Survival of the Fittest

Jen Sinkler, Experience Life senior editor, compiles a hodgepodge of fitness information for sporty types.

Archive for the ‘Interviews’ Category

Interview With Michael Boyle

Monday, August 18th, 2008

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I realize I’ve been all over the map lately, topic-wise, but hey, I did say I’d be compiling a hodgepodge of fitness information here. Therefore, it’s totally reasonable to transition from kvetching about the color selection of women’s trainers to posting an interview with one of the biggest names in the fitness biz.

Here, Michael Boyle, author of Functional Training for Sports: Superior Conditioning for Today’s Athlete (Human Kinetics, 2004), strength and conditioning coach for Boston University men’s hockey team, and founder of the hugely informative Web site www.strengthcoach.com, has been gracious enough to answer a few questions on — surprise, surprise — a wide range of mostly unrelated topics.

For more of his wisdom within this blog, see here, here and here.

JS: What are a few of the most common misconceptions you encounter when training athletes (i.e., what do you have to talk people out of doing all the time)?

MB: Number one is steady-state cardio work. I think it borders on useless for all but the most unfit. To me, steady state is for beginners who can’t tolerate intervals yet, or for recovery days. I think team-sport athletes should do almost no steady state work. For fitness enthusiasts, maybe twice a week at most.

Number two is lifting with light weights. I laugh at people who lift these little dumbbells out of fear of getting “too big.” It takes tremendous work to build muscles. What I want to say to most people is, “Don’t worry, you won’t work hard enough to build muscle anyway.”

JS: What are some basic pre-hab concepts athletes shouldn’t skip (but often do)?

MB: Athletes should foam roll to improve tissue quality and then stretch for tissue length. We need to take better care of our muscles. [Ed note: For some foam rolling stretches, check out “On a Roll” in the Experience Life November 2007 archives.]

JS: Best exercises to reduce your 40 time?

MB: Some variation of the squat. The 40 is about getting a bigger engine. In the simplest sense, a bigger engine (stronger muscles) equals more speed.

JS: Best agility exercises to improve change of direction?

MB: I’m not a big agility guy, but I think single leg plyos with stability emphasis are key. Lateral bounds with a one-second pause in a 2 to 30 degree knee bend are a great place to start.

JS: Most common dysfunction/imbalance/inflexibility in the body?

MB: Tight lateral hamstrings. It’s very difficult to get a good hamstring stretch. Most people end up stretching their low back instead of their hamstrings. Don’t flex the trunk when you stretch the hams. [See the photo below for Boyle’s recommendation for a hamstrings stretch that keeps your back decidedly not rounded.]

boylehamstrings.jpg

JS: What do you think is the best way for an overweight athlete to drop body fat without losing much muscle?

MB: Simple: Eat better. If it’s white, skip it. No bread, no cereal, no pasta, no rice. I would advocate grain-free for weight loss and reduced grain for general health. Corn and high fructose corn syrup have become the number one source of calories in our diet. Guess what — corn is a grain, not a vegetable. [Ed note: And the girl from Iowa bursts into tears …]

JS: How much barefoot training do you incorporate into your training programs?

MB: We don’t do much barefoot for practical reasons — it just takes time to get shoes on and off, etc. We do recommend less constructed shoes like the Reebok Smoothfit series and the Nike Free.

JS: Who do you ask when you don’t know the answer to a fitness question?

MB: Depends on the topic. For exercise physiology stuff, I go to a guy named Chris Frankel. Very smart guy. Works for the company that makes the TRX system.

For injury stuff, I ask orthopedic physical therapist Dan Dyrek. I have dubbed him my “smartest man no one has heard of.”

JS: Other thoughts?

MB: I don’t think training changes much. I think kettlebells are here to stay. I think some of the bootcamp and Biggest Loser stuff is irresponsible.

[photo credit: mil8]

Wiley Wins!

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

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I just found out my friend and former Minnesota Valkyries teammate, Sara Wiley (pictured at left with a “bring it” expression on her face), won the NSCA collegiate strength and conditioning professional of the year — congrats, Y! She’s the associate director of strength and conditioning for athletics at the University of Minnesota–Twin Cities, and absolutely amazing at what she does (hence the award, obvy).

If you want to check out my March interview with her on developing optimal quadriceps-to-hamstrings strength ratios for knee health, click here.

Chocolate Milk: Good, Not Perfect

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

spillchocmilk.jpgOftentimes, by the time the media gets a hold of a message, it gets blown out of proportion. OK, we blow it out of proportion. In this case, the message, “Chocolate milk is a good postworkout recovery drink,” morphed — at least in my mind — to “Chocolate milk is an ideal postworkout recovery drink.” (Probably because I really, really wanted it to be true.)

So I had a few questions after reading this June 3 post by Adam Russell, PhD, high-performance nutrition and supplementation consultant to USA Rugby, in which he poked fun at the recent New York Times article on post-workout nutrition. I was especially baffled since chocolate milk had been second on Russell’s May 28 list of suggested postworkout amino acids. As in, is this dude moody?

But no. He just wanted to clarify that chocolate milk is “good, but not perfect.” Which he elaborated upon in a third post the other day, as well as in an email to me.

Here’s what Russell has to say about why chocolate milk isn’t an ideal postworkout recovery drink:

  • The major protein in milk, casein, is a slow-digesting protein, which means the gastric emptying time of chocolate milk isn’t as good as some other possibilities. And the faster you can get amino acids out of the small intestine and into the bloodstream during the recovery phase, the better it is for insulin response and protein synthesis.
  • The types of carbs in milk aren’t as fast-delivering as some other sources; namely, the ones in Surge and Vitargo.
  • There’s potential for lactose intolerance in a significant portion of the population.
  • Many commercial milks are sweetened using poor-quality sugars (and in the case of high-fructose corn syrup [HFCS], downright dangerous). Folks who work out really hard can get away with HFCS on occasion, but we’re talking high-intensity interval and strength and conditioning training. Given that some folks think of walking up a flight of stairs is a workout, adding more cheap sugars to their diets could be a very, very bad thing for most of America.

So what does the job better than chocolate milk?

Surge and Vitargo are two examples. And adding whey protein isolate to the latter may be better yet.

But chocolate milk is still a decent option, right?

Yes. It does the job better than most crap out there, it’s cheaper (although milk isn’t as cheap as it used to be) and you don’t have to think very hard about it. So pay your taxes, be nice, and at the very least drink chocolate milk after a moderate- to high-intensity workout.

[photo by russeljsmith]

Revisiting Elisa Au’s Favorite Workout

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

elisaau2004champ.jpg

I’ve posted this workout once before, but I thought it was worth a revisit. My apologies if you’ve already been there done that, but for those of you who are new, welcome! Feel free to sign up for blog updates via email or RSS feed (see the toolbar at right). I mean, it’s easier than trying to remember to check back, and laziness can be a powerful motivator.

The dilly is that the June issue of Experience Life, featuring once and possibly future karate world champ Elisa Au on the cover, just dropped, and I was reminded all over again how impressive her achievements are. (To see for yourself, check out the accompanying article, “Solid Gold Champion.”)

And lucky us, she caved (pretty easily, may I say — she’s not as tough as she looks) when I asked her to share her very favorite workout with us. So here it is — Round 2.

FROM ELISA:
I’VE CHOSEN EXERCISES from my training in karate and with my personal trainer, Corey Shackelford. These exercises do not require any equipment — they rely on your body weight for resistance and focus on the core muscles, which are most important for a strong body.

You can definitely start with fewer reps if the moves are unfamiliar to you. Or, you can add reps and sets in order to challenge yourself.

1. Warm up! [For an article on the benefits of warming up and cooling down, see “Gradual is Good” from the March 2007 issue of Experience Life.]

2. Charlie’s Angels Lunges — Lunge sideways with your left leg, feet parallel, arms straight out and parallel to the ground in front of you (in a gun-shooting position). Twist your upper torso to the left so that your arms rotate 90 degrees, then back to starting position. Step up and repeat on right side. 10 reps on each side.

3. Burpees — Squat down and place hands on the floor, shoulder width apart. Kick your feet back into a push-up starting position. Bring feet back under you and immediately jump up in a star position (arms and legs all extended). Repeat 15 times. [For a video demo of how to do a burpee, click here.]

4. Arm Shuffles — Start in push-up position. Shuffle your arms so that your body moves clockwise like a hand of a clock. Try to keep your feet at the middle position as your arms move from 1 to 12. Do 2 times clockwise, 2 times counter-clockwise.

5. Superman — Lay on your stomach. Lift your legs and arms off the ground and hold position for 30 seconds to a minute. [For pics, see here.]

6. V-Ups — Lie on your back. Lift your legs and arms/shoulders off the ground to create a V-shape with your body. Lower your arms and legs without letting them touch the ground. Do 15 reps. [Pics here.]

7. Plank Positions — Place elbows/forearms on the ground, feet in push-up position. Be sure your shoulders are directly above your elbows so that all body angles are 90 degrees. Hold this position for 1 minute. Point right arm straight ahead, parallel to the ground. Hold this position for 20 seconds. Switch arms and hold for another 20 seconds. Repeat with extended right and left legs, each for 20 seconds. Lastly, extend right arm and left leg, hold for 20 seconds, then switch to other side for the last 20 seconds. You will total 3 minutes. [See a basic plank pose here. You got the rest through the description, right?]

dice.gifFor the next three exercises, use small pieces of tape stuck to the floor. Mark 5 points like the 5-side of a die. The outer points should be about shoulder-width apart on all sides.

8. Hourglass — Start on the bottom two points with feet shoulder-width apart. Jump to the middle point to bring feet together, then jump to the top points to get back to shoulder-width position. Jump back to the middle point, then back to starting position. Repeat 15 times.

9. Figure 8 — Keep your feet together the entire time on this one. Start at the bottom left corner. Hop to the middle point, then to the upper right point. Continue on to the upper left point, middle, bottom right, then back to the beginning at the bottom left. You have made a figure 8. Repeat 8 times this way, then 8 times the opposite way.

10. Around the World — Stand on the middle point with one foot. Hop to the bottom left point then back to the middle. Continue to the top left then return, top right and return, bottom right and return. Repeat in this clockwise position 5 times, then 5 times counter-clockwise. Repeat with other foot.

11. Cool-down and STRETCH!

~Elisa

Eric Cressey is Unbalanced

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

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At Cressey Performance, stability balls are holey. No, that’s not a typo. I mean employees literally use knives to puncture them. With glee.

Don’t believe me? Here’s videographic evidence of one of the founders of this Boston-based high-performance training facility, Tony Gentilcore, expressing his disdain for what is, Cressey Performance employees say, an oft-misused piece of fitness equipment.


YouTube link tohttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O_BBCmvFERs

Their hatred stems from the wide misinterpretation of how to develop functional fitness.

You see, many trainers widely recommend doing squats, lunges, curls, and anything else you can manage while teetering precariously on a stability (or Swiss) ball, balance disc, Bosu ball or wobble board. Countless articles are filled with reasons why this is a fabulous idea, the main being that such exercises add a balance component and thus not only engage the target muscles, but also engage lots and lots of small stabilizing muscles. Meaning, you get the extra benefit of improved proprioception (awareness of your body in space), so why not?! Right? Right?

Even the magazine jumped on the balance bandwagon, publishing an article about how balance boards aren’t just for balancing anymore. (It was years ago! I didn’t know any better!) [Hides in shame]

shameredcard.jpg

[But ref! I wasn’t the only one! Pleeeease don’t send me to the sin bin …]

PROBLEM IS, the latest research shows that while doing such exercises are great for rehabbing ankle injuries, they can actually de-power healthy athletes. So if you’re healthy, and your goals have anything at all to do with getting stronger, faster and more powerful, you actually don’t want to wobble. (That’s not to say you should cut out abs and upper-body exercises like pushups on the ball — I’m just talking about exercises that involve standing or kneeling on such contraptions.)

But don’t just take it from me — below, an interview with Eric Cressey, MS, CSCS, the brains behind this research and one of the best in the fitness biz. Also, if you’re interested, Cressey just released his new book, Maximum Strength: Get Your Strongest Body in 16 Weeks with the Ultimate Weight-Training Program (De Capo, 2008). (I already read it — two thumbs up, and if I had more I’d point them skyward, too.)

Jen Sinkler (JS): How do you define functional fitness? And how is that different from widely held beliefs?

Eric Cressey (EC): Excellent questions. The term “functional” as it relates to exercise was first applied in a rehabilitation context, as therapists worked to help restore function in patients through modalities that best simulated and carried over to their daily lives. I feel strongly that functional training (or rehabilitation) should be specific to the task at hand for an individual in a given environment. The problem nowadays is that we are trying to say that a given exercise (or training style) is functional to everything — and that’s just not possible.

It goes without saying that different individuals have different “required” and “desired” functions to accomplish in their daily lives. In its truest sense, functional training refers to preparing individuals for the demands that lie ahead in everyday activities, work, recreational activities and competitive athletics. Because these demands are different for everyone, it’s important to realize that true functional training programs must be specific to the individual.

JS: What happens to a healthy athlete who does exercises standing on an unstable surface? And why don’t these exercises work to make you a stronger, more balanced athlete?

EC: Our research showed that replacing as little as 2 to 3 percent of overall training volume with unstable-surface training (UST) in healthy, trained athletes impaired the development of sprinting speed and vertical jump height — and there was a trend toward significance on the agility front, as well. There are a ton of reasons for the decrease in power output and performance. In a broad sense, all of these explanations can be considered fundamentally related to the fact that UST does not adhere to the principle of specificity of training.

The vast majority of athletic endeavors involve stable surfaces where instability is applied further up the kinetic chain. Therefore, it becomes important to differentiate between instability at the foot, which is accustomed to stable surfaces in closed-chain motion, and instability at the torso and arms, which often encounter instability while the base is stable. In this regard, unstable surface training may prove more useful in measures aimed at training the core and upper body musculature (e.g., movements seated on or lying across a stability ball, with or without added resistance) than with exercises targeting the lower body. I could go into a complete physiology and biomechanics discussion, but that took me 94 pages in my master’s thesis! Let’s just say that unstable surface training provides for some unfavorable biomechanical consequences (namely, overpronation), lower force production and impaired plyometrics activity (longer amortization phase between eccentric and concentric actions).

Believe it or not, there’s also some evidence to suggest that healthy individuals who train on unstable surfaces are more likely to encounter both chronic and traumatic knee injuries. My theory is that if you work to lock up an ankle that doesn’t need extra stability — and encourage anterior-weight-bearing in the process (via overpronation) — you’re asking for hypermobility (excess movement) at the joint above.

JS: When is unstable surface training appropriate?

EC: Lower-body UST has a ton of merit in those returning from ankle sprains. UST has proven effective time and time again with respect to addressing the chronic functional ankle instability seen in lateral ankle sprains. Basically, this is a proprioceptive deficit in the peroneal muscle group on the lateral aspect of the shin. These muscles prevent excessive inversion, but if they don’t fire fast enough, you’re likely to re-sprain.

I also feel that unstable surfaces can be applied effectively in the upper body — as in the case of unstable push-ups, or dumbbell presses on a stability ball. It really comes down to where you apply the instability. If it’s at or above the hips, you’re golden.

Honestly, the problem is that the only research (before we came along, that is) was done on injured patients and untrained individuals. Comparing them to healthy, trained athletes is altogether inappropriate. As a result, rehabilitation protocols were promoted to healthy individuals as an effective training initiative when, in fact, they are counterproductive.

In spite of this new research, you won’t likely see a change in people using them this way simply because a) few people actually read the research and b) a lot of people have a significant vested financial interest in the success of these implements, so they aren’t about to jump ship when they’re still separating people from their money with poor training recommendations.

JS: Who does have the green light to do exercises standing on balance contraptions (i.e., what if you don’t care about getting stronger, faster, more powerful)?

EC: At risk of sounding insensitive, if you aren’t concerned about being stronger, faster or more powerful, then you have no right to complain when you get hurt. Unstable surface training in the lower body impairs power and rate of force development. Even if you’re not an athlete, even if you’re a 90-year-old woman concerned about falling, don’t you think that fast and forceful muscle actions are going to help prevent you from breaking your hip?

Honestly, I wish more weekend warriors would think of themselves as athletes, and not just gerbils running on treadmills or circus clowns standing on stability balls.

JS: How should healthy, competitive athletes train instead? What kinds of exercises should we do?

EC: Squats, deadlifts, lunges, Olympic lifts, bench press, push-ups, rows, chin-ups [ed. note: of course!], bridges, medicine-ball throws, sprinting, jumping, sled pushing/pulling, mobility drills, etc.

The list could really go on and on. We do a thousand things, but honestly, aside from a few unique circumstances, outside of the realm of rehabilitation, lower-body unstable surface training isn’t justified.

ON THAT NOTE, please enjoy the following videos. (What do you think Mr. Cressey would have to say to these fellas?)


YouTube link tohttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sLW-RpX0T38&


YouTube link tohttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MUN2yjjKvZI


YouTube link tohttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JlSKNTotop8&

Do you have questions? Differing opinions? Stories of stability gone wrong? Leave your thoughts in the comment section. And remember, if you want to get your hands on Cressey’s new book, Maximum Strength, click here.

Elisa Au’s World-Champ Workout

Monday, April 14th, 2008

elisabeach.jpg

So … no one outside the Experience Life staff knows this yet, but former — and possibly future — karate world champion Elisa Au will be gracing our cover in June. Now you know, too. Shhh.

A little background: Au (pronounced “Ow” — go to town on that one) is the only American woman to have won a world championship, and remains the only person in the world, male or female, to win more than one world title at a single world karate championship. The only person in the world. Can you imagine being able to say that?crane.jpg

If you want to read more about her, check out the links here, here and here. (Highlight from the last one? She recommends people not try the fictitious “crane technique,” pictured at right, from the movie Karate Kid.) There are lots more articles about her, but I’ve grown weary of pasting the links. These days, she’s training in Chicago, where she owns and operates three martial arts schools with her spankin’-new husband, John Fonseca (no slouch himself when it comes to karate accolades — to see a video of Fonseca, click here).

I interviewed Au several weeks ago, and before we hung up, she promised to share her favorite workout on my blog. (A very, VERY big thank you to her for sharing!)

HERE’S THE WORKOUT SHE SENT ME over the weekend — if you try it out, please tell us how it goes in the “comments” section! I tried (albeit half-heartedly) to find photos or video demonstrations to go with at least some of the exercises below, but if you’re having trouble figuring one out, post your question(s) in the comments.

FROM ELISA:
I’ve chosen exercises from my training in karate and with my personal trainer, Corey Shackelford. These exercises do not require any equipment — they rely on your body weight for resistance and focus on the core muscles, which are most important for a strong body.

You can definitely start with less reps if the moves are unfamiliar to you. Or, you can add for reps and sets in order to challenge yourself.

1. Warm up! [For an article on the benefits of warming up and cooling down, see “Gradual is Good” from the March 2007 issue of Experience Life.]

2. Charlie’s Angels Lunges — Lunge sideways with your left leg, feet parallel, arms straight out and parallel to the ground in front of you (in a gun-shooting position). Twist your upper torso to the left so that your arms rotate 90 degrees, then back to starting position. Step up and repeat on right side. 10 reps on each side.

3. Burpees — Squat down and place hands on the floor, shoulder width apart. Kick your feet back into a push-up starting position. Bring feet back under you and immediately jump up in a star position (arms and legs all extended). Repeat 15 times. [For a video demo of how to do a burpee, click here.]

4. Arm Shuffles — Start in push-up position. Shuffle your arms so that your body moves clockwise like a hand of a clock. Try to keep your feet at the middle position as your arms move from 1 to 12. Do 2 times clockwise, 2 times counter-clockwise.

5. Superman — Lay on your stomach. Lift your legs and arms off the ground and hold position for 30 seconds to a minute. [For pics, see here.]

6. V-Ups — Lie on your back. Lift your legs and arms/shoulders off the ground to create a V-shape with your body. Lower your arms and legs without letting them touch the ground. Do 15 reps. [Pics here.]

7. Plank Positions — Place elbows/forearms on the ground, feet in push-up position. Be sure your shoulders are directly above your elbows so that all body angles are 90 degrees. Hold this position for 1 minute. Point right arm straight ahead, parallel to the ground. Hold this position for 20 seconds. Switch arms and hold for another 20 seconds. Repeat with extended right and left legs, each for 20 seconds. Lastly, extend right arm and left leg, hold for 20 seconds, then switch to other side for the last 20 seconds. You will total 3 minutes. [See a basic plank pose here. You got the rest through the description, right?]

dice.gifFor the next three exercises, use small pieces of tape stuck to the floor. Mark 5 points like the 5-side of a die. The outer points should be about shoulder-width apart on all sides.

8. Hourglass — Start on the bottom two points with feet shoulder-width apart. Jump to the middle point to bring feet together, then jump to the top points to get back to shoulder-width position. Jump back to the middle point, then back to starting position. Repeat 15 times.

9. Figure 8 — Keep your feet together the entire time on this one. Start at the bottom left corner. Hop to the middle point, then to the upper right point. Continue on to the upper left point, middle, bottom right, then back to the beginning at the bottom left. You have made a figure 8. Repeat 8 times this way, then 8 times the opposite way.

10. Around the World — Stand on the middle point with one foot. Hop to the bottom left point then back to the middle. Continue to the top left then return, top right and return, bottom right and return. Repeat in this clockwise position 5 times, then 5 times counter-clockwise. Repeat with other foot.

11. Cool-down and STRETCH!

~Elisa

Perfectly Balanced (Strength Ratios)

Friday, March 7th, 2008

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In search of snow, I set off to the Poconos after work Wednesday night. It was Ladies’ Night at Blue Mountain Ski Area, and with the weather warming up in Philly, it seemed high time to seek altitude.

Now, I grew up by Fun Valley Ski Area (which I just found out has discontinued its winter activities; I’m nearly inconsolable, though I haven’t been there in 15 years), and until I hit high school, I had a season pass most winters.

But fond as I am of the place, I have to admit the runs were pretty consistent with the gently rolling plains of Iowa. Plus, they were short! Just a straight, 20-second shot to the bottom of the hill. You could wear yourself out if you tried very, very hard, but it took all day.

Which means I wasn’t fully prepared for the sheer length of the trails the other night (or during a college vacation to Breckenridge, but that’s another story). My legs were already feeling a little thrashed from the leg-intensive workout program I’ve been following, and in no way, shape or form were my quadriceps up for the challenge.

But that was the thing: As I skied, only my quads became fatigued. No other muscle groups seemed fazed, but my thighs burned with the intensity of a thousand suns. Were they the only muscles doing anything?

THAT GOT ME THINKING ABOUT some stuff I read about what the strength ratio between quadriceps and hamstrings should be, and how many of us — especially women — are quad dominant.

I picture my own quads as ultra-chivalrous gents, gallantly shooing off the right muscles for the job at hand: “No, no, allow me to get the door for you,” or “Need help across that puddle? Please, take my arm.” Or maybe they’re more like martyrs, hissing, “Do I have to do everything by myself? Fine, why don’t you just rest.”

In any case, if your quads are significantly stronger than your hamstrings, you’re essentially playing ratio roulette, because you’re far more susceptible to knee or hamstrings injuries.

In fact, one of the neuromuscular factors leading to the higher incidence of ACL injury in women and girls is likely this particular muscle imbalance. From Experience Life’s September 2006 article “Weak in the Knees” (which I’ve referenced before):

Women tend to have stronger quadriceps relative to their hamstrings, which may decrease the hamstrings’ ability to stabilize the knees. The general recommendation for a healthy hamstrings-to-quadriceps strength ratio is for the hamstrings to be at least 60 percent — and ideally closer to 80 percent — as strong as the quads.

My friend Sara Wiley, CSCS, associate director of strength and conditioning for athletics at the University of Minnesota–Twin Cities (who is also, might I add, a fine rugby inside center), takes it a step further, saying she likes to see hamstring strength at 80 to 90 percent of quad strength.

Here, a little Q and A with her on the topic.

Me: Why are women more likely to have a quadriceps-to-hamstrings strength imbalance?

Wiley: There’s some debate about whether this is genetic or due to activity choices. As girls mature, it appears they develop quad strength more quickly than hamstrings strength. My thought is that it’s not really that we develop all that differently physiologically, but that we engage in activities that don’t require us to engage the posterior chain in the same way as males of the same age.

I say this because we know that after training, females can exhibit quad/hamstrings strength ratios similar to males, and retrain motor patterns so that the hamstrings fire with strength and in coordination with the quads.

I say this also because I grew up in the Midwest on and near farms, and the farm girls I train now seem far sturdier with respect to the posterior chain. I think they grew up playing and working outside, where the boys and girls played the same games and did similar chores. Maybe they should market a “Posterior-Chain Barbie” … just kidding [see bottom of post for contest]. Obviously, it’s difficult to make sweeping generalizations, but there is something to be said for modeling behaviors (think the little boy watching Favre and emulating his throwing style) and motor patterns set as a young child.

Me: How can you tell if you’re quad dominant?

Wiley: I don’t know of a standard method of self-assessment, but one idea is the hamstring hip lift, which can be performed as follows:

1. Lie on your back with your feet hip-width apart, the soles of your feet on an 18-inch bench or step.
2. Push down into the bench with your feet, lifting your hips up high. You’ll feel your hamstrings working. Do not lift your shoulders or neck off the floor, and keep your upper back down flat.
3. Lower the hips back down until your butt is just off the floor, and then push down into the bench and raise your hips again.
4. Continue for 15 repetitions, rest for 45 seconds, and then complete two more sets.

It’s just a hamstring exercise, but a person with decent hamstrings strength should be able to handle it. If, on the other hand, you struggle, you should work on those hammies.

Do this exercise once or twice a week. When you can do three sets of 20 reps, try doing one-legged hamstring hip lifts. Start with three sets of ten, and build to three sets of 20. For further challenge, you can try these on a stability ball; first double-legged, then single-legged.

It’s a great exercise for runners.

Me: How do the pros measure quads-to-hamstrings strength?

Wiley: You can measure quads-to-hamstrings strength isokinetically using a specialized machine called the Cybex Test, which is set to move at speed versus resistance. This allows you to compare peak torque at extension (quads) versus flexion (hamstrings) at similar speeds. The problem is, it’s not real-world applicable or related to actual function.

That said, it’s still the best way to compare the two while eliminating uncontrolled factors (technique, for instance), and it’s still a standard and accepted test/measurement system, though many are trying to improve it.

Me: Are having quads that are much stronger than hamstrings more common than vice versa? Do you ever see vice versa?

Wiley: Quad dominance is much more common. Can’t say that I’ve really seen the opposite. That’s not to say it couldn’t or doesn’t happen, just haven’t seen it myself.

Me: Why you think this type of imbalance is so prevalent?

Wiley: Most people engage in quad-dominant activities for one reason or another — they like them more, or they’re directed to do certain exercises by their trainer. Or maybe because you can’t see your hamstrings in the mirror? Sometimes I think people just don’t consider whether they are doing balanced activities in workouts, or they don’t know if they are or aren’t.

I rarely train athletes based on muscle groups (i.e., we don’t do “hamstring workouts” or “quad workouts”). But, I do evaluate my programs to make sure that lower body pushing exercises [which activate the quads] are balanced with lower body pulling exercises [which activate the hamstrings], either within that workout or within the week.

Lastly, form and technique play a role. For instance, when doing a squat, if you don’t dip below 90 degrees, you aren’t engaging your hamstrings.

Me: Any other factors that might come into play?

Wiley: Muscles don’t operate in a vacuum, and there are other factors that can have implications for injury. For example, while it’s important to have hamstrings that are strong, they must also be able to coordinate their efforts with the quads or the risk of injury still exists. An example would be a soccer player planting a leg to decelerate — there is a powerful quad contraction, and the hamstring must also fire at the right time to counteract this force, or the ACL is at risk.

This is why jumping/plyometric exercises are a significant part of ACL-injury-prevention programs.

It’s also why compound movements that require movement at multiple joints and coordination of muscle groups are superior to isolated movements. Poor eccentric hamstring strength compared with concentric quad strength can manifest itself as hamstrings strains in runners, because the leg comes through into a foot strike out in front of the body.

Excessive tightness in other areas may also affect the hamstrings. Tight hip flexors may lead to inhibition of the glutes, and if the glutes aren’t doing their job, the synergistic muscles (hamstrings and low-back muscles) have to take over to perform hip extension. The most common result of this is usually low-back pain.

Me: What exercises should people should do if they’re quad dominant?

Wiley: Pulling exercises, such as deadlifts. They are for everyone! Learn to do them right! Deadlifts with a wide grip put further emphasis on the posterior chain. Try also Romanian deadlifts and good-mornings. (Generally, think BENDING EXERCISES.)

I think people are sometimes scared of this category of exercises because they work the posterior chain, which involves the low back. But when you learn to do these correctly (flat back, wide chest, tight core) they might also (GASP!) prevent back pain.

As I mentioned, you can also do hip lifts on a stability ball. Obviously, machine leg curls work the hamstrings, but they don’t work them where they cross the hip, only at the knee. It’s important to work both — so do machine leg curls and stability-ball leg curls.

CONTEST: Five bucks to the reader who submits the best illustration of what Posterior-Chain Barbie would look like. Email entries to jsinkler@experiencelifemag.com. I’ll post the winner at the end of next week.