I remember when I coached how sore I would be afterwards. Long hours, weird positions, uneven surfaces, moving mats and equipment, repetitive spotting on one side, saving the athlete that bachs in the middle of a skill… All of these things contribute to back pain in gymnastic coaches. Taking time to take care of your body will help you be a more successful coach. Staying healthy, strong, and flexible will help you complete the required job duties and still have energy left over to go home to your family or home life. It has been proven that with proper body mechanics less energy is expended thus saving energy for the end of the day.

5 simple things to prevent Low back pain

1) Core: There are lots of ways to work the core. Here are just a few.

Planks forward

Side planks


phase 1

phase 2

Upper Abdominal Curls

curlup

Phase 1

curlphase2

Phase 2

curlphase3

Phase 3

Lower abdominals

lower

Obliques

obliques1
obliques2

2) Hip strength:

Clams

clams

Prone Knee Bend Lifts

proneknee

Lunges

lunges

3)Stretching:

Hip flexor stretch

hipflexstretch

Quad Stretch

quadstretch

Hamstring stretch

hamstretch1

*only as lean as far as you can with a straight back.

hamstretch2

Calf Stretch

calfstretch

4) Cardio:(Interval training)

3 days a week. 15-20 min total workout time. Sprint 30 seconds with recovery 2 minutes. Repeat for 15-20 min

5)Good spotting Technique

Get as close to the gymnast as possible.

Keep arms close into the body, not out stretched.

Bend at the knees and hips, not from the back

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