Posts in Athletic Training
Interview with The Just Athletics Podcast

My friends Chris Johnson of Siuslaw High School in Florence Oregon and Dave Frank of Central Catholic in Portland Oregon recently asked me to join them on The Just Athletics Podcast.

After some small audio hiccups, we talk using regional interdependence as a coach, eliminating frivolous aspects of training, letting the goal be the goal, learning from those who aren’t in your specific sporting area and developing a trusted referral network. We also explore the topics of why questions and expanding the coach’s pattern recognition system while of course talking strength and conditioning.

They may have also gotten the first announcement of Start with the Core!

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Major Book Announcement!

I might have been gone for a minute, or two months, but that doesn’t mean I haven’t been busy.

Coach Travis Floeck and I are teaming up, this time to write a book. ‘Start with the Core’ will be a major expansion on why we train athletes the way we do, by starting with the core. This book is an anecdotal and evidence-based deep dive into what the ‘core’ is, why we begin training with the core, specifics regarding our order of operations, progressions, and the pattern hierarchies that govern our approach, and how we have implemented these principles while training athletes across ages and populations to reduce injury risk and improve performance.

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So You Have Your CSCS

This blog is not meant to disparage another profession, belittle the knowledge and experience of my colleagues, or look down on weekend warriors. I am a proud member of the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA) and holder of the title of Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist (CSCS). I have been a personal trainer and group exercise instructor, worked in physical therapy and chiropractic offices as well as athletic training facilities, coached at every level, and been a strength and conditioning coach. I have a great deal of respect for each of these professions, but there are distinctions, and they should be respected.

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Be Nice to Your Hamstrings

It is a near constant to see exercise participants of all ages engaging in the prolonged static stretching of a given muscle or muscle group. From competitive sport to physical education classes to yoga, passive static stretching has been a mainstay. It is particularly common to see a variety of stretches for the hamstrings being utilized, however, this may not be the path to performance and injury resilience that many believe it to be. Increased mobility, pain-free function, and injury risk reduction may be contingent upon flipping the relationship between strength and flexibility in the lower extremity as we stretch our quadriceps, instead of strengthening them, and strengthen our hamstrings, instead of stretching them.

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Behind the Eyes

While experimenting with my students recently in clinic, a patient reported with complaints of T-Spine pain rated 3/10 at rest with no significant aggravating factors, limited multisegmental trunk rotation bilaterally with right greater than left, and a very strange presentation of bilateral weight bearing shoulder stability and motor control dysfunction (SMCD).

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The Amazing Mulligan

As we reach the latter weeks of the high school basketball season I am once again fascinated by the Mulligan Concept and its profound utility in treating lateral ankle sprains. To date as a DAT student and athletic trainer I have had 8 patients suffer 12 lateral ankle sprains (Grade 1-2) with sparse few days of time loss injury.

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Adventures in the Psychosomatic

During my travels over the course of the last weekend I had the opportunity to visit a dear friend's new yoga and personal training studio. As we discussed the development and growth of her business and trends in her clientele, the topics of pain, movement, trauma, and the relationship between experience and sensory information as input and pain as output evolved into a question of biceps tendon pain in her own right shoulder.

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