Written By: Adam Dull, Personal Trainer @ O2 Cary
Strength and conditioning coaches and personal trainers are engaged in a constant search for the best ways to improve sport performance. All things being equal, a bigger, faster, stronger, more conditioned athlete will rule supreme on the playing court or field.
While there is constant debate over techniques for boosting sport specific speed, power and strength, I believe we tend to overlook the importance of a comprehensive warm-up, and the role it plays in optimizing performance in each and every workout, practice and game.
What is the best way to prepare an athlete for performance – mentally as well as physically?
For many years the accepted norm has been to perform a light warm-up followed by some “static stretching.” In fact, almost anywhere in the world you will see athletes – from school children to elite competitors – starting their practice sessions with ‘a couple of laps’ and some light stretching. So ingrained is this type of routine in almost every coach’s head that it tends to go unquestioned.
The specific advantages of a dynamic warm-up, by comparison with the more traditional ‘sit and stretch’ routine, are as follows: