Tag Archives: Core Cambridge

Training Tuesday: Hamstring Injuries

Here’s one for all the runners and especially triathletes out there. Hamstring injuries. We’ve all been hamstrung by hamstrings at one time or another and it’s got to be one of the more annoying injuries to get!

This is a triathletes nightmare as long bout on the bike shorten and tighten the hamstring and then bursting into a run will tear it up!

Here’s the guys at Core Cambridge‘s take on it:

Do you have a Sports Medicine or Strength & Conditioning question? Tweet it to @corecambridge and they’ll answer it!

Previous Training Tuesdays:

Training Tuesday: Can you retain speed/strength when recovering from injury?
Training Tuesday: Shin Splints
Training Tuesday: Collapsed Arches
Training Tuesday: Swimmers Shoulder
Training Tuesday: Training for the Hard Knocks
Training Tuesday: Training for the Tough Times
Training Tuesday: What is normal?
Training Tuesday: Food Labels: This is alot, this is a little.
Training Tuesday: Sugar: The Bitter Truth
Training Tuesday: Protein and Fats
Training Tuesday: Carbs and Sugars
Training Tuesday: Why? (Part III)
Training Tuesday: Why? (Part II)
Training Tuesday: Why? (Part I)
Training Tuesday: Windemere
Training Tuesday: Running Injuries
Training Tuesday: Cycling Injuries
Training Tuesday: Swimming Injuries
Training Tuesday: Mind Games
Training Tuesday: Three Moments That Changed My Outdoor Swimming Life
Training Tuesday: Rules For Open Water Swimming
Training Tuesday: Background

Training Tuesday: Can you retain speed/strength when recovering from injury?

Once again the guys at Core Cambridge are answering questions on strength and conditioning. This one is particularly pertinent to me-training with injuries. When I was back playing rugby I trained and played through all manner of injuries just to try and keep my place. Don’t get me wrong-I loved every minute I got to play but it has caused some damage for me now!

Here’s Ed and Cris with the lowdown and a case study of an elite sprinter with a hamstring injury:

Do you have a Sports Medicine or Strength & Conditioning question? Tweet it to @corecambridge and they’ll answer it!

Previous Training Tuesdays:

Training Tuesday: Shin Splints
Training Tuesday: Collapsed Arches
Training Tuesday: Swimmers Shoulder
Training Tuesday: Training for the Hard Knocks
Training Tuesday: Training for the Tough Times
Training Tuesday: What is normal?
Training Tuesday: Food Labels: This is alot, this is a little.
Training Tuesday: Sugar: The Bitter Truth
Training Tuesday: Protein and Fats
Training Tuesday: Carbs and Sugars
Training Tuesday: Why? (Part III)
Training Tuesday: Why? (Part II)
Training Tuesday: Why? (Part I)
Training Tuesday: Windemere
Training Tuesday: Running Injuries
Training Tuesday: Cycling Injuries
Training Tuesday: Swimming Injuries
Training Tuesday: Mind Games
Training Tuesday: Three Moments That Changed My Outdoor Swimming Life
Training Tuesday: Rules For Open Water Swimming
Training Tuesday: Background

Training Tuesday: Shin Splints

Shin Spints. That mild to excruciating pain in your shins. They’re the bane of everyone’s life from runners to rugby players, gymnasts to weightlifters but what are they and what can we do about them? (Hint: It’s rarely actually shin splints!)

Do you have a Sports Medicine or Strength & Conditioning question? Tweet it to @corecambridge and they’ll answer it!

Previous Training Tuesdays:

Training Tuesday: Collapsed Arches
Training Tuesday: Swimmers Shoulder
Training Tuesday: Training for the Hard Knocks
Training Tuesday: Training for the Tough Times
Training Tuesday: What is normal?
Training Tuesday: Food Labels: This is alot, this is a little.
Training Tuesday: Sugar: The Bitter Truth
Training Tuesday: Protein and Fats
Training Tuesday: Carbs and Sugars
Training Tuesday: Why? (Part III)
Training Tuesday: Why? (Part II)
Training Tuesday: Why? (Part I)
Training Tuesday: Windemere
Training Tuesday: Running Injuries
Training Tuesday: Cycling Injuries
Training Tuesday: Swimming Injuries
Training Tuesday: Mind Games
Training Tuesday: Three Moments That Changed My Outdoor Swimming Life
Training Tuesday: Rules For Open Water Swimming
Training Tuesday: Background

Training Tuesday: Collapsed Arches

Last week we talked about swimmers shoulder, now we’re going to talk about runners foot! Runners Foot is essentially when the muscles and ligaments around the foot arches don’t function correctly-it’s technical name is Plantar Fasciitis and in laymans terms it’s collapsed arches.

The distress call again went out to Core Cambridge and again they came up trumps. Here are two short videos on the problem and how to solve it:

‘Plantar Fasciitis’ What is it? How can you help it? Part One:

‘Plantar Fasciitis’ What is it? How can you help it? Part Two:

Do you have a Sports Medicine or Strength & Conditioning question? Tweet it to @corecambridge and they’ll answer it!

Previous Training Tuesdays:

Training Tuesday: Swimmers Shoulder
Training Tuesday: Training for the Hard Knocks
Training Tuesday: Training for the Tough Times
Training Tuesday: What is normal?
Training Tuesday: Food Labels: This is alot, this is a little.
Training Tuesday: Sugar: The Bitter Truth
Training Tuesday: Protein and Fats
Training Tuesday: Carbs and Sugars
Training Tuesday: Why? (Part III)
Training Tuesday: Why? (Part II)
Training Tuesday: Why? (Part I)
Training Tuesday: Windemere
Training Tuesday: Running Injuries
Training Tuesday: Cycling Injuries
Training Tuesday: Swimming Injuries
Training Tuesday: Mind Games
Training Tuesday: Three Moments That Changed My Outdoor Swimming Life
Training Tuesday: Rules For Open Water Swimming
Training Tuesday: Background

Training Tuesday: Swimmers Shoulder

Training Tuesday is back!

This week is all about scapula dyskinesis or swimmers shoulder. I read a recent abstract about swimmers shoulder (you can read it here) and it basically highlighted the fact that swimmers are more sensitive to shoulder pain due to the fact that our shoulders are the mian power house for our sport and also that swimming creates more active and latent trigger points (muscle knots). I’ve spoken about Core Cambridge and they came back, thorough as always, with these two videos showing what the problem is and how to treat it:

Shoulder Dyskinesis or Swimmers Shoulder explained and treated! Part One:

Shoulder Dyskinesis or Swimmers Shoulder explained and treated! Part Two:

If you have any strength and conditioning questions then please tweet them to Core Cambridge and they’ll sort them out!

Previous Training Tuesdays:


Training Tuesday: Training for the Hard Knocks

Training Tuesday: Training for the Tough Times
Training Tuesday: What is normal?
Training Tuesday: Food Labels: This is alot, this is a little.
Training Tuesday: Sugar: The Bitter Truth
Training Tuesday: Protein and Fats
Training Tuesday: Carbs and Sugars
Training Tuesday: Why? (Part III)
Training Tuesday: Why? (Part II)
Training Tuesday: Why? (Part I)
Training Tuesday: Windemere
Training Tuesday: Running Injuries
Training Tuesday: Cycling Injuries
Training Tuesday: Swimming Injuries
Training Tuesday: Mind Games
Training Tuesday: Three Moments That Changed My Outdoor Swimming Life
Training Tuesday: Rules For Open Water Swimming
Training Tuesday: Background

Training Tuesday

This is going to be a weekly post about all things preparatory for the trip. Everything from choosing kit and clothes to gadgets and gizmos to exercises and nutrition. I’ll try and include as much expert advice as I do my own opinion/experience! I’m going to start by getting people up to speed about where I am physically and how I’ve got here.

Fear not, this is not the blog for born survivor super athletes! More for try hard couch potatoes!

Right, a little history. I’ve got injuries from dislocations to sprains to tears and breaks in most of my joints with the first serious injury coming at 12 with my back which still affects me now and the most serious being my knees and shoulders which I’ve dislocated more times than I’d like to remember, mostly playing rugby as I did for 20years from 4-24! My main problem was that I wasn’t very good at rugby but I was playing at a high level. This made me push myself back from injuries too soon and carry injuries through game after game. At one point I was playing three serious games of rugby a week and training six times a week. Whilst this is monumentally bad for the body and I wouldn’t recommend it to anyone it has proven to me what my body can be put through if I’m determined enough. Pigheadedness always beats pain!

I did my first bike ride from London to Cape Town on the advice of my rugby physio in France, I think he meant cycling from Toulouse to Barcelona of Toulouse to Paris but that said it worked. When I got to Cape Town my knee was bombproof and as strong as it’s ever been. Sadly a crash had smashed up my shoulder; sitting hunched on a bike with poor form had destroyed my core; and pedalling for 12000miles had made me the least flexible man on earth. These slowly subsided/healed in the year I spent in Korea so much so that I could play rugby again which allowed me to pop my knee cap out just three weeks before I was due to set off from Korea to Cape Town! Korea to Cape Town was 22000miles, took 14months and the usual core destroying toll on my body. You’d think after 34000miles in the saddle I’d have worked out how to protect my back but no!

So I arrived at Core Cambridge for my initial assessment expecting them to impressed with my tanlines and overly strong quads! Amazingly, they concentrated on the hypermobility in all my joints (no strength and control in my joints) and my staggering lack of core strength. This didn’t paint a pretty picture to them for a guy who’s looking to do 2.2million strokes across the Atlantic! Swimming depends heavily on core strength-people bang on and on about core strength but it is the most important area of your body-it’s the area that allow you to deliver power to the outside world. Without a decent core then any effort I’d put into pulling my body through the water would be absorb by my sloppy core and cause the joint to rub, creak and tear on itself.

Over the next few months I’ll go through some of the tiny movements and control excercises that I’ve been doing to make my stroke more efficient and to injuryproof my body.

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