If anyone has any questions, please let me know and I’ll be happy to give my two cents.
@АртёмВасилевский-х3ш5 жыл бұрын
Hello Julian! Great helpful drills! 👍 Please, give your advice for rep range/timing for all of them. Hope I'm not bothering you too much with this request. Thanks in advance!
@greenecman5 жыл бұрын
Артём Василевский thank you sir! For rep ranges and sets, my advice is to do as many quality reps as possible. In general 3 sets of around 20 reps and/or about 45 seconds of time for each exercise before you have to quit due to fatigue breaking form or beginning to compensate with improper movement patterning using the wrong muscles. If you are able to go longer, you may increase the load e.g for the bear crawl place a weight on your back. If you cannot do, use a regression or less time and work your way up to the goal.
@greenecman5 жыл бұрын
Robert McClain you can use all of these as a workout starter or finisher. Because many of these exercises we are training stabilizer, postural endurance muscles and not breaking down tissue excessively, these may be performed everyday. Best advice is listen to your body; if you feel sore, give yourself a rest day or two to recover. Especially an exercise such as the hamstring curl with the eccentric loading may cause soreness and therefore you may need a couple days break from it.
@greenecman5 жыл бұрын
Balder van de Vijfeijken thank you for watching! To minimize the knee experiencing injuries, it’s important to address mobility and strength in the hips and ankles. General exercises would be the glute bridges, hamstring curls, and quadruped rocking for the hips. For ankle strength, I like doing any type of single leg exercise like the SL bridge on a foam pad or bosu ball to add instability. Training barefoot is also a great way to enhance proprioception and increase foot and ankle muscle activation.
@yanisignatov5265 жыл бұрын
what the best way to strengthen neck? Thx
@willheydecker61794 жыл бұрын
I've been paying a physiotherapist for weeks in preparation to get my once-injured shoulder ready to start jiu jitsu and here I find almost exactly what was prescribed for free online. If you pay attention to everything that was said here, especially the parts about the shoulder blade and the types of rotation you want to focus on while holding isometric poses, you will be 100% good to go. This is the shit. I will be referencing this for a long time to come. What fantastic, valuable content.
@l3thw3185 жыл бұрын
Why is this video so underrated ? This is important and well done video.
@maddog562005 жыл бұрын
Chad / Julian, this is gold! Thank you so much!!
@licknuu5 жыл бұрын
Perfect, I’ve been looking for something like this for a while. Great job!
@Africanallday Жыл бұрын
very helpful and informative video. well done guys
@konstantinsvirin98629 ай бұрын
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:00 🏋️ *Effective prehab strategies for common areas of pain and injury in jiu-jitsu discussed with Julian Vanderlinden, a black belt and physical therapy student.* 01:22 🐻 *Bear crawl drill enhances shoulder and elbow stability, crucial for injury prevention in jiu-jitsu.* 02:56 🦴 *Advanced shoulder stability exercise demonstrated with a "super bird dog" movement for dynamic stability.* 04:08 🔄 *Mini band exercises, both around wrists and knees, provide multi-directional resistance to strengthen muscles used in jiu-jitsu.* 05:30 🏋️ *Overhead stability exercise using bear crawl position helps warm up shoulders and build stability for jiu-jitsu.* 07:26 🚫 *Strategies for fortifying the low back, addressing concerns for guard players and those transitioning from parallel training.* 09:54 🔄 *Side bridge variations with leg movements to strengthen and stabilize the low back, addressing internal rotation demands in jiu-jitsu.* 10:35 🔄 *Incorporating thoracic mobility into side bridge for dynamic movement and rotation without compromising low back stability.* 13:54 🦵 *Strengthening hamstrings using stability ball curls to support knee health in jiu-jitsu athletes.* 15:40 🤸 *Perturbation plank on a stability ball to enhance core stability and prepare for the demands of jiu-jitsu.* 16:22 🦴 *Neck exercises for injury prevention, focusing on deep neck flexors and external load application for stability.* 18:45 🕰️ *Recommended reps for neck exercises and the importance of mastering details for effective prehabilitation.* 20:51 🤝 *Julian van der Linden shares knowledge on prehabilitation for jiu-jitsu, emphasizing muscle coordination and technique in movement patterns.* Made with HARPA AI
@Watcher41873 жыл бұрын
This video is so under rated. Wish i would have started doing this stuff sooner. Had to take 3 weeks off cause of adductor pain and those copenhagen planks are really helping me get back into the game faster.
@JuggernautTrainingSystems3 жыл бұрын
Thanks. Glad to hear it
@plnmbjj2 ай бұрын
I’m gonna try this tomorrow
@CruentusCruor2 жыл бұрын
This was most helpful! Thank you!! It helped me fix up my coordination and tight joints, big time~
@JuggernautTrainingSystems2 жыл бұрын
Glad it helped!
@danielschwartz68225 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video! Any suggestions for helping me get my legs over my head when I’m on my back? I’m so tight and getting stacked is very painful! I can’t touch my feet to the mat and all my classmates can with no problem
@ehsanjudo5 жыл бұрын
Thanks guys, great stuff 🦍
@jamesbenedict75165 жыл бұрын
Ok my bad that I've missed the last J and quickly jumped to conclusion
@mattbrown22635 жыл бұрын
I completely understand the benefit of these exercises from a perspective of enhancing performance, but can you cite any research that shows these exercises have an effect on injury prevention/reduction?
@greenecman5 жыл бұрын
Hi Matt, A lot of these exercises I've found to be effective through expert opinion as well seeing a number of high level BJJ athletes use them with success. I did a quick search of the literature for you and found these articles discussing: core stability and low back injury reduction, eccentric hamstring exercises and ACL prevention, balanced shoulder girdle musculature and shoulder injury risk reduction. The key with doing these exercises is emphasizing proper technique (quality over quantity). For example, if Chad did not emphasize a full protraction of his shoulder blades during the bear crawl, the effectiveness in enhancing proper scapulohumeral rhythm / shoulder mechanics would be dramatically reduced. If Chad did not maintain a neutral spine with the glute bridge, he may even be causing further harm than benefit. References Lee, B. Y., & McGill, S. M. (2015). Effect of Long-term Isometric Training on Core/Torso Stiffness. Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, 29(6), 1515-1526. Akuthota, V., Ferreiro, A., Moore, T., & Fredericson, M. (2008). Core Stability Exercise Principles. Current Sports Medicine Reports, 7(1), 39-44. Ben Kibler, W. (1998). The Role of the Scapula in Athletic Shoulder Function. The American Journal of Sports Medicine, 26(2), 325-337. Monajati, A., Larumbe-Zabala, E., Goss-Sampson, M., & Naclerio, F. (2016). The Effectiveness of Injury Prevention Programs to Modify Risk Factors for Non-Contact Anterior Cruciate Ligament and Hamstring Injuries in Uninjured Team Sports Athletes: A Systematic Review. 11(5), E0155272. Abdelraouf, O., & Abdel-Aziem, A. (2016). THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CORE ENDURANCE AND BACK DYSFUNCTION IN COLLEGIATE MALE ATHLETES WITH AND WITHOUT NONSPECIFIC LOW BACK PAIN. International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy, 11(3), 337-44.
@xavierboeynaems25004 жыл бұрын
My thoughts exactly. How does this transfer to injury prevention is a whole other question. I'm even yet to come across some kind of epidemiology of BJJ injury study - too many variables to consider to call this "prevention". So very valid question Matt, and IMO not so convincing answer / lit review by Julian. LBP and core strength very much debatable (or not...); scapular rhythm debunked concept; "proper technique" - what does this mean???; most ACL injury prevention protocols / studies designed around field sports (how does this apply / transfer to BJJ?)... I could go on. So yes, great exercises, execution coaching etc... But let's be cautious in calling this "prevention". Because it ain't.
@mattbrown22634 жыл бұрын
Xavier Boeynaems Agreed. The sources cited simply don’t give a causative link between these exercises and injury prevention and/or risk reduction, and as you say, are conducted in non-contact sports - Hardly a sport like BJJ! The demands of BJJ require athletes to express strength, flexibility and stability in a wide variety of positions, so the assumption that these specific movements help reduce injury is reductionist. I think it’s irresponsible to suggest that a specific exercise will reduce the risk of injury when we know that there are far more compelling mechanisms of injury - mismanaged training load being the predominant one. People shouldn’t be encouraged to incorporate a specific exercise to ‘prevent’ injury before their training workloads are appropriately managed.
@pchiethegreat12 жыл бұрын
@@mattbrown2263 does everything always have to be sport specific when it comes to exercise prescription for prehab purposes? Does everything need a giant systematic review and meta analysis in order to be considered for prescription? If you seriously think that any of these exercises don’t contribute to improved joint stability, mobility and strength just because the literature isn’t 100% specific on its application to BJJ particularly, then you clearly have no idea what you’re talking about and are just trying to flex your “knowledge” and science zealotry on someone who has actual, practical experience with high level BJJ athletes. Julian, keep up the good work mate. Love your content and JTS as well.
@pchiethegreat12 жыл бұрын
@@xavierboeynaems2500 does everything always have to be sport specific when it comes to exercise prescription for prehab purposes? Does everything need a giant systematic review and meta analysis in order to be considered for prescription? If you seriously think that any of these exercises don’t contribute to improved joint stability, mobility and strength just because the literature isn’t 100% specific on its application to BJJ particularly, then you clearly have no idea what you’re talking about and are just trying to flex your “knowledge” and science zealotry on someone who has actual, practical experience with high level BJJ athletes. Julian, keep up the good work mate. Love your content and JTS as well.
@Yupppi3 ай бұрын
Would it be useful for bjj athletes to do similar training as judo athletes? Like snatch, heavy clean, heavy squat, pullups/deadlifts/heavy single arm dumbbell rows? The stuff that Shohei Ono's training video showed. Becoming strong as a horse for both performance and injury prevention. And the normal dynamic and movement specific warmups before rolling.
@cdee007 Жыл бұрын
Hey gang, when have you seen the best benefits of these exercises? As a warm up before jitz, after, or as a daily exercise? I'm looking for a series to do daily (mornings) for injury prevention. Thanks!
@chronometa5 жыл бұрын
The neck one is probably most important imo.
@joakimsjovall18925 жыл бұрын
Can you do one exactly like this but for powerlifting?
@zareh8054 жыл бұрын
I’ve been training for a month and injured 4 times already. It’s so frustrating.
@Dhobby5174 жыл бұрын
I thought the stability ball was going to pop. Going to try these tonight
@utarian73 жыл бұрын
I'm glad Alex Jones turned to fitness and MMA after being deplatformed.
@pricerowland5 жыл бұрын
This is just a video made for all the people who have to go against Chad
@dy1204814 жыл бұрын
My biggest takeaway from this is the word "juggernoggin".
@robertovelarde_staff-marti96963 жыл бұрын
16:23 lol
@JaredPlane5 жыл бұрын
Good drills, but I'd go with something like, "Injury Risk Reduction" rather than "Injury Prevention" in the title.