Showing posts with label shoulder Injuries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shoulder Injuries. Show all posts

Thursday, 6 July 2023

A Hidden Cause of Bench Press Shoulder Injuries

A Hidden Cause of Bench Press Shoulder Injuries


Watson Dumbbells Total Health Performance Narellan
Watson Dumbbells

A hidden cause of bench press shoulder injuries is actually a weakness of the long head of the biceps.


The long head of the biceps is stressed more when the elbow joint is behind the upper body as they are when doing incline curls.


If you have strengthened your rotator cuff and external rotators, and have addressed muscle adhesions etc, but still experience some pain in the bench press, then you should check your numbers on incline curls and see if your weights match the norms for your bench.



I hope this quick tip helps.



If you want your programs designed to address your individual needs feel free to reach out. https://www.totalhealthperformance.com.au/onlinecoaching


If you need some work on addressing muscle adhesions feel free to book in for a performance session. https://www.totalhealthperformance.com.au/performancesession  

Saturday, 28 March 2020

Increase Overhead Strength to Improve Your Bench

Increase Overhead Strength to Improve Your Bench


There has been mass panic about training at the moment due to coronavirus. One of the concerns I am hearing most about is losing strength on the bench press. "I have a bar, some plates, and some dumbbells, so I can't bench, it's gonna go down massively".
You can use this time to work on your overhead strength. This will more than likely help you come back with a better bench then if you just kept hammering away on it at the gym as you normally do.
This is something that Ed Coan has spoken about for a long time. When his bench stalled, he said he would work on behind the neck presses as he felt the weakness in his shoulders were limiting his bench press.
Charles Poliquin said that based on the normative data he collected over the years there was a strong correlation between shoulder pain and a lack of overhead strength. He also explained that training only the bench press pathway often causes the subscapularis muscle to shorten and unbalance the shoulder joint.
Charles would often say that the ability to be able to behind the neck press was a sign of a healthy shoulder. To perform the behind the neck press we start the weight from a deadstop on the traps, using a full range of motion. This is how you would assess your shoulder integrity using that lift, not a little half rep lockout type thing barely reaching the top of your head, that I see in most commercial gyms.
So, spending some time focusing on your overhead strength may also help reduce your risk of injury as you may correct some imbalances that you would not have otherwise addressed.
Overhead presses will also increase the strength of the long head of your triceps which will also help carry over to a stronger bench when you get back to it.
Pair your pressing work with a chin up variation, then move on to some form of row, and external rotator work and you will keep, if not increase, the strength on the bench press. Remember to vary the type of press and chin up every 4 -6 workouts and do the same for your assistance work.
The change will more than likely help you break a few plateaus.
Related:
Bench press tip - grip width
Bench press tip - elbow position
Bench press - arch or no arch?

Wednesday, 22 August 2018

Results That Stick


Results That Stick

Mani came in with a shoulder injury the other week so I did a few things for him to help relieve some of the pain and gain some range of motion. Now it didn't "fix" his shoulder completely as he still has pain now but it did allow him to do some better rehab and just get around better in day to day activities.

The best part about it for me is how well the gains made stuck. A lot of treatment I have had in the past has felt good for a short period but feels like I go back to where I was a day later or sometimes even just by the time I have driven home. 

Working with so many rugby league players and jiu-jitsu athletes has given me a lot of exposure to shoulder injuries, how to help relieve some pain, and how to prevent them. We refer on to a good team who takes this further so we can always get you back to competition a lot quicker.