Está atualmente a visualizar o Portugal versão do sítio.
Gostaria de mudar para o seu sítio local?
10 TEMPO DE LEITURA MIN

IF IT WASN’T SCREWED ON

Dr Ed Wittich, BSc. Applied Science, MSc.

Osteopathy, BAT Logic Performance Consultant

The importance of the head and neck in rowing

A major factor affecting total body movement and control in rowers is the tendency to instinctively move towards where your head/neck and eyes do, in much the same way that a panicking driver stares directly at the obstacle they least want to hit in an accident and, in doing so, directs attention and movements towards that object as a consequence. In other words where the head or eyes lead, the body will follow.

Some anatomy first. The cervical spine (the anatomical term for the neck) is made up of seven cervical vertebrae, all of quite varying shapes.

BIOMECHANICS

“Being able to achieve length in the neck and spine will improve body positioning for force production and breathing through the rowing stroke.”

FIG.1: THE HEAD AND NECK

These form joints between themselves via the main bodies of the vertebrae, like fists stacked upon each other, joined with vertebral discs sandwiched between them and with the all-important facet joints that help with the multi-movement planes our neck provides. Rotation, side-bending, flexion and extension; the neck has to be good at all of these and cope with a circa 4.5kg head sitting on top.

The skull is joined via an important group of articulations to the top two vertebrae and via muscular structures to the jaw and front of the neck. The bottom of the neck column is then linked to the thoracic vertebrae (mid spine) and has soft tissue connections to the upper ribs, collar bones and shoulders. There are many vital nerves and blood vessels in the neck as well, not to mention the path of the oesophagus and trachea with its cartilaginous protection. Basically, there is a lot going on with the neck!

The nerves running out from the neck play important roles such as supplying the diaphragm (spinal levels C 3, 4, 5) and sensory/motor supply to the arms. This explains why dysfunctions in the neck can have such wide effects.

Leia o artigo completo e muitos outros nesta edição da Row360
Opções de compra abaixo
Se for o dono da questão, Iniciar sessão para ler o artigo completo agora.
Edição digital única Issue 019 - Aug | Sep 2017
 
€7,99 / issue
Esta edição e outras edições anteriores não estão incluídas numa nova inscrição. As assinaturas incluem a edição regular mais recente e as novas edições lançadas durante sua assinatura. Row360
Assinatura digital anual €29,99 facturado anualmente
Guardar
37%
€5,00 / issue

Este artigo é de...


View Issues
Row360
Issue 019 - Aug | Sep 2017
VER NA LOJA

Outros artigos desta edição


Row 360
Team Sheet: Our writers
A rower, photographer and writer, Benedict discovered
Bulletin.
HUDSON Boat Works are supplying FISA with more than
Jaws
Fraser River, British Columbia
Inked
World Cup III, Lucerne
NEW CYCLE
Catching up with Hamish Bond
PAY ATTENTION
The psychology of focus and motivation in rowing
Rowing Blazers
A START-UP FOUNDED BY A TEAM OF ELITE ROWERS IS BRINGING THE BLAZER BACK TO ITS ORIGINS
Happy Days.
Having a difficult day? Perhaps you have time for a
Different Strokes
TIB ROWING CLUB BERLIN
Go Faster Stripes
776BC introduces Motion
SARASOTA
Guide to the 2017 World Rowing Championships
GAME CHANGER
From Paralympic discus disqualification to the GB women’s eight: Rebecca Chin tells her story.
BLUE OPTIC COMMUNICATIONS
The musings of an Olympic rower in the midst of training camp
A Rower’s Regatta
Royal Canadian Henley 2017
Modern Rowing Style & Innovation
Scull & Sweep
Battle of the Orient
International University Rowing Regatta Xinjin, China July 2017
What You Don’t See At The Olympics
The technology behind those Olympic starts and what really goes on at the start of a race
Thames Rising
Winning Henley while working the nine to five? Ben Lewis makes it three in a row for Thames RC.
PLOVDIV
Under -23 World Championship
TRAKAI
Junior World Championships 2017
Last Word
Former rower, coach, umpire and accomplished sports marketing and management executive Patrick McNerney was appointed CEO of USRowing in mid- August and assumed leadership of the organisation in September.
Conversa
X
Suporte Pocketmags