Health and Wellness FITNESS
STABILIZATION IS HIP! Strong hips will aid leg strength and balance
By Nick Bohanan
it’s important to have good leg strength and good balance, particularly at the finish. Part of establishing good strength and balance comes from hip stabilization.
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Hip stabilization gives you strength in the way balance does. The primary benefit of stable hips is added strength at the finish, but stabilization also helps your hips stay level in each step of the approach. If you have weakness in one hip or the other, it can affect your posture from side to side and front to back as you move from one step to another.
owling puts your body in positions it is not always used to being in, so
Hip stabilization is mostly about the pelvic bones. You hips are ball- and-socket joints and the pelvis is the bone that connects your hips with your spine. There’s a little bit of movement in that area and it needs to be stable in order to pro- vide your lower body with support. If you’re not strong in those areas you tend to compensate with one side or the other. The result is pain in one hip or the other, or in your lower back. Because of the natural imbalance in weight distri- bution, bowling can accelerate that pain.
In the finish position your slide hip has the greatest strain. You still need flexibility in that area, but you also need strength and stabilization.
Also, weak glutes are preva- lent in bowling. Many bowlers are
“In the finish position your slide hip has the greatest strain. You still need
flexibility in that area, but you also need strength and stabilization.”
FITNESS, HEALTH AND NUTRITION TIPS TO MAKE YOU A BETTER BOWLER
THE FINISHING TOUCH: The greatest strain on a bowler’s hips comes at the finish, when there is an imbalance in weight distribution.
bent forward at the finish, which strains the glutes. There are a few exercises that can help strengthen the gluteus medius, which correlate with abduction, extending one leg away from the other.
First, lay on your side. Lift the top leg straight up and away, tightening your glutes while re- laxing your abs. You only need to raise your leg 12-18 inches to be effective. (Going higher than 18 inches reduces the effectiveness of the exercise.) Hold the leg at
12 USBOWLER SEPTEMBER 2011
that angle for five seconds. Do three sets of 10.
The other exercise is the Clam Shell. Lay on your side with your knees bent at about 60 degrees. Keeping your ankles together, separate your knees, lifting the top knee only. Do three sets of 10. These exercises will help strengthen your hips and make you more stable through your approach and to the finish. — Nick Bohanan is United States Bowling Congress Sports Performance Specialist.
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