Showing posts with label BJJ injury. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BJJ injury. Show all posts

Top 4 Yoga Workouts for MMA To Reduce Chances Of Injury

Top 4 Yoga Workouts for MMA To Reduce Chances Of Injury

Starting an intense workout routine after spending a passive lifestyle for a long time can test your body. The world we live in today runs according to the clock. You will see people struggling to find enough time to cook a decent meal. This is where you will see takeout, bad diet, lazy lifestyle, and intense working routines where they will sit behind computers most of the day.

In this intense lifestyle getting back in the ring without getting into shape means you will get injured right away. This also means that once you get injured, you will need too much time to recover and your routine of seeking rest and living a very passive and dormant lifestyle will prevail even more. This is the reason you need to get your body into shape before you start your workout.


How Does Flexibility Help You Improve Your Training?

To understand the idea of flexibility you need to understand the function of your muscles every time you lift something or you move, your muscle has to move according to the body and bones structure. If you lift something heavy, your muscle needs to extend. However, in most cases when you live a passive lifestyle, your muscles lose flexibility and become very rigid. The angle of movement and its extension capacity becomes very limited.

As a result, when you start your workout and you try to move according to the requirement of exercise, your muscles will only move to a certain limit. Beyond that limit, when you move your muscle or try to test its limit, you will either feel strain or your muscle fibers will rupture. This strain means you will have to wait for the fibers to heal.

Usually, after the healing, the replaced fibers are strong and flexible enough that they can support the movement. This is the reason you might have noticed that if you have never worked out and you start your workout, you will have very limited muscle movement and angle of movement. However, with the right workout and daily exercise, your movement will extend and you will be able to work in a better way.

With the help of this article, we will look at some of the best and most effective yoga moves that will improve your body’s flexibility. This workout will not only help you prevent the chance of injury, but you can also use it as a warm-up exercise.


Top 4 Yoga Workouts for MMA to Reduce Chances Of Injury

Utkatasana

This is also called chair pose. For this pose, you will follow the same pose as squat but you have to make sure that your hands are just above your head. This will help you focus on the strength of your lower body and as you extend your arms above, you will be able to work on the arms muscles as well.




Vajrasana

Commonly known as the diamond pose. This pose requires you to tuck your feet under your buttock as you take a seat on the floor. Now, keep your hands on the knee in your lap. Keep your back straight and breathe through your nose. This pose will help you fix your posture and work on the flexibility of your chest muscles as well as your shoulders and your back.

Paschimottanasana

This pose is known as the forward bend and it can be a little tricky for the beginner. For this pose, you will have to sit straight and then extend your legs straight as well. Now use your hands to reach your toes and then tug on them till you can touch your chest down on the knees. This pose will help you strengthen your lower back muscles as well as your legs and your arms.


Chakrasana

This is the most common pose and you might have seen people testing their flexibility through this pose as well. This pose is known as the forward fold or table pose. You will be required to lay down and then use your legs and arms to lift the weight of your torso. Make sure you are not getting lower stretch instead, go up till you see your back getting into a curved shape.

Bottom Line

To sum it all up, it all comes down to the workout you choose. Although stretching is the main principle in all kinds of exercises you also have to keep in mind that there are static stretching techniques as well as dynamic stretching techniques. Apart from this, focusing on the flexibility of just one muscle group will make you weak, and eventually, you will get injured somewhere else. While forming a good workout, always start with simple full-body workouts that will help you work on all muscles at the same time. Also, keep in mind that before working on muscle strength you need to work on flexibility first.

 


--------------------------------------------------

ZHOO ZHITSU IS FOR EVERYONE!

Check for more resources on Amazon.com:

BJJ / Grappling tips: Injury and awareness


I injured my finger today* in BJJ. We were drilling open guard vs passing with full resistance and in the heat of the moment, the ring finger on my left hand bent the wrong way. It hurt. It really flipping hurt!

I quickly got off the mat, screaming and shouting in agony, and got to my locker where I had some ice spray which actually helped a little. A friend saw me and kindly got me a bag of ice which further helped reduce the pain and the swelling. I'll tape it and keep icing it and it should get back to good very soon.

The injury itself isn't really interesting. What interests me is the before and after. This might surprise you but I could see it happen. I knew I was vulnerable today for a number of reasons:


Self defence in BJJ: A different perspective on accident management

Self defence is a very important aspect of training BJJ, grappling, Karate or any of the martial arts. This is something I believe very strongly in, but I feel a lot of readers misunderstand what I mean when I say "self defence".

Mostly, the term "self defence" conjures images of an exaggerated, usually pre-determined, attack from a friendly partner which is then met with a variety of vicious-looking counter-attacks until the bad guy is seemingly neutralised. "If someone attacks you with an overhead knife strike you do this then this then this then this...then you freeze!".


While indeed there are technical aspects to self defence such as clinching (from stand-up and on the ground), blocking (hand on the biceps) and distance management (using the knee shield in guard, reaching mount to neutralise attacker's punches), and these are very much valuable assets if and when drilled against progressive resistance, that's not the part I meant. I call that part "Defending yourself against the intentional acts of others"


I'm mainly referring to defending yourself against:



1. The unintentional acts of others

2. The grip of your ego

3. Your lapses of awareness



BJJ / Grappling Supplements: GLC2000 Glucosamine + Chondroitin



Last night's advanced BJJ session at The Labs had something extra ordinary about it.

Without getting into too much detail, I can tell you that we worked really hard, but not to the point of breaking. We held and maintained a very high pace, but still managed to learn lots of jiu jitsu from the session.

In groups of three and against resistance, we drilled guard passing, sweeps, submissions, takedowns and takedown defence for two minute rounds, changing partner every time a point or a submission was scored. We did this for the full duration of the session and I am feeling it today! My muscles are sore and some of my joints are a little sore. I'm not broken, but I have been definitely been given a very thorough workout!

Coincidently, I received my first tub of GLC2000 yesterday. GLC2000 is a market leader in high-end Cartilage and joint formulae which I first saw in my first copy of Ultimate Grappling Magazine. We have all heard and read about joint supplements and whether they work or not but the proof, as they say, is in the pudding and I'm giving this one a try.

To give this Glucosamine / Chondroitin joint supplement the best review possible, I will be running a diary based on how I perceive the benefits of the product. My main joint issues from martial arts (karate and BJJ / Grappling) are:

Sore fingers / knuckles
Sore neck
"Tired" shoulder / rotator cuff muscles - tender tendons
Achy ribs, near the false ribs (lower rib cage)
Sore knees
Sore toes and ball of foot

Which pretty much covers everything haha but hey at least my elbows seem to be fine (touch wood!)

I will be updating the Part Time Grappler blog regularly with results of this experiment. (Sore) fingers crossed!


--------------------------------------------------

ZHOO ZHITSU IS FOR EVERYONE!

Liam "The Part Time Grappler" Wandi

Proudly sponsored by Predator Fightwear: Built for the kill and Brutal TShirt: Made By Grapplers For Fighters

BJJ / Grappling Injury Avoidance and Longevity: Interview with Professor Adem Redzovic


Injury in BJJ and grappling is a terrible thing. No one enjoys tweaking a knee or having a herniated disc so when Gracie Barra black belt and instructor at the first American Gracie Barra academy, Professor Adem Redzovic talks about longevity and his top three tips to avoiding injury*, I knew I had to share this with you all:

1. Understand rehab and that kind of resistance training. Adem highlighted that while many Brazilian jiu jitsu players understand the importance of supplementary strength and conditioning training to improve their on the mat grappling performance, far too much of it is focused on heavy lifting, leaving much to be learnt from the way physiotherapists teach strength exercises to athletes during rehab from grappling injuries**. This is something I've gravitated towards over the past 2 years (strengthening the core, spine erectors and other small muscles and trying to bring the body into balance and symmetry (right and left, upper and lower, extensors and flexors...etc.)

2. Treat your jiu jitsu journey as a marathon and not a sprint. Royler Gracie black belt and my friend Mr Eddie Kone once said: "I don't know about you but I would rather learn for an hour than fight for 4-5 minutes!" And I always carry those words with me. Adem put it this way: "the worst place to be is collecting dust on the bench with an injury". Hear hear!

3. Instructors and team mates: Create a family atmosphere: look after each other and don't take risks with wild horses at your gym (that one made me chuckle because every gym has them and we all know who they are. If you don’t, chances are it’s you!). Take responsibility for your health and if you don’t want to roll with someone, then don’t it’s ok! Don’t grapple with them, get hurt and then limp off the mat with a sour face going all “I-Accuse”.

Also, why not gently and politely bring to your instructor’s attention that when you roll with person x, they train way too hard for you to learn anything and you feel at risk of injury. If nothing else, this will highlight to her that maybe a chat with person x is in order. Treat your BJJ gym members as a family and everyone will benefit.

If you enjoyed this, check out the full interview on Martial Arts Weekly (see below) and also this blog post on White Collar BJJ.


-------------------------------------------------------------

*It’s a brilliant martial arts interview on Martial Arts Weekly: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/martialartsweekly/2011/09/11/spotlightprofesser-adem-redzovic-gracie-barra-bjj-chicago. You can also read an interview with Adem on On The Mat here.

**I’m obviously no expert, but Rosi Sexton is! Read her fantastic blogs http://rosisexton.wordpress.com/ and http://combatsportsclinic.com/blog/ for many gems on the subject of rehab and prehab.

--------------------------------------------------

Liam "The Part Time Grappler" Wandi

Proudly sponsored by Predator Fightwear: Built for the kill

----Did You Like This Article?--- Click here to add The Part Time Grappler to your Favourites / Bookmarks

BJJ / Grappling injuries: hand skin

I know this is not a BJJ injury per se, but I have noticed that the more I train BJJ and grappling, especially in the gi, the more it seems to shred the skin on my hands in general and my fingers in particular. Avoiding this "grapplers hands" condition is by no means only for vanity.

 
-shredded skin hurts!
-skin is your body's barrier against infections and a broken barrier is a useless barrier.
-a small cut can easily grow into a big one.