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Avoiding ACL Injuries
Avoiding ACL Injuries
As a long time youth track and field coach and participant, I cringe when I watch soccer teams warm up before games. As the girls get older, they are more susceptible to ACL injuries. I watched games this weekend at the Winter Blast and the pre-game warm ups were simply unacceptable. 50 degree weather, yet none of the coaches spent more than 10 minutes warming up the girls and yet they expect the girls to run full speed and cut on cold muscles.
Parents, put your girls in a track and field program for one summer. They will learn how to warm up properly and how to run with proper technique. Then follow the workout posted on another forum about avoiding ACL injuries and hopefully your daughter will have an injury free soccer career.
The key to avoiding injury is strong hamstrings. Unfortunately, almost all the girls I saw this weekend need a lot of work on their legs. Sting has a fitness company they recommend and I know of several good trainers. It doesn't matter who you use, just spend some time on the strength component of your daughters soccer game.
If you live near a track, pm me and I will give you one workout that will quickly help to strengthen the hamstrings.
Good luck this spring.
youthsports- TxSoccer Poster
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Re: Avoiding ACL Injuries
KSD- TxSoccer Sponsor
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Re: Avoiding ACL Injuries
FriscoSoccer2004- TxSoccer Sponsor
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Re: Avoiding ACL Injuries
90% of the girls I have seen on the soccer field in that last year, can all get significantly faster by proper training. Focus on the hamstrings and hip flexor's and you will see results very quickly. Think about how many times your daughter starts, stops and changes direction in a game. The girls who look faster than other girls, just have stronger hamstrings and hip flexors which give them more explosion.
Agility training is not enough. You have to find a trainer who can target the two most important muscles involved in speed and explosion through a combination of plyometrics, light weights and sprinting. If all the 04 parents do this, the level of soccer among all of the teams will skyrocket.
I have noticed a lot more girls wearing ankle boots and knee braces due to soccer injuries lately. It is a shame because proper training and just a little bit of time on the track can prevent a lot of these type of injuries.
youthsports- TxSoccer Poster
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Re: Avoiding ACL Injuries
USA203- TxSoccer Postmaster
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Re: Avoiding ACL Injuries
I read lots of papers that suggest that kids are suffering more ankle injuries because they spend little time strengthening the foot and ankle by playing barefooted like in the old days. When I was young kids used to play barefoot 80 to 90 % of the time. Kids can strengthen the ankle a number of ways, walking around barefoot is the easiest but calf raises at the end of a workout should be standard for all coaches.
Parents, if your coaches warm up consists of kicking the ball back and forth and then running a few laps please pull them aside and stress how important injury prevention is. A good warm up should involve, butt kicks, skips, carioca, side straddle, short bursts building up to top speed.
youthsports- TxSoccer Poster
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Re: Avoiding ACL Injuries
lovesoccer- TxSoccer Postmaster
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