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Foam rolling isn't breaking up scar tissue but you can use it to
improve your mobility. Dr. John Rusin shows you how with
these 4 simple drills.
Just because you’re using a foam roller doesn’t necessarily mean that movement should
be considered a self-myofascial releases (SMR) technique.
This may be hard for some of you overly touchy feely soft tissue zealots to conceptualize,
but the foam roller is just another piece of equipment in a gym. Its use is far from
mandatory.
The tool does not create the result, even if we are talking about your beloved roller.
Alongside its popularity for decreasing neurological tone of soft tissues, the foam roller’s
shape and size quietly provides a very novel mobility tool.
Using one helps lifters and athletes enhance positions for stretching and mobilization
based movements.
Here are the four most effective mobility drills that use a foam roller.
These drills are staples in my athlete’s programs. And no, these are not “foam rolling
SMR techniques” so get it straight.
THORACIC SPINE
One of the most common movement dysfunctions a majority of lifters experience is an
inability to achieve thoracic spine extension, especially in a braced position under load.
While this positioning deficit may seem minor, the real problem behind the inability to
achieve and maintain a neutral thoracic spine position is the undue stress this spinal
position places on the shoulders and neck.
Simply put, the thoracic spine was anatomically designed to be a mobile group of spinal
segments to take stress off the lower back, shoulders, and neck during physical
activities.
If this region of the spine loses its ability to be mobile in nature, the joints and regions I
just mentioned are placed in a more vulnerable position for chronic or traumatic injury.
This is part of the problem as to why achy shoulders and lower back pain are so
prominent in the lifting population.
Sure, feel free to “foam roll” your upper back and thoracic spine, but make sure you
prioritize the thoracic spine extension with diaphragmatic breath over the foam roller to
really start seeing performance enhancement and mobility results.
The gluteus medius muscle is a fan shaped muscle located deep to the gluteus
maximus. It is located on the lateral side of the hip, between two major bony
prominences, the greater trochanter of the femur and the iliac crest of the pelvis. This
muscle provides lateral stabilization of the hip and pelvis and plays an active roll in some
hip rotation and abduction.
Due to the anatomical location of this muscle, it is very hard to fit a foam roller into the
soft tissue groove and roll it traditionally along the fiber orientation. For those of you
thinking you should use a lacrosse ball instead, this type of pinpoint pressure placed in
such an acute area where a ton of vascular and neural structures are, is playing with fire.
So how do we address this common area directly without pissing off the other all-
important structures of the hip?
By placing the foam roller perpendicular with the body in contact with the soft tissue
area between the hip and pelvis, we will be using our body to move over the roller. This
is worth repeating. We will not be “rolling” the foam roller underneath the body, but
rather rotating our hip and pelvis on top of the roller while it is stationary.
This is a money move that I’ve been using with my athletes for years. But as simple as it
looks, there are a few key points. Be sure to rotate slowly over the roller in order to not
only hit the soft tissues of the lateral hip, but to also mobilize the pelvis and hips along
with it. The slower you move and the better spinal position you can maintain, the better
your results will be.
After you get done smashing the roller and ball into your armpit and hurting yourself,
stick the foam roller under you and get some real lat mobility work in. Pressure down on
the top portion of the lat while your body is positioned in sidelying. Use your opposite
arm and side of the rib cage to reach and stretch through to meet your hands together in
an overhead position.
This targets the lat on the roller from a soft tissue standpoint, while incorporating the
stretch of the thoracic cage and opposite side lat, resulting in tension throughout the
entire system. Due to many deep direct insertional and fascial connections, it is ideal to
be mobilizing both lats at once.
Give this one a try, as it feels great and will actually work to enhance your thoracic spine
and rib cage positions as well.
PECTORALIS GROUP
Yes, you’ve all been waiting on the chest and shoulder mobility drill, so here it is. The
pectoralis group is not only comprised of one big and superficial muscle we target on
bench press, but rather two synergistic muscles working together in unison; the
pectoralis major and minor.
I realize that only speaking to two of the muscles of the shoulder girdle is quite simplistic,
as there are many more primary movers and key players in position throughout this
region. But for the sake of targeting mobility, we’ll key in on these two.
Traditional foam rolling does a pretty good job of targeting the pectoralis major muscle,
especially near its insertion point closest to the shoulder joint. But many times, overly
aggressive stretching and SMR work can leave the tendons of the pec beat up.
It can also aggravate the smaller more intricate structures of the anterior shoulder girdle
such as the rotator cuff and long head of the biceps tendons. A way to self-treat around
this problem is by using the foam roller to enhance your angles for a pin and stretch type
movement.
Since we want to be focusing on gaining mobility and flexibility, it would be smart to try
to take the tendons and other non-contractile tissues involved in a movement or position
out of the equation.
For the pecs, we will be placing the foam roller under the chest arranged in a 45-degree
angle to the body right under the meaty muscular portion of the pec itself. This area is
found an inch or two up towards the shoulder from the nipple.
By placing pressure through this area, then rotating your opposite shoulder and rib cage,
we not only mobilize the pec, but also the rib cage and thoracic spine. This is a catch all
move that really does a great deal of good for both the T-Spine and shoulders. I highly
recommend placing this into your daily prehab program.
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John Rusin
John is an internationally recognized coach, speaker, and writer, whose
innovative vision and knowledge brings together high-performance strength
and hypertrophy programming with a cutting-edge, pain-free training
methodology.
View all by John Rusin »
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