Title: Golf Health: Sportsmedicine for Golf Business
1Golf HealthSportsmedicine for Golf Business
Teaching Professionals
- Karen W. Stellick, PT
- GREAT MOVES
- 719.477.6870
2AGENDA
- Fitness Essentials for Golf
- The Basics of Anatomy and Kinesiology as they
Relate to Golf - Understand the Principles Behind a Golf Fitness
Evaluation
3Components of Fitness
- Flexibility Spine Extremities
- Strength Core Extremities
- Posture Function Follows Form
- Balance Internal External
- Cardiovascular Demands Benefits
- Neuromuscular training Speed and Position
- Nutrition Demands Benefits
4FACT AND FICTION ABOUT FITNESS ON THE LPGA
- Grip Strength Ave. L 92 Ave. R 90
- Demand versus potential.
- Lean Body Mass
- Literature recommendations, 11-19 body fat
- Actual 28.5 body fat average on the LPGA
- Bone density analysis findings.
- Osteopenia and rib fractures.
- Dermatology findings.
- Skin cancer.
5Factors Leading to Golf Injuries
- Poor Body Mechanics
- Excessive Practice
- Lacking Golf Specific Exercise Program
- Poor Nutrition Plan
- Previous Injuries/Surgeries
- Travel Injuries MVAs, Lifting Baggage
- Irregular Sleep Habits and Accommodations
- Smoking, Drinking, Stress
- Inherent trauma from the golf swing
6(No Transcript)
7(No Transcript)
8Biomechanics of the Spine
- Motion in one plane influences movement in the
other planes. - Excessive flexion of the thoracic spine decreases
the potential for rotation.
9CORE STABILITY
10Shoulder Strength Flexibility
- Scapular control
- Thoracic posture
- Muscle imbalance
- Shoulder control
- Rotator cuff stability and mobility
- Pectoral Involvement
- Injury Prevention
- Nerve Impingement
- Tendinitis
11(No Transcript)
12Set-up Back swing
13Downswing Impact Zone
14The Finish
15Factors of the Lead Shoulder
- The average horizontal adduction/internal
rotation is 130 degrees for males, 155 degrees
for females. Where does the player get this
motion? Scapular or glenohumeral motion?
Demonstration of effect on grip and injury
potential. - Soft tissue shortening or lengthening may lead to
pain, dysfunction and weakness such as the
snapping scapula or nerve tension on many
professional players. - Fifteen muscles stabilize and move the scapula.
Nine help stabilize the glenohumeral joint while
six control scapular stability against the
thoracic wall. - Ground impact forces are transferred to both
arms, eventually affecting the shoulders and
spine. - The balance of flexibility and stability of
pectoral, trapezius, and rotator cuff musculature
is critical to prevent impingement, tendonitis,
or bursitis.
16 ELBOW PAIN
- Weakness
- Imbalance
- Elbow Flexion
- The Push
- The Pull
- Shoulder or Wrist
- The Grip
TREATMENT Proper Diagnosis Rest, ice, heat,
iontophoresis, forearm band, stretching,
strengthening, retraining mechanics
17PELVIS HIPS
- Swing stability and consistency comes from pelvic
or core strength and stability. - Limited flexibility in the hips is a major source
of back pain in amateurs. If the swing cant
rotate at the hips, rotation will be painfully
stolen from the lumbar spine. (Research) - Tight hip flexors and hamstrings. Weak adductors
and abdominals. Piriformis syndrome. Trouble
spots for many golfers. - Mobility first. Then stability and balance.
Then motor retraining. - Studies show lateral core weakness leads to back
pain. - What are the precautions for total hip
replacements?
18Who could be the culprit?
- Tight piriformis
- Tight gluteus medius
- Tight hamstrings
- Tight iliotibial band
- Limited thoracic rotation
- Poor swing technique.
- ___1. Inability to rotate into the backswing.
- ___2. Loss of right knee flexion in backswing.
- ___3. Pain in the sacral and buttock region.
- ___4. Lateral side-bend of the lumbar spine
instead of rotation. - ___5. Poor lumbar/hip posture during the swing.
(Is this a trick question?)
19BALANCE RULES!
Understand the effect on weight shifting and club
head speed.
20FUNCTION FOLLOWS FORM
- The neck must rotate to allow full rotation of
the shoulders with the head and eye position
maintained. - The shoulders support effective arm motion and
control various force vectors through many planes
of rotation. - The trunk must allow effective independent
rotation of the shoulder girdle and hip girdle. - The pelvis stabilizes and maintains appropriate
spinal angle. - The hips provide rotation rather than excessive
pelvic slide, lumbar torsion or side bend.
Leslie Spalding, LPGA tour
21- The knees provide effective lower body support.
- The ankles allow optimal knee stability, motion,
and balance. - The elbows maintain effective swing radius.
- The forearms must rotate to accommodate adequate
clubface rotation. - The wrists allow for effective club head speed
and position. - The fingers allow for effective club control
throughout the swing.
The knees and ankles also allow for a quick
getaway to the 19th hole!
22Specifics of Golf
- A specific motion over 100 specific joints
involving hundreds of muscles, each in a specific
direction through specific input of specific
stimuli to obtain a specific amount of muscle
response or specific facilitation of a specific
tissue dependent upon the specific tissue
involved in a specific action to achieve specific
physical performance requirements and goals with
specific fiber muscle recruitment fueled by a
specific muscle energy system. Then the ball
gets in the way of the club and Whack!
23Mastering Functional Exercise in Golf and Life
- Player uses biomechanically correct movement with
good demonstration of control. - No substitution pattern is noted.
- Minimal perception of exertion.
- Non-symptom producing. (pain, balance)
- Goals for intensity, duration, and frequency are
SMART.
Achievements with exercise Annika and Tiger.
24Set SMART Goals
- Conduct SMART goal training.
- Specific
- Measurable
- Achievable
- Realistic
- Time-phased
25Identify Skills Needed to Achieve Goals
- Time Management- self discipline
- Cardiovascular Fitness- endurance
- Core Strength- control and confidence
- Muscular stretch- preparation and breathing
- Flexibility- adaptability and relaxation
- Balance- focus and trust
- Posture training- visualization
- Velocity changes- handling stress
26Does your swing fit your body?
- Does your body fit your swing?
27STUDENT MINI-EVALUATION
- Grip Strength R ______ L ______
- Thoracic rotation R _____ L _____
- Hip External Rotation R _____ L _____
- Single Leg Balance EO/EC R ___ L ___
- Kinesthetic or Visual dominance?
- Posture
- Arm hang position _____________________
- Set-up alignment ______________________
28THANK YOU FOR TEACHING!
- GREAT MOVES PHYSICAL THERAPY
- KAREN STELLICK, PT
- 1612 S. 8TH STREET
- COLORADO SPRINGS
- 719-477-6870
- GOOD FOR A FREE 30 MINUTE SESSION
29!
UCCS Grip Strength/Pressure Data
30UCCS Grip Strength/Pressure Data
31UCCS Grip Strength/Pressure Data
32UCCS Grip Strength/Pressure Data