So I want to take a moment with you all to talk about pain because every person experiences pain differently. Pain is a very subjective thing and here’s why you experience it in your own unique way and what to do about it so you can heal faster and feel better next time you get hurt and being able to function well or winning gold is on the line.
Masters Rowers: add strength training to increase your medal count.
An interview with Will Ruth from RowingStronger.com about his strength training book, Rowing Stronger (vol. 2) and why developing peak power is *critical* for the masters level rower.
The Secret Formula That Helped Me Win My First Gold Medal...
Just like you, for years I believed that a proper warmup involved taking multiple repetitions of the sport at hand - layups, practice swings, rowing strokes. Follow that with some static stretching to loosen the muscles. Stick to that prescription and there's no way I'll get injured...
Seventy48: How to Win a 70-Mile Rowing Race In 10 Hours!
I’m not just a Doctor of Physical Therapy… I row “a little bit” in my spare time as well.
This year as “Team IMUA”, my teammate Thiago Silva and I raced and won the 2nd annual Seventy48 race in Seattle, WA. We trained for months, emphasized an enhanced training regimen including better sleep (and more of it) and better nutrition. After 10 hours and 49 minutes, we crossed the finish line 1st, beating the 110 other human powered rowing and paddling craft. Here’s how we did it…
How To RockTape Your Wrists to Enhance Performance During Rowing Race
You know those stretchy, brightly colored athletic tapes we’re seeing on the Olympic athletes and basketball players and the like? They’re not just for show. And I use RockTape with my athletes and physical therapy clients for a number of reasons… most importantly, less pain and better performance.
Paddlers like expert Connor Inslee (Seattle, WA) appreciate this RockTape taping strategy... 40 miles and finally a pain-free forearm for the SEVENTY48 race. Here’s how we did it:
Rowers Got Tight Hips, Hamstrings and Calves? Two Tips To a Better, Stronger Catch.
Tight hamstrings and tight calves are too often the culprits blamed for catch compression challenges in the rowing shell.
Yet while male and female rowers alike suffer from the common malady of tight muscles, there's an unexpected, lesser known and more complicated neighboring body structure implicated:
The ankle.