best body - storage.googleapis.com10 tips from the countryÕs top female athletic trainers that will...

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10 tips from the country’s top female athletic trainers that will turbocharge your sweat sessions and send pain packing By Kimberly Hiss Raise Your Game body best It’s not surprising these days to see women dominating inside the sports arena, but the number of women rising in the ranks behind the scenes is also growing. More female trainers than ever are working with the country’s top athletes—from WNBA players to collegiate quarterbacks—and it’s their knowledge of physiology, injury prevention, and rehabilitation that keeps the athletes performing at their peak. No matter what your fitness level, these leading ladies’ secrets will make you a star performer. 61 PHOTOGRAPHS BY ARTHUR BELEBEAU

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Page 1: best body - storage.googleapis.com10 tips from the countryÕs top female athletic trainers that will turbocharge your sweat sessions and send pain packing By Kimberly Hiss Raise Your

10 tips from the country’s top female athletic trainers that will turbocharge your sweat sessions and send pain packingBy Kimbe rly Hi ss

Raise Your Game

bodybest

It’s not surprising these days to see women dominating inside the sports arena, but the number of women rising in the ranks behind the scenes is also growing. More female trainers than ever are working with the country’s top athletes—from WNBA players to collegiate quarterbacks—and it’s their knowledge of physiology, injury prevention, and rehabilitation that keeps the athletes performing at their peak. No matter what your fitness level, these leading ladies’ secrets will make you a star performer.

61P H O T O G R A P H S B Y A R T H U R B E L E B E A U

Page 2: best body - storage.googleapis.com10 tips from the countryÕs top female athletic trainers that will turbocharge your sweat sessions and send pain packing By Kimberly Hiss Raise Your

Ariko Iso, 41Head football

athletic trainer at Oregon State

UniversityIso became

the first female athletic trainer

in the NFL when she was hired by the Pittsburgh

Steelers in 2002.

Mary Kirkland, 48Athletic training

supervisor for InoMedic Health Applications at NASA (Kennedy Space Center)

As the first athletic trainer ever hired by

NASA, Kirkland keeps astronauts and employees healthy and fit.

Kim Moseley, 53 Head athletic trainer for the

WNBA’s Atlanta Dream

Moseley swaps best practices

with her husband, Don, an

athletic trainer for the NFL’s

Tennessee Titans.

Sue Falsone, 38 Head athletic

trainer and physical therapist

for the Los Angeles DodgersFalsone made

history this year as the first female

head athletic trainer in a U.S.

professional sports league.

Julie Max, 59Director of

athletic training at California State

University at Fullerton

In 2000, Max became the first

woman to be elected president

of the National Athletic Trainers’

Association.

video’s telling them to pace themselves). “An overuse injury can take three, sometimes six weeks to really start hitting you, so you could be doing damage from the start without realizing it,” she says. Try the program in 15-minute increments or add just one or two new exercises and see how your body responds before doing the whole thing.

Sit Back If your ab routine typically consists of things like V-sits and situps, it’s time to rethink your approach. “You have five lumbar vertebrae, and each one gives you about seven to nine degrees of motion, for a total of 45 degrees,” says Kirkland. That means to truly work your core, you need to stay between zero degrees (like a plank) and 45 degrees (like a crunch). “From 45 degrees to a full situp, you’re engaging your hip flexors, which attach directly to your lumbar spine. Too many reps will not only make your hip muscles sore, but your lower back will start to hurt too.”

> Kim Moseley To-Go TrainingTake your workout anywhere with a resistance band like the Versa-Loop or Thera-Band,

MEET THE TRAINERS

Get-Fit Tricks

> Ariko IsoTrain Smarter If you want an all-in-one training tool, Iso says the TRX Suspension System is worth the investment. She likes the portability and how it makes any body-weight move more challenging. “The fact that it’s suspended means you have to use your core to stabilize,” she says. “You work more than one muscle during any exercise, and when you can do that, you save time.” ($200, trxtraining.com)

Back It Up People know to train their abs, but many don’t realize how important it is to strengthen their entire back, says Iso. Add a few simple exercises in the quad ped position (on hands and knees) to your weekly routine. Try this: Slowly raise your opposite arm and leg until your body forms a straight line from fingertips to heel. Pause, then return to start. Do three sets of 15 to 20 reps on each side. > Mary Kirkland Tame the InsanityPopular DVD series like P90X and Insanity are great workouts, but they’re not for everyone, says Kirkland, who notices many people do too much too soon (despite the

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Page 3: best body - storage.googleapis.com10 tips from the countryÕs top female athletic trainers that will turbocharge your sweat sessions and send pain packing By Kimberly Hiss Raise Your

Form first: During lunges, drop down, not forward.

Get-Fit Tricks

one of Moseley’s favorite products. “I travel with one all the time because the bands are inexpensive and so compact they can fold up into a purse,” she says. Try this: From either a seated or standing position, pull the band up around your thighs, then slowly pull your legs apart at the knees (it works your inner and outer thighs); do three sets of 10.

Fall Smart As someone who has seen some tremendously hard fouls (like players going up for a basket or a rebound and getting knocked five feet to the ground by an opponent), Moseley says one of the worst things you can do is put your arms straight out to try to break a fall. “That could cause a shoulder separation or dislocated elbow,” she says. Instead, roll with the fall to the side of your back, which can tolerate more impact.

> Sue FalsoneEat After Exercising Workouts cause muscle damage—it’s how muscles repair that makes them stronger, says Falsone. “If all you do is break down muscle cells, you’re on the path to injury,” she says. “The first 10 minutes post-workout is the time to replenish those cells so they can begin to repair and be ready to work out again.” Your stomach may not be craving a turkey sandwich, but grab something easy to eat like a banana and peanut butter or a protein shake. (Falsone likes EAS Myoplex Lite Ready-to-Drink shakes for her athletes.)

No-Gym Workout Falsone’s first priority is her athletes’ health and fitness, which means some days it can be tough to schedule her own gym time. “If I absolutely can’t fit in any kind of workout, I focus on my posture,” she says. “Slouching shuts o" everything, but fixing your posture changes everything

about you and how your muscles are activated.” Healthy posture means activating your shoulders and drawing them back; bringing your head back into alignment, which decreases tension headaches; and engaging your core (which, as a bonus, helps your stomach look flatter).

> Julie Max Get Stronger Stems Athletic-training students learn that your quads should be stronger than your hamstrings, but for women, Max says it needs to be close to an even balance. After four of her nine Cal State gymnasts ruptured their anterior cruciate ligaments (ACL), she took them o" the leg-extension machines in the weight room and had them do squats and hamstring curls instead. The next three years, they totally eliminated any ruptures. “Going forward, I deemphasized quadriceps strengthening—which is a lot of what men do—for female athletes, and I emphasized hamstring strengthening,” she says. Keep your ratio even by making sure you do at least one hamstring exercise for every quad exercise.

Take Practice Sips“Water is the most underrated nutrient—it can change your performance overnight,” says Max. “We underestimate the importance of how much water we need to drink in order to be at our peak performance.” But while you may be aware of recommendations (eight to 10 eight-ounce glasses a day), it’s hard to track how much that is. Try this tip from Max: Get an eight-ounce glass of water and count how many swallows it takes to drink the whole thing. Say it’s 10. Now you know when you’ve checked o" one eight-ounce serving, whether you’re sipping from a fountain or a tumbler in a restaurant. Q

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