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STRETCHING: Why Should I

STRETCHING: Why Should I?

Thursday, May 17, 2012

This short article looks at some of the tips, tricks and helpful hints you can use to help prevent sports injury and do-away with stiff, aching muscles & joints. It”s been put together to answer some of the more common questions we get regarding stretching and sports injury, and details a number of useful sports injury prevention techniques.

Overcoming & Preventing Sports Injury

If you’re involved in the health & fitness industry, whether it be participating in your favourite sport, coaching, training or just keeping fit, you”ll know how annoying and debilitating a sports injury can be. In reality, when you have a sports injury you’re actually losing on two fronts. Firstly, you’re losing simply because your body has been hurt and now needs time and care to repair itself. And on top of this, you’re also losing the time you could have been putting into training and improving your sporting ability.

A sports injury is a bit like losing money. Not only do you lose whatever you were going to buy with that money, but you also have to work hard to make up the money you”ve lost. Take it from me; a sports injury is one of the most frustrating and debilitating occurrences that can happen to anyone who’s serious about their health, fitness, sport or exercise.

The Cold, Hard Facts

I recently read an article titled “Managing Sports Injuries” where the author estimated that over 27,000 American”s sprain their ankle every day. (And no, that”s not a typo, EVERY DAY!) On top of this, Sports Medicine Australia estimates that 1 in every 17 participants of sport and exercise are injured playing their favourite sport. This figure is even higher for contact sports like Football and Gridiron. However, the truly disturbing fact is that up to 50 percent of these injuries may have been prevented.

The Professionals Secret Weapon

While there are a number of basic preventative measures that will assist in the prevention of sports injury, there is one technique that has slowly been gaining in popularity. It’s still not used as often as it should be by the average sports participant, but with the professionals using it more and more, it’s only a matter of time before it starts to catch on. Before we dive into this little used technique for minimizing your likelihood of sports injury, let”s take a quick look at some other techniques to help you prevent sports injury.

So, Where Do You Start?

Most people are coming to understand both the importance and the benefits of a good warm-up. A correct warm-up will help to raise body temperature, increase blood flow and promote oxygen supply to the muscles. It will also help to prepare the mind, body, muscles and joints for the physical activity to come.

While warming-up is important, a good cool-down also plays a vital role in helping to prevent sports injury. How? A good cool-down will prevent blood from pooling in your limbs. It will also prevent waste products, such as lactic acid, building up in your muscles. Not only that, a good cool-down will help your muscles and tendons to relax and loosen, stopping them from becoming stiff and tight.

While preventative measures such as warming-up and cooling-down play a vital role in minimizing the likelihood of sports injury, other techniques such as obeying the rules, using protective equipment and plain common sense are all useful.

The One Technique to Cut Your Chance of Injury by More Than Half

So what is this magic technique? Why is it such a secret? And how come you haven”t heard of it before? Well chances are you have, and also, it’s not that secret and it’s definitely not magic. You”ve probably used this technique yourself at some point or at least seen others using it. But the real question is, how dedicated have you been to making this technique a consistent part of your athletic preparation?

What is it? STRETCHING. Yes, stretching. The simple technique of stretching can play an imperative role in helping you to prevent the occurrence of sports injury. Unfortunately stretching is one area of athletic preparation often neglected. Do not underestimate its benefits. Don”t make the mistake of thinking that something as simple as stretching won”t be effective. Stretching is a vital part of any exercise program and should be looked upon as being as important as any other part of your health and fitness.

In recent time the professionals have been getting more and more serious about stretching and ultimately, their flexibility. The coaches and trainers are just starting to realize how important flexible muscles are to helping prevent sports injury. Flexibility has often been neglected in the overall conditioning of modern athletes. It’s only now that its benefits are proving invaluable to all those serious about staying injury free.

How Does Stretching Prevent Injury?

One of the greatest benefits of stretching is that you’re able to increase the length of both your muscles and tendons. This leads to an increased range of movement, which means your limbs and joints can move further before an injury occurs. Let”s take a look at a few examples.

If the muscles in your neck are tight and stiff this limits your ability to look behind or turn your head around. If for some reason your head is turned backwards, past its” normal range of movement, in a football scrum or tackle for example, this could result in a muscle tear or strain. You can help to prevent this from happening by increasing the flexibility, and the range of movement, of the muscles and tendons in your neck.

And what about the muscles in the back of your legs? The Hamstring muscles. These muscles are put under a huge strain when doing any sort of sport which involves running and especially for sports which require kicking. Short, tight hamstring muscles can spell disaster for many sports people. By ensuring these muscles are loose and flexible, you”ll cut your chance of a hamstring injury dramatically.

How else can stretching help? While injuries can occur at any time, they are more likely to occur if the muscles are fatigued, tight and depleted of energy. Fatigued, tight muscles are also less capable of performing the skills required for your particular sport or activity. Stretching can help to prevent an injury by promoting recovery and decreasing soreness. Stretching ensures that your muscles and tendons are in good working order. The more conditioned your muscles and tendons are, the better they can handle the rigors of sport and exercise, and the less likely that they”ll become injured.

So as you can see, there”s more to stretching than most people think. Stretching is a simple and effective activity which will help you to enhance your athletic performance, decrease your likelihood of sports injury and minimise muscle soreness.

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LA Boxing fighter contingency program

You fight, because you love the sport.

We support you, because we love the sport.

Professional fighters have long been behind the curve on salaries in comparison to sports such as baseball, basketball, football, and professional racing. Most athletes agree that professional fighting like boxing, kickboxing and mixed martial arts are among the most grueling and dangerous sports but compensation has not matched the risks MMA warriors face when they enter the ring. With the exception of a few super-star fighters, most fighters, whether amateur or professional, will never become millionaires. Many often work day jobs to support themselves or their families http://laboxingfightcontingency.com/

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LA Boxing members

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The LA Boxing Kickboxing Workout is designed to be the perfect total body workout. Kickboxing is the fastest way to a tight, toned fighters body.
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Double end ball punch LA BOXING

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The LA Boxing Kickboxing Workout is designed to be the perfect total body workout. Kickboxing is the fastest way to a tight, toned fighters body.
858 484-7269

LA Boxing kickboxing class (long version)

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#1 Training Tip
If you are going to do kickboxing purely for the health benefits, then all you really need to do it with intensity. Throwing lazy punches and kicks won’t give you much of a workout. Also, you need to do it consistently. Just like any exercise regimen, the longer you consistently do it, the stronger the habit of doing it will be.

First Kickboxing Class At LA Boxing

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New members talks about his first class at LA Boxing

 

Maximum results at LA Boxing thats what you get every time you train!

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A Compact Guide to Creating the Fitness Habit

Monday, January 2nd, 2012

Post written by Leo Babauta of zenhabits.net.

A new year, a new slate of resolutions.

Perhaps the biggest resolution at New Year’s is to get fit — start exercising, start eating right, and all that jazz.

But resolutions never last. As you might already know, I’m not a fan of resolutions.

Instead of creating a list of resolutions this year, create a new habit.

Habits last, and they lead to long-term fitness (and more). They require more patience, but they are worth the wait.

As some of you know, fitness habits are what started me along the path to changing my life. I quit smoking, started running. Then I started eating healthier, became vegetarian (now vegan), quit the junk food addiction, started doing other types of workouts (bodyweight, weights, Crossfit, anything that was fun).

And six years later, I’m nearly 39 years old and in the best shape of my life. I have less bodyfat than any time since high school, more muscle than ever in my life, and I can run and hike and play longer than anytime in the history of Leo. That’s not to brag, but to show you what can be done with some simple fitness habits.

Reshaping Through Habits

The appealing thing about many fitness programs is that they promise quick results. You see testimonials from people who have gone through the program and lost 30 lbs. and gain a washboard stomach in just 4 weeks!

That’s all complete crap.

First, most people won’t achieve those results. Second, and more importantly, if you do get quick results, you’ll reverse those results very quickly … because you haven’t created new habits. You’ve just done something intense and unsustainable for a short period of time. That’s nearly worthless.

You should be focused on long-term results, and more importantly on a healthy lifestyle. A healthy lifestyle starts with changing your habits and ends with long-term results.

Changing habits takes time. I recommend one habit at a time, and give yourself about a month per habit. That takes patience, but you shouldn’t try to see amazing results in just 30 days. You should enjoy your new lifestyle, which will be an amazing result in itself that you can achieve immediately. In a matter of months and years, your body and health will change too.

Let’s say you change one habit at a time, one per month or so. You’ll have 12 new habits every year. Even if you only formed 6 habits that stuck and that you loved, you’d be amazed at what kind of changes those 6 habits would create in your life and fitness. If you did 6 habits a year for three years, you’d be transformed.

If you don’t have the patience to change one habit at a time, or focus on enjoying your new habits rather than getting quick results, you should stop reading now.

Which Habits to Choose

So let’s say you’re just starting out … what habit should you start with?

My favorite habit is daily exercise, but if you’re looking to lose weight probably the most important habits relate to eating.

In truth, which habit you choose first matters very little in the long run. You will be changing many little habits over the course of the next few years, and the order of those habits is unimportant. What matters is that you start.

Here are some habits that I’d start with, if you haven’t created them yet:

  • Exercise for just 5 minutes a day, adding 5 minutes per week. Make it a fun exercise.
  • Drink water instead of sweet drinks.
  • Replace fried foods with vegetables.
  • Eat fruit and nuts for snacks.
  • Eat lean protein, including plant proteins, instead of red meat.
  • Add strength exercises to your routine — pushups, pullups, squats, lunges.
  • If you’ve been doing all of the above for awhile, add some weights — compound lifts like squats, deadlifts, bench presses, dips, chinups, overhead presses and rows.

I’ve found that losing weight is simple: eat lots of veggies and plant or lean protein, reduce calories, do some kind of cardio, lift some weights to preserve muscle.

Gaining muscle is also fairly simple: eat lots of veggies and plant or lean protein, increase calories, do some kind of cardio to preserve heart health, lift heavy weights to grow muscle.

The weights should be compound lifts and heavy, the cardio should be enjoyable. Getting “toned”, btw, is just gaining muscle and losing the fat that covers the muscle, whether you’re a man or woman.

Forming the Habit

These are my top principles for forming habits. If you’ve read my writings on habits before, this won’t be new to you, but often it’s good to review these principles for things you’ve missed:

  1. Make it social. This is an incredibly powerful too. I highly, highly recommend Fitocracy to everyone, as it’s a way to make exercise fun and social (invite code: ZENHABITS). It turns fitness into a game, and you log your exercises, get points, encourage others, complete fitness quests, get props for workouts you’ve done. Other great ways to make your habit change social: report on your daily progress to friends and family through Facebook, Twitter, Google+ or email, find a workout partner, get a coach, join a running group, join online fitness forums, join a class.
  2. Do one habit at a time only. People often skip this one because they think they are different than everyone else, but I’ve found this to be extremely effective. You increase your odds of success with just one habit at a time, for many reasons: habits are hard to form because they require lots of focus and energy, having many habits means you’re spreading yourself too thin, and if you can’t commit to one habit at a time, you’re not fully committed.
  3. Make it your top priority. People often put off fitness and diet stuff because they’re too busy, too tired, to stressed out by big projects or the holidays, etc. But in my experience, those are great reasons you *should* be exercising. So make your new diet or exercise habit one of your absolute top priorities for the day. If you don’t have time, you need to make time.
  4. Enjoy the habit. This is extremely important, and most people ignore it. If the habit is fun, you will stick with it longer. And even better, if you are enjoying it, you immediately win. You don’t need to wait for a bunch of pounds lost or other results — you get instant results because you’re enjoying the change. I find activities I enjoy, I join challenges or races to make exercise fun, I enjoy a conversation with a friend during a run, I eat healthy foods that are delicious (berries — yum!) and focus on savoring those foods. Focus on the enjoyment, and don’t make the habit change a big sacrifice.

Final Recommendations

Many people set fitness goals for the year. I’ve done it myself, but lately I’ve found that I can get fit without them. For one thing, when you set goals, they are often arbitrary, and so you are spending all your effort working towards a basically meaningless number. And then if you don’t achieve it, you feel like you failed, even if the number was arbitrary to start with.

You can create habits without goals — I define goals as a predefined outcome that you’re striving for, not activities that you just want to do. So is creating a habit a goal? It can be, or you can approach it with the attitude of “it doesn’t matter what the outcome of this habit change is, but I want to enjoy the change as I do it”.

So enjoy the habit change, in the moment, and don’t worry what the outcome of the activity is. The outcome matters very little, if you enjoy the journey.

The journey to fitness can have an infinite number of paths, and setting your path in advance by setting goals is limiting. Allow yourself to change course on a whim, without guilt of not achieving a goal, and you’ll find new paths you’d never have anticipated when you set out.

But the most important step of the journey is the first one. After that, the most important step is the one you’re presently taking. So take that step, and enjoy it.

The Ageless Warrior

 

Boxing history has had a handful of fighters who were able to, not only compete, but reach a high level of success into what most would consider past their prime. The “Ole Mongoose,” Archie Moore, fought late into his forties, George Foreman won the heavyweight title at age forty-five and, more recently, forty-seven year old Bernard Hopkins has gained a great deal of attention for being able to tap into a virtual fountain of youth and show some of today’s young guns, that age really is only a number.  Were these boxers genetically gifted?  Did they have a secret to success for fighting into their golden years? Were they just well-preserved because of their lifestyles outside of the ring?  The answer may be…all of the above?

Regardless of how each of them were able to personally prolong their boxing careers and experience the best of themselves at a time when most fighters are riding off into the sunset, there are things YOU can do to ensure that you have a long, healthy career by the choices you make now.  Or, if you’re already up-there in age, just beginning, or well into the twilight of your boxing career, it’s never too late to do what you can to slow the aging process down and turn back the boxing clock on your internal timer.

One of the most important contributors to aging is Human Growth Hormone.  The presence of it reduces the effects of aging, helps build muscle and improves your general health.  You can improve your natural levels of HGH by getting plenty of sleep (at least 8 hours) and reducing stress. Too little sleep and too much stress produce a reaction from your body that releases hormones from your pituitary gland that, in turn, decreases HGH levels. Yeah, accomplishing both of these in this fast-paced, demanding world is easier said than done, but worth striving for, as they are major contributors to the aging process.

On the other hand, it has been proven that intense exercise, such as interval training or boxing training, actually increases testosterone output.  Since your levels of testosterone and HGH begin decreasing substantially once you hit your 30s, it’s more important than ever to increase your intensity and the level at which you train.  Those days of casually going in the gym and meandering from bag to bag, getting a few rounds in and just getting by are over.  The days where youth is on your side has to be replaced by a concerted effort to use every minute you’re in the gym.  Shorten your rest periods, eliminate idle chit chat, don’t let your mind wander and push yourself every minute of every round.  It may sound like common sense or pretty basic advice, but you might be surprised at how many gyms house a slew of fighters who are skating by on raw talent and depending on their natural physical gifts.  Guess what?  Their days are numbered.  So are yours, so start counting them now.

Your ability to maintain muscle mass peaks between twenty and thirty years old, but declines by one percent every year once you hit forty.  You lose up to sixty-eight percent of your bone density by the time you reach sixty.  To offset that, compound weight-lifting movements have been proven to increase muscle mass, bone density and overall strength.  You may have been hesitant to incorporate weightlifting in the past, but you might want to reconsider adding some multi-joint movements to supplement your boxing routine. These types of exercises focus on explosiveness and power, not building muscle so “no” it won’t slow you down and “no” it will not make you muscle bound.  What it will do is help you keep what muscle you do have, prevent your body from deteriorating and prevent your power from diminishing.  If you’ve hit that magic number in age, you might want to consider if it is worth holding onto that old belief that boxers shouldn’t lift weights or, instead, realize that it’s time to move some iron and pump up your boxing routine.

Every decade after the age of 25 your aerobic capacity declines by approximately 10 percent.  The answer isn’t running an extra 5 miles every day or increasing your time on the stationary bike, but maybe mixing up your aerobic routine.  Try swimming.  It can help fight-off aging by increasing your blood pressure, helping build muscle mass through resistance training and has been shown to improve your blood chemistry.  Most importantly, when approached with an intensity and sense of focus, it will increase your lung capacity.

Lastly, your diet is crucial…maybe even the most important contributing factor.  The ins and outs are too vast to get into many specifics, so let’s just say this…if you can’t catch it with a net, shoot it with a gun, pull it from the ground or pick it from a tree, consider not eating it.  Most likely it’s not good for you.  If it comes already prepared, pre-packaged, frozen, boxed, preserved or canned, in most instances, its health benefits are going to be questionable.  If the cavemen didn’t have it or couldn’t get it, you don’t need it.

It really is true when they say age is only a number.  You can be every bit as fit at forty years old as you were at twenty, if you make the right choices and adjustments to your training.  It’s never too late to start living right, eating right and training right to have a boxing career that keeps you young at heart.

At LA Boxing, boys and girls learn self-defense

YouTube Preview ImageAt LA Boxing, boys and girls learn self-defense, self-confidence and discipline while having fun in a safe and entertaining group class format. And it’s a great way them to get out their energy and frustrations too.

The Benefits
They will learn:

Self-Confidence Children become more self-confident at LA Boxing because they progress at their own pace and are not compared to others.
Coordination Our youth program challenges the entire body, developing coordination, balance, agility and poise.
Discipline Boxing, Kickboxing, Jiu Jitsu and MMA training will help your child to discover that through self-discipline and perseverance he or she can accomplish almost anything.
Self-Defense LA Boxing teaches children to think instead of panic in potentially serious situations. And how to react to threats from other kids.

The Benefits at our gym in San Diego LA Boxing

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The Benefits at our gym in San Diego

Our members enjoy benefits they can’t find in any other group exercise class, including:

An ultra-calorie burning workout in a fun and engaging atmosphere. The LA Boxing Workout has been proven to burn 800-1,000 calories in a single hour workout!
A complete workout experience, strengthening and toning while building endurance and functional fitness
A genuine cross-training regimen, learning new techniques across the widest array of fighting styles, from trainers who are experts in their fields
Exercise that focuses on your physical, mental and emotional health
A way to stay engaged in your exercise every day, and measure your progress along the way
Limited class size, ensuring our experienced professional trainers can offer one-to-one attention focused on making sure your form is safe and correct.