The main areas this program was meant to address are:

1) Improving soft-tissue quality of the muscles in the hip and thigh

2) Improving ankle range of motion

3) Strengthening the hip external rotators and abductors

4) Using isometrics (and one dynamic exercise-the reverse lunge) to strengthen the lower body

Foam Roll Circuit: Anterolateral Hip, Quads, Lateral Thigh

1 x 30s each position on each side

Lacrosse Ball Circuit: Lateral Glute, Posterior Glute

1 x 30s each position on each side

3-Way Ankle Mobility

1 x 5 each position on each side


A1) Side Lying Hip Abduction/External Rotation Hold

Week 1: 3 x 20s hold each

Week 2: 3 x 25s hold each

Week 3: 3 x 30s hold

A2) Split Squat Iso-Hold w/ Toe Pull

Week 1: 3 x 25s each

Week 2: 3 x 30s each

Week 3: 3 x 35s each

B1) Close Stance Glute Bridge Hold w/ MiniBand

Week 1: 3 x 20s hold

Week 2: 3 x 30s hold

Week 3: 3 x 40s Hold

B2) 3-Way Squat Circuit: Knees Out, Hands Behind Head, Hands Overhead

Week 1: 3 x 10s each

Week 2: 4 x 10s each

Week 3: 4 x 10s each

C1) Lateral MiniBand Walk

Week 1: 3 x 6 steps each

Week 2: 3 x 8 each

Week 3: 3 x 10 each

C2) Reverse Lunge

Week 1: 3 x 8 each

Week 2: 3 x 8 each

Week 3: 3 x 8 each

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Those of you that know me personally know that I hold physical therapists in a very high regard. I’m fascinated by the education they receive. They truly are the only profession that is taught how we move, and expected to be able to apply their knowledge in a way to manipulate human movement in the interest of health.

Unfortunately, recently I’ve been hearing from several people that have gone to multiple physical therapists with no luck. I don’t want to throw physical therapists under the bus, but it’s frustrating when I ask people what they did at physical therapy and the answer comes back “Ice, stim, and stretches” every time. Stretching I’m okay with. Ice and stim treat symptoms, not causes.

If these modalities don’t provide long-term results, then why do PTs use them? Simple. Insurance! PTs are given a very limited number of visits to make someone feel better. Ice and stim reduce pain rapidly, so people feel better. The underlying problem is likely still lingering (unless a little rest was really all someone needed), but they feel better, which is pretty important.

But there needs to be a happy medium. Something between treating symptoms and treating the cause. Of course, the best way to treat an injury is to avoid it altogether. I’ve spent countless hours reading physical therapy texts to try to improve my understanding of human movement for just that reason. If you can spot movement abnormalities before people get hurt, you can probably save them the hassles of rehabilitation.

My next post will have the program I put together for the girl with patellofemoral syndrome and chondromalacia. Stay tuned!

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