make 40 thousand dollars a year right out
     of high school. You won't be a vice president with
     car phone, until you earn both.

     RULE 4
     If you think your teacher is tough, wait till you get a
     boss. He doesn't have tenure.

     RULE 5
     Flipping burgers is not beneath your dignity. Your
     grandparents had a different word for burger flipping
     they called it Opportunity.

     RULE 6
     If you mess up, it's not your parents' fault, so don't
     whine about your mistakes, learn from them.

     RULE 7
     Before you were born, your parents weren't as boring as
     they are now. They got that way from paying your bills,
     cleaning your clothes and listening to you talk about
     how cool  you are. So before you save the rain forest
     from the parasites of your parent's generation, try
     delousing the closet in your own room.

     RULE 8
     Your school may have done away with winners and losers,
     but life has not. In some schools they have abolished
     failing grades and they'll  give you as many times as
     you want to get the right answer. This doesn't bear the
     slightest resemblance to ANYTHING in real life.

     RULE 9
     Life is not divided into semesters. You don't get
     summers off and very few employers are interested in
     helping you find yourself. Do that on your own time.

     RULE 10
     Television is NOT real life. In real life people
     actually have to leave the coffee shop and go to jobs.

     RULE 11
     Be nice to nerds. Chances are you'll end up working for
     one.

Monday, 26 January 2015

5 REASONS TO LOVE BURPEES



It’s the exercise everyone loves to hate. Buck Furpees, as the not-so-elegant saying goes.Burpees are a simple, straightforward movement. Drop down to the ground in a pushup position, chest and thighs to the floor. Get back up to a standing position in the most efficient, fastest way possible. Jump a few inches in the air with your arms over your head. Repeat. Nothing flashy, nothing complicated. So why all the hate? In my opinion, burpees have been given an unjust reputation. The benefits far outweigh the discomforts. To get out in front of the infamous exercise, here are 5 reasons we should learn to love the burpee.

1 - The burpee is simple.
I already alluded to this above, but it’s worth some extra reinforcement. No bars, no weights (unless you wanted to wear a weighted vest…yikes), you can carry the burpee with you wherever you go. The burpee is built on straightforward movement standards that a massive range of people can do, and its simple to scale for those who don’t have it yet. Exercise in its purest form, people.

2-Burpees ARE functional fitness.
Can you think of a major muscle group that isn’t utilized in the execution of a burpee? Your arms, chest, quads, glutes, hamstrings and abs will all be called into action with every rep, and after a few of the suckers you’re body is going to start feeling like lead. Given that you are required to use your entire body weight to hit a burpee, the movement can be defined as a high-load, high-rep (if programmed as such) exercise. Which is great news, because findings from the Journal of Strength and Conditioning research has shown that high-rep and high-load exercises are effective at increasing muscular endurance.

3-Burpees will boost your anaerobic capacity.
Anaerobic is a word coming from the Greek word “αναερόβιος” which literally means living without air. Sound familiar? Anaerobic exercises are high intensity, short duration (1-2 minutes)-think of a 100m sprint. Now, if you are attacking your burpees with high intensity (easier said than done, I know), you will not only reap the benefits through muscular endurance (as mentioned above), but your lung capacity, heart health and ability to work faster/harder in a shorter amount of time will be significantly increased.

4-Burpees are great for weight loss.
As has been mentioned numerous times, burpees are a full-body exercise, intense exercise that shoots your heart rate up, resulting in large caloric expenditure. In fact, burpees burn up to 50% more fat than conventional strength training, and better yet, they will increase your metabolism for the rest of the day, long after you’ve finished throwing up from them.

5-Burpees are versatile, and they make you think.
Burpee muscle-ups, burpee box jumps, burpee pull-ups, burpee toes-to-bar, burpee…the list goes on. And, you can combine them in with any workout that needs another piece of equipment. Any.
Lastly, the burpee really does make you think. In the midst of the lung-burning, acid-building, vomit-inducing burpee workout, your mind tends to wonder and ask yourself just why exactly you are putting yourself through such misery. When you finally finish, and get that post-wod elation 30 minutes later, you have your answer. Over time, when you see the results in your performance and in your appearance, you’ll know for sure.
And, like me, you may just come to love the burpee.


BY WILLIAM IMBO

Friday, 17 May 2013

Moment Arms, Force Vectors and a Squat Analysis

Moment Arms, Force Vectors and a Squat Analysis

Understanding these important biomechanical terms will enable you to understand why some squat variations are more or less effective than others and why some variations are just plain dangerous!

What are moment arms and how do they work around joints?

A moment arm is simply the length between a joint axis and the line of force acting on that joint.

Every joint that is involved in an exercise has a moment arm. The longer the moment arm is the more load will be applied to the joint axis through leverage. As an example, think of trying to get a nut and bolt apart. If you can’t do it by hand because the moment arm is small, you use a crescent (as shown) which provides you with a much larger moment arm and allows less force (applied by you) to result in much more torque (rotational force) being applied at the nut. This is because torque at an axis is:

Force x Moment arm = Torque

In the exercise examples that follow you'll see the moment arms that work on the hip and knee joints with some common squat variations. Understanding these moment arms will enable you to determine which variations are safe or dangerous and what muscles are working most/least with each variation. The results may surprise you so please read on...

What are force vectors and how do they apply to exercise?

A force vector is the direction of a force. On the page covering the essentials of movement mechanics we talked about the line of force of gravity. There are many force vectors at play when we lift an object. We have gravity, the force of friction on the object, ground reaction forces, muscle forces (generated in the line existing between the origin and insertion of the muscle) and forces of momentum and so on.

The outcome of a movement is the sum of all vectors and their respective forces.

To put this in an exercise context, if I was going to punch a boxing bag the following forces and vectors would be in play

  •  The ground reaction forces I’d generate from my legs to start the punch
  •  The internal forces of every muscle involved from the foot, legs, trunk and arm
  •  The momentum of my arm
  •  The inertia of the bag

The main thing to do when analysing any exercise is to work out the major forces, how the body is likely to manage them, and how the body will stabilise the joints involved in the movement. Once you have done this you will know:

1. What muscles will be worked during the movement
2. Whether the posture involved in the movement is practical and one that you would want to encourage
3. What muscles will be worked as stabilisers
4. Where the exercise technique would go wrong if a person was to technically fail at this exercise

As an example we can look at squatting, initially with the back squat:

1. In this squat you can see the moment arms around the hip and knee – they measure from the joint axis to the line of force. In this bar position the moment arm around the hip is slightly longer than that around the knee. This means the hip extensors (gluteal muscles) will be doing slightly more work than the knee extensors (quadriceps) in terms of the force they’ll need to generate to overcome the load.

2. The posture here is good and is to be encouraged

3. The trunk, knee and hip stabilisers will be worked significantly, especially as more load is added.
 
4. This squat will most likely be lost from the core, resulting in the lumbar spine rounding and the bar dropping forward, so cueing of 'chest up', 'tummy tight', 'push through the hips and up' will help. As with all squats knee alignment, if lost, can cause counter rotation in the lumbar so cueing knee position as your clients fatigues is also important.

Now let’s compare the back squat with the front squat:

1. In this squat you can see the moment arms have changed slightly. They are now about equal meaning the loads around the hip and knee will be similar. This means the hip extensors and knee extensors will need to generate similar amounts of force throughout the movement.
2. This posture is also good and should be encouraged.
3. The shoulder, trunk, hip and knee stabilisers will be worked significantly, as in the back squat.
4. This squat will also be lost from the core or from the shoulder girdle due to the positioning of the bar, so cueing of 'elbows up', 'chest out' and 'tummy tight' will help. As with all squats knee alignment, if lost, can cause counter rotation in the lumbar so cueing knee position during fatigue is again also important.

Now let’s look at some squat variations, stating with the low bar back squat:

1. In this squat you can see the moment arm around the hip is at least twice as long as the moment arm around the knee. This low bar position is the position power lifters tend to use as it involves the hip extensors a lot more than the knee extensors and the hip extensors are able to produce more force than the knee extensors and act around a joint with better articulation (deep ball and socket versus the knee which is a shallow joint). As the hip extensors are able to produce more force than the knee extensors then this squat variation enables heavier loads to be lifted.

2. The posture wouldn’t be encouraged except where needed for performance in competition (e.g. powerlifting or other sports where this position is required under load) as huge loads are placed on the lumbar spine as well as the hips, and these areas need to be progressively conditioned to withstand these forces. This is an 'advanced' lifters posture.

3. The hip and trunk stabilisers will be worked significantly with this variation.

4. This squat will be lost from the core, resulting in lumbar rounding so cueing 'tummy tight', 'drive up and through', 'head still' will help. As with all squats knee alignment must be maintained.

Finally to understand force vectors a little more let’s take a look at the smith machine squat with feet slightly out in front and then the swiss ball squat which are commonly prescribed squat variations in fitness clubs.

1. You can see here the moment arm around the knees is substantially longer than that around the hip. This, over time, will encourage the quadriceps to become stronger and the gluteals to develop only a little. Unfortunately it will teach the person to squat with their thighs and not use their gluteals in a normal way. It will eventually bias the movement pattern and over time could cause knee injury or low back problems. You can also see the line of force is on the heels and not the mid-foot. This is not a natural position.

2. Although the torso is in good posture here, you usually see a flat back in the clubs. As the gluteals are not very active the core isn’t always active. Also, the bar is stopping the person moving forward as they can hang on to it, so there is little requirement for the trunk extensors to be active. This posture and it’s mechanics should not be encouraged.

3. Very few stabilisers will be used as the exercise has eliminated most natural sagittal plane requirements due to the fixed bar and virtually all front and transverse plane requirements.

4. If a person were to fail on this exercise it would be around the lumbar for stability. The most likely failure will be a very poor spinal position as you can keep lifting longer into muscular fatigue when you don’t have to stabilise your position.

Interestingly when we ask why this squat is prescribed we often get told it is to help someone build up to free weight squatting because they can’t yet squat, or it’s to strengthen the gluteals and teach them the movement. None of this seems reasonable when you understand the biomechanics. The best way to help clients build up to free weight squatting is through teaching bodyweight squats with a range of movement that suits each individual client.

One final point. When you do this squat the further you put your feet out the more the knee extensors (quadriceps) become active and the less the hip extensors (gluteals) do. As this occurs a force vector that creates knee shearing develops and increases such that if used over time the knee joint is almost guaranteed to get injured. You’ll see this in a more pronounced fashion in the swiss ball squat.

1. The line of force is marked going down through the centre of mass in blue. The base of support is a long way from the line of force and the centre of mass will be around the very top of the thighs. The knee moment arm is in green – basically this exercise is all quadriceps, and very little gluteals (if any) given there is virtually no moment arm for them to act around.

2. The yellow line represents the force vector of the quadriceps – we know a muscle shortens from it’s origin to it’s attachment. Because of the moment arm of the quadriceps and because the person must constantly push backward to keep the ball on the wall, there is constant shearing force at the knee joint. In order to cope with the quadriceps activity the inner unit of the knee will be constantly challenged (the inner unit includes the cruciate ligaments, lateral and collateral ligaments, and hamstrings). The torso is dormant as it is resting on the ball (if anything only the erector spinae may be active to hold the torso on the ball), and the gluteals are dormant as they have no way of contributing to the exercise. None of the learning the brain is doing in this exercise is of any use, nor is it safe over the long term. So this is not a posture that we would ever encourage.

3. Although on a ball the transverse and frontal plane stability required is less than in a free standing squat. Sagittal plane stability is created through friction with the ball.

4. Failure in this exercise would likely be muscular and around the knee or hip. At the knee there maybe significant discomfort causing the client to stop. At the hip the client may lose alignment (medially rotate the femur) resulting in the knees turning in.

Again this exercise is often prescribed as a regression from free body squatting. It seems, given the biomechanics, it is not.

Finally, given we like to ‘progress’ our clients by loading them, you can often see this exercise being completed with dumbbells in hand increasing the load acting through the line of force. It could be suggested that getting a baseball bat and smashing your client in the knee caps would be a more effective and upfront way of doing the damage people seem intent on causing with this exercise.

So to cut a long story short - please think twice about exposing your clients to swiss ball or smith machine squatting, and then choose a safer, more effective version!