When you warm up your goal is to increase muscle and tendon flexibility, stimulate blood flow, increase body temperature, and increase skill specific body movement.
When you walk into a gym, you see hoards of people standing against a wall stretching their calves, locked forward in a deep “V” hamstring stretch, or standing with their foot in their hand in an attempt to achieve the goals mention above…
IT’S – NOT – WORKING!
In fact your are most likely doing yourself a huge disservice! Whether it be biking, running, swimming, fighting, or lifting weights, your body has an incredible ability to store energy within your tendons and muscles. Think of your tendons and muscles as a tightly coiled spring ready to fire free and be set loose in a millisecond. Your Tendon / Muscle springs provide an estimated 50% of the energy required to take your next step or perform any motion. When you decrease that ‘stiffness’ in the muscle you are actually making it hard to store and re-utilize that energy. As proof, a 2010 study by Jacob Wilson monitored a selection of runners to measure running efficiency. He had the runners run 30 minutes at a set pace followed by 30 minutes at the fastest they could run. He had one group perform 16 minutes of traditional ‘static’ stretching before the test, they would stretch the muscle to its maximum range of motion then hold for 30 seconds and repeat. As it turned out, the group that did not stretch before the test burned 5% less calories in the first 30 minutes and were able to run 5% farther during the second! While this demonstrates the results in endurance style movements, similar result have been well documented in power and ‘short burst’ activity as well.
Great! No more warm up for me right?
Wrong! You just need to warm up smart… In comes the Viking Muscle Dynamic Warm Up Routine:
To start, take off your shoes. we are priming your body to work at it peak level so we must prepare all the muscles in your legs including the essential support tendons and muscles that are in your feet. A barefoot warm up will force you to focus on balance and form throughout. Secondly, wear your hoodie. If you recall above, one of the goals of the warm up is to increase body temperature. We can make it easier by starting in your hoodie and getting a sweat going before we get to your actual workout.
Now, lets go through what an Ideal warm up should look like, there are many variations and warm up routines out there. I like Defranco’s Agile Eight:
With this new dynamic warm up you should feel limber, but still coiled and ready for optimal performance. Make sure you do this every day even if your not working out that day.
Hail!