hamstring

Dave Campbell

2006-02-09

For me and the runners on my team 90% of the time the cause is TIGHT HIPS.
THese are your PRIME MOVERS for most exercise. Probe hips with your thumb
for tender areas and apply pressure and try to get a release, yoga pigeon
poses and a variety of hip stretches will help.

Best,
DC

> [Original Message]
> From: J.Michael Manning
> To: ;
> Date: 2/9/2006 2:16:59 PM
> Subject: Re: [OBRA Chat] hamstring
>
> Matthew,
> Tight or sore hamstrings may be caused by a number of things, but as it
> relates to proper bike fit, it typically is an indication that you are
> overreaching because your saddle is either too high or too far back. An
> efficient pedal stroke would more evenly balance the workload betwen the
> quads and hams. Consider that the quads are a very powerful muscle
> group...as you exert greater force near the bottom of the stroke, your
> hamstrings are lengthening and if not allowed to relax will begin to
> tighten. It is akin to stretching a rubber band beyond its normal length.
> This causes stress and soreness. As well, you are depriving yourself of
> power because you have basically applied the brakes. There are a number
of
> things you can do to improve your flexibility and range of motion, such
as
> regular stretching, massage or heat therapy. But it is more important to
> address the root cause of the problem. Proper bike fit and proper posture
> means efficient biomechanics. Without it, you are wasting a lot of
energy.
> It's like trying to shoot a free throw without the benefit of being able
to
> flex your wrist or fingers. Look at Shaq...he shoots from the shoulder
and
> elbows. No wonder he misses so often. Contact me if you need a
professional
> bike fitting.
> J.Michael Manning
> 503-330-5531
>
> >From:
> >To:
> >Subject: [OBRA Chat] hamstring
> >Date: Thu, 9 Feb 2006 08:37:20 -0800
> >
> >Good morning,
> >
> >
> >
> >Does anyone have any experience with resolving a strained hamstring, ie.
> >saddle position/height, or any helpful remedies for recovery?
> >
> >
> >
> >Thanks very much,
> >
> >
>
> >mathew braun
> >
> >
> >
> >d o w a
> >
> >319 sw washington street. #200
> >
> >portland, or 97204
> >
> >p: 503.226.6950
> >
> >f: 503.273.9192
> >
> >m: 503.808.0495
> >
> >
> >
>
>
> >_______________________________________________
> >OBRA mailing list
> >obra@list.obra.org
> >http://list.obra.org/mailman/listinfo/obra
> >Unsubscribe: obra-unsubscribe@list.obra.org
>
>
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> Unsubscribe: obra-unsubscribe@list.obra.org


J.Michael Manning

2006-02-09

Matthew,
Tight or sore hamstrings may be caused by a number of things, but as it
relates to proper bike fit, it typically is an indication that you are
overreaching because your saddle is either too high or too far back. An
efficient pedal stroke would more evenly balance the workload betwen the
quads and hams. Consider that the quads are a very powerful muscle
group...as you exert greater force near the bottom of the stroke, your
hamstrings are lengthening and if not allowed to relax will begin to
tighten. It is akin to stretching a rubber band beyond its normal length.
This causes stress and soreness. As well, you are depriving yourself of
power because you have basically applied the brakes. There are a number of
things you can do to improve your flexibility and range of motion, such as
regular stretching, massage or heat therapy. But it is more important to
address the root cause of the problem. Proper bike fit and proper posture
means efficient biomechanics. Without it, you are wasting a lot of energy.
It's like trying to shoot a free throw without the benefit of being able to
flex your wrist or fingers. Look at Shaq...he shoots from the shoulder and
elbows. No wonder he misses so often. Contact me if you need a professional
bike fitting.
J.Michael Manning
503-330-5531

>From:
>To:
>Subject: [OBRA Chat] hamstring
>Date: Thu, 9 Feb 2006 08:37:20 -0800
>
>Good morning,
>
>
>
>Does anyone have any experience with resolving a strained hamstring, ie.
>saddle position/height, or any helpful remedies for recovery?
>
>
>
>Thanks very much,
>
>

>mathew braun
>
>
>
>d o w a
>
>319 sw washington street. #200
>
>portland, or 97204
>
>p: 503.226.6950
>
>f: 503.273.9192
>
>m: 503.808.0495
>
>
>

>_______________________________________________
>OBRA mailing list
>obra@list.obra.org
>http://list.obra.org/mailman/listinfo/obra
>Unsubscribe: obra-unsubscribe@list.obra.org


jboquiren@comcast.net

2006-02-09

Matthew,

I find that weekly yoga helps my hammies and quads recover quite nicely.

http://www.prananda.com/

Joseph 'Om shanti' Boquiren

-------------- Original message --------------
From:

Good morning,

Does anyone have any experience with resolving a strained hamstring, ie. saddle position/height, or any helpful remedies for recovery?

Thanks very much,

mathew braun

d o w a
319 sw washington street. #200
portland, or 97204
p: 503.226.6950
f: 503.273.9192
m: 503.808.0495


Hormann, Douglas J.

2006-02-09

I've found that elevating the leg in question at the Lucky Lab, along
with an appropriate amount of re-hydration therapy, works wonders.

Dep. Doug Hormann, WCSO
Office of Consolidated Emergency Management
20665 SW Blanton Street, Aloha, OR 97007
503.642.0374 - Work
503.807.7485 - Mobile/Pager
112*30326*128 - Nextel DC
doug@ocem.org
http://www.ocem.org

________________________________

From: obra-bounces@list.obra.org [mailto:obra-bounces@list.obra.org] On
Behalf Of MathewB@dowa.com
Sent: Thursday, February 09, 2006 8:37 AM
To: obra@list.obra.org
Subject: [OBRA Chat] hamstring

Good morning,

Does anyone have any experience with resolving a strained hamstring, ie.
saddle position/height, or any helpful remedies for recovery?

Thanks very much,

mathew braun

d o w a

319 sw washington street. #200

portland, or 97204

p: 503.226.6950

f: 503.273.9192

m: 503.808.0495


MathewB@dowa.com

2006-02-09

Good morning,

Does anyone have any experience with resolving a strained hamstring, ie.
saddle position/height, or any helpful remedies for recovery?

Thanks very much,

mathew braun

d o w a

319 sw washington street. #200

portland, or 97204

p: 503.226.6950

f: 503.273.9192

m: 503.808.0495