Yoga For Athletes
February 10, 2009 by Ray Baskerville
Golf. Running. Swimming. Basketball. Football. Cycling. It’s hard to find a sport for which yoga hasn’t been suggested as a performance or injury-prevention aid. While there’s not yet a whole lot of scientific research to quantify or qualify the benefits of yoga for athletes, it’s easy to find sport-specific yoga DVDs, books, and testimonials from star athletes like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Sasha Cohen. (More common is research examining how yoga can help the elderly or people with diseases or disabilities.) So absent a pile of studies to thumb through, I thought it might be instructive to talk to a handful of experts about how yoga might spill over into the rest of your workout life. They said yoga:
1. Will most likely make you more flexible. That’s probably a good thing; there’s debate on whether and how competitive athletes should stretch, but most agree that if you don’t push it, the stretching in yoga isn’t likely to harmthe average exerciser. “In my heart, I believe in stretching,” says Nicholas DiNubile, a spokesperson for the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons and the author of FrameWork: Your 7-Step Program for Healthy Muscles, Bones and Joints.
That’s especially true for people who perform repetitive motions, whether hunched over a computer or on the pitching mound. “We get into these habitual patterns of doing the same things with our bodies every day,” says Lillie Rosenthal, a New York-based osteopath who is board certified in physical medicine and rehabilitation. Runners may have tight muscles in the back of their body, like their hamstrings. Tennis players and pitchers have overdeveloped dominant arms and shoulders. The stretching and strengthening in yoga may help manage those imbalances, as well as improve general flexibility, doctors say.
2. Improves your balance and body awareness. Many yoga poses can improve your stability and agility and your awareness of where your body is in space, says Sage Rountree, a Chapel Hill, N.C.-based yoga teacher and cycling/triathlon coach and author of The Athlete ‘ s Guide to Yoga . Those skills are enormously helpful in sports—just think of a golfer, whose swing depends on being able to sense where various body parts are and how they move in relation to one another.
3. Can strengthen your core. “Core strength” is a buzz-phrase in pretty much every sport; the idea is that strengthening the muscles in your back, midsection, and butt will give you the stability to improve the power of your movements and reduce injuries. Yoga can do that, says Brian Halpern, a nonsurgical sports medicine physician at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York. (Core strength is part of a program designed to reduce injuries in female soccer players.)
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Athletes want to study “yoking Atmana and Brahmana,” for, this is Yoga/Hinduism.
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yoga help me with my back problems when playing soccer and has help build back up my core muscles which had become pretty useless untill i started to play again, once i felt the pain i used yoga to overcome my problems, great post and keep up the good work…
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I had knee surgery on my right knee a few months ago and was having some problems with it stiffening up. My physiotherapist recommended trying yoga to see if that would help. I started doing yoga classes about 6 weeks ago and already I’m seeing a great improvement. The pain in my knee is also becoming less obvious. I highly recommend yoga in this situation.
.-= kerry @ orthopedic knee surgery´s last blog ..Arthroscopic Surgery Recovery – Basic After Care =-.
Yoga is fantastic… stretching the ligaments and muscles can really change how you feel about your body. It’s a great pain reliever too when done gently over time!
You can’t restrict the yoga for someone but it is best things for all one those are really wants to get its benefits, so don’t be delay just take the initial steps to start it…thanks