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				American College of Sports med article on stretching
				Posted: Sat Mar 06, 2004 1:59 pm
				by Robert schmitt
				American College of Sports Medicine 
www.acsm.org 
Press release 
March 3, 2004 
VARIETY OF PREPARTICIPATION ACTIVITIES, NOT JUST STRETCHING, 
RECOMMENDED TO PREVENT INJURIES IN 
SPORTS 
Research indicates stretching alone before and after exercise is 
not enough to prevent injury 
INDIANAPOLIS ? Preparation for sports or exercise should involve a 
variety of activities and should 
not be limited to stretching alone, according to a report published in 
the March 2004 issue of 
Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise®, the official scientific 
journal of the American College of 
Sports Medicine(ACSM). Researchers examined decades of scientific 
evidence and caution that 
stretching alone may not be enough to prevent injuries. 
“The use of stretching primarily as a way to prevent sports injury has 
been based on intuition and 
observation rather than scientific evidence,â€Â
 
			 
			
					
				
				Posted: Sat Mar 06, 2004 6:57 pm
				by TeddyVault
				Thanks Rob, I've been seeing this for a while and it's so nice to have it in print from expert types.  
     Everyday example type thing...  I am six three and, embarrassingly, at thirty can just touch a basketball rim, usually.  But, ten or fiteen minutes into a pick up game, (what warm ups should simulate), I can throw down a tennis ball or volleyball, which I suspect is at least three or four inches better than pre-warm up.
     Also, I coach at a club and have seen the effects of a good warm up and a negligible warm up.  If someone is having step problems, primarily inconsistency problems, then I have them go run a half mile or so, then do some pole runs or sprints.  When they get back they are much more consistent, and even though many deny it, they are actually faster.  
     Now, add three or four inches to a plant and a hair or two more speed and imagine the effect on a vault!!!
     Thanks for spreading the word!
     Joe
			 
			
					
				
				Posted: Wed Mar 15, 2006 1:58 pm
				by rainbowgirl28
				Good article.
What do you include in your warmup?
I always do at a minimum:
Jog
A few static stretches
Leg swings
Sprint drills
Build ups
before I step on the runway.
			 
			
					
				
				Posted: Wed Mar 15, 2006 2:04 pm
				by swtvault
				Stretching.  Yet another perfect example of the HUGE amounts of misinformation that pervades our sport.  Thanks for posting that article RS.
			 
			
					
				
				Posted: Wed Mar 15, 2006 2:55 pm
				by VaultMarq26
				Although stretching has never been proven to reduce the occurance of injuries, it has been proven to decrease DOMS (delayed onset muscle soreness)....some people call it second day soreness.
My strenght and conditioning professor last semester was always talking about fallicies in the sports world such as strecthing and injury prevention.
			 
			
					
				
				Posted: Wed Mar 15, 2006 3:17 pm
				by jumpbackin
				Any study that "proves" stretching reduces DOMS is a bad study.  Stretching does not reduce DOMS.
In addition; intense stretching prior to training or athletic event reduces performance and increases the chance of injury.  Light stretching prior to activity is ok but probably not neccessary.  Intense stretching to increase flexability can be done after training or later in the day or evening.
It kills me having to bite my tongue when I see the training errors being made by some of the young vaulters I vault with.
			 
			
					
				
				Posted: Wed Mar 15, 2006 3:45 pm
				by VaultMarq26
				i have never actually seen the study...so it may very well be flawed.  I have always just done dynamic stretching when warming up.....static stretching doesnt' seem to be very effective
			 
			
					
				Dynamic Warmups
				Posted: Thu Mar 16, 2006 2:12 am
				by baggettpv
				To all,
Based on many years of coaching and education the dynamic warmups is essential for learning to run properly and getting the body ready for strenuous running activities. My masters athletes use them as a workout, the younger ones use them as a warmup. I have developed the procedure to accomplish this (presented it at Reno in 04) and the descriptions can be found at 
www.willamettestriders.com 
Let me know what you think as I am just a shop teacher.....haha
Rick
 
			 
			
					
				Re: Dynamic Warmups
				Posted: Thu Mar 16, 2006 11:37 am
				by karl
				baggettpv wrote:To all,
Based on many years of coaching and education the dynamic warmups is essential for learning to run properly and getting the body ready for strenuous running activities. My masters athletes use them as a workout, the younger ones use them as a warmup. I have developed the procedure to accomplish this (presented it at Reno in 04) and the descriptions can be found at 
www.willamettestriders.com Let me know what you think as I am just a shop teacher.....haha
Rick
 
Rick is correct.  I've personally worked with several of the top conditioning and functional fitness experts from around the country.  Dynamic warmups (movement prep) should be done prior to any strenuous activities.  Static stretching for flexibility increases and/or recovery should be done at the end of the workouts.  
This approach is being applied to the top athletes in many sports around the nation (and internationally), so it's probably good advice for most vaulters.
 
			 
			
					
				
				Posted: Thu Mar 16, 2006 11:41 am
				by jumpbackin
				I'm not clear on your descriptions but it seems a little intense as a warm up.  I would do a light jog, a few striders, some lateral and backward movements, some skips then probably some more striders before beginning what (I think) you described.
			 
			
					
				
				Posted: Fri Mar 17, 2006 12:22 am
				by Robert schmitt
				I vault to warm up. If I do anything before hand I'm to worn out to vault.  

  Although this is the case I try to do dynamic warm up before I jump.
 
			 
			
					
				Dynamic Warmups....
				Posted: Sat Mar 18, 2006 3:28 am
				by baggettpv
				Simply:
This warmup consists of two aspects. One is to get the body ready for strenuous activity. The other because of the repitition on the numbers of activities, teaches the body the functions of the movements it produces (Psychomotor Learning). If the warmups (which are produced many times during training) are random and chaotic then motor learning can not proceed, but if there is a sequencing and duplication of movement then the body will be able  duplicate those movements when under higher levels of stress (Speed). Thats why you do drills!
The warmups should duplicate the movements necessary in the athletic event thus giving a  higher level of performance under higher levels of stress....Try this... Get ready to pick your nose. Think about it then put a finger in your nose to pick it. Did you miss? Probably not because you have picked your nose a million times before! Now try to do it fast. Didn't miss this time either did ya? Try the other nostril. Got it too!
How many times does it take to learn to run with proper running form? Same as picking your nose. and what better place to put that practice than in your warmups (reps of 2 times each) or a workout (reps of 6 times each) where the intensity is low and the accuracy is high?
Simple enough?
Rick Baggett
PS: Google search for Psychomotor Learning for more info. if you dare...