Last week I shared an integrated mobility exercise that opens up some range of motion along an anterior sling connecting the front of one hip with the opposite shoulder.

This variation addresses the same concept on the opposite side of the body, now focusing on the connection between the glute and the opposite lat.

This video is of a “Diagonal Hip Rock w/ Opposite Reach”

A few notes:

✅ Set up on hands and knees and either reach one leg back on ~45° angle or bring one leg up into a “pigeon” position to feel a big stretch in the back of that hip

✅ Sink into the stretch while keeping your hips square to the floor (e.g. don’t open up as in a seated 90-90 position). Holding this position, reach with the opposite arm across your body, side bending through your torso to feel a stretch through the lat.

✅ Each rep, attempt to reach slightly further with your hand, and every few reps try to sink slightly deeper into your hip.

Typically performed for 6-10 reps per side.

Feel free to post any comments/questions below. If you found this helpful, please share/re-post it so others can benefit.

To your success,

Kevin Neeld
SpeedTrainingforHockey.com
HockeyTransformation.com
OptimizingAdaptation.com

P.S. For more information on how to assess movement and integrate specific strategies to improve mobility and movement quality in training, check out Optimizing Movement. Don’t have a DVD player? Send me a note through the contact page after you checkout here Optimizing Movement and I’ll get you a digital copy of the videos!

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Many movements in sports rely on diagonal myofascial “slings” that create a connection between one hip and the opposite shoulder.

Influencing mobility at individual joints is extremely important, but including “integrated” mobility work along these diagonal slings can address limitations that may not appear at the single-joint level.

This video is of a “1/2 Kneel Hip Flexor w/ Opposite Pec Mob” that taps into emphasizes the fascial connection through the front of the down-side hip, the obliques, and opposite pec.

A few notes:

✅ Set up by pushing the down side knee into the ground, rolling the tailbone under and shifting the hip forward to feel a deep stretch through the hip flexors.

✅ Grab the pole with the bottom hand palm down and the top hand palm up. Use the bottom hand to push the top back at ~45° angle above horizontal until you feel a big stretch through your pec.

✅ Each rep, attempt to push slightly further back to increase length/tension across the entire pathway. You can “take up slack” by sinking the hips further forward, and/or adding rotation through the t-spine.

Typically performed for 6-10 reps per side OR for 3-6 reps of alternating periods of 10s of holding a stretch, and 10s of pushing against the stretch (1-2mins of total tension).

Feel free to post any comments/questions below. If you found this helpful, please share/re-post it so others can benefit.

To your success,

Kevin Neeld
SpeedTrainingforHockey.com
HockeyTransformation.com
OptimizingAdaptation.com

P.S. For more information on how to assess movement and integrate specific strategies to improve mobility and movement quality in training, check out Optimizing Movement. Don’t have a DVD player? Send me a note through the contact page after you checkout here Optimizing Movement and I’ll get you a digital copy of the videos!

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I was fortunate to come across Thomas Myers book Anatomy Trains (@anatomytrainsofficial) early in my career (great recommendation from @michael_boyle1959), and it continues to influence how I view movement.

In the book, Myers breaks down the anatomy of 7 important fascial pathways. The lateral line extends from the foot through the peroneals, IT Band, hip abductors, lateral obliques, lateral intercostals up through the splenius capitis and SCM to the lateral aspect of the cranium.

This video shows a “Lateral Wall Lean w/ Triceps Stretch” that emphasizes stretching the lateral line from the ground up. While the triceps aren’t included in Myers lateral line, actively flexing the elbow adds tension along the pathway.

A few notes:

✅ Slide the inside leg under the outside leg and roll the ankle so the outside of the foot is on the ground

✅ Sink the hips toward the wall to feel a stretch through the lateral hip, obliques, and rib cage.

✅ Think of reach your elbow slightly up the wall to increase the tension through the lateral line and through your lat.

✅ Keep this position while you bend your elbow to reach down your back.

✅ Every few reps, see if you can reach your leg further or sink your hips closer to the wall to “take up the slack”

This quickly becomes a favorite with the athletes that try it, in part because it’s addressing areas typically overlooked with more common mobility routines.

Feel free to post any comments/questions below. If you found this helpful, please share/re-post it so others can benefit.

To your success,

Kevin Neeld
SpeedTrainingforHockey.com
HockeyTransformation.com
OptimizingAdaptation.com

P.S. For more information on how to assess movement and integrate specific strategies to improve mobility and movement quality in training, check out Optimizing Movement. Don’t have a DVD player? Send me a note through the contact page after you checkout here Optimizing Movement and I’ll get you a digital copy of the videos!

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Today’s Thursday Throwback features an important article that I originally wrote back in 2010. The concept of Michael Boyle and Gray Cook’s “Joint by Joint Approach” discussed below is the single most effective way to communicate to clients/athletes how a limitation at one joint or segment can influence function or pain in a different area of the body.

This was one of the major movement concepts I discuss in my DVD Optimizing Movement, and is one of the first things I teach to new interns and employees. Simply, this is a great topic for everyone involved in sports, from rehab professionals down to athletes. Enjoy, and if you find the article beneficial, please share it on Facebook, Twitter, etc.

Optimizing Movement DVD Package

The Mobility-Stability Continuum

Over the last several years, Michael Boyle and Gray Cook’s “Joint-by-Joint Approach to Training” has changed the way the sports performance world looks at athletic development. Starting from the ground up, the joint-by-joint system outlines that the body has joints alternating in emphasis on whether they need mobility or stability to maximize function. The chart below provides more specific details on which joints need mobility and which need stability. You’ll notice that if you read it from left to right, the joints progress  from the ground up within the body: ankle -> knee -> hip -> lumbar (low back) -> thoracic (upper back) -> scapulothoracic (shoulder blades) -> glenohumeral (shoulder joint) -> elbow).


This breakdown helps us understand the mechanism underlying a lot of common injuries. To be overly simplistic, if a joint in the mobility column has sub-optimal mobility (or range of motion), an adjacent joint will need to “fill in the gap” by providing the additional range of motion. Usually this “compensatory movement” occurs at the next joint up. Following this idea, you can refer back to the table and see that mobility restrictions in the left column lead to compensatory movements (and consequent injuries) to the joints in the right column.

For example, if your ankle lacks mobility (especially in the transverse plane), you’ll get it from your knee. This compensation will almost inevitably result in some sort of pain/injury. More specific to hockey player, if your hip lacks mobility, you’ll get it from your lumbar spine, which will eventually lead to back pain. You can see how this joint-by-joint approach creates a paradigm that explains many athletic injuries.

While I’m sure this wasn’t the original intention of either Coach Boyle or Gray Cook, this idea has been interpreted in a black and white fashion: Joints either need mobility or they need stability.

The truth is that EVERY joint falls somewhere on a mobility-stability continuum:

←————————————————————————————————————-→
Mobility                                                                                                                                     Stability

Let’s take a look at the lumbar spine. Each segment of the lumbar spine has about 2-4 degrees of rotation range of motion, for a total of about 13 degrees total rotational capacity. In contrast, the thoracic spine has in excess of 70 degrees (and so do the hips: about 30-50 degrees in both internal and external rotation). From this viewpoint, it’s obvious that we should be emphasizing rotation through the hips and thoracic spine and NOT through the lumbar spine. This fits well in the mobility/stability table above. Failure to do so results in excess rotation through the lumbar spine, which can cause a host of disc and spine issues.

With that said, it’s important to note that we still NEED that 13 degrees of rotation range of motion in the lumbar spine and should use it. We don’t want to force motion past the end range of the joint, but using the allowable motion is absolutely essential to efficient movement.  In this example, we want to “cue” movement from the thoracic spine and hips, but we shouldn’t be preaching NO movement at all through the lumbar spine. As Stuart McGill has mentioned, we just don’t want to push that joint (the lumbar spine) THROUGH end range.

Coming back to the continuum, understand that even joints that necessitate a high level of mobility (e.g. the glenohumeral or “shoulder” joint) absolutely need some requisite stability. The same is true for the ankle. In both cases, ligament damage due to injury creates an increase in joint laxity, which by definition improves mobility. However, this mobility comes at the expense of NECESSARY structural stability and increases the risk of subsequent injury to that joint (one example of why previous injury is the best predictor of future injury). In reality, these joints probably don’t belong in columns as much as a continuum as displayed below.

←————————————————————————————————————→
Mobility                                                                                    Stability
Glenohumeral                                  Hip                Ankle                 Lumbar

When we think of maximizing human performance, we can never think in black and white terms. Each joint needs a specific balance of mobility and stability. If you take only one thing from this discussion, it should be that the body functions as a cohesive unit, meaning limitations in one area will absolutely affect (usually negatively) both adjacent areas and areas further up/down an anatomical pathway. This is just one more reason why isolation training is moronic.

To your success,

Kevin Neeld
OptimizingMovement.com
HockeyTransformation.com
UltimateHockeyTraining.com

P.S. The foundation for maximum athletic performance is built on Optimizing Movement

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