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Build Your Pickle Ball Muscles 


To prevent injury and improve your game, strength (or resistance) training is very important. “It improves bone density, maintains or increases muscle mass, and helps maintain a healthy weight,” If you’re working out in a gym, the suggestion starting with eight to 12 weeks of basic exercises on machines or with free weights. Then switch to exercises using only free weights because they mimic the movements of pickleball better.


To build power, move lighter weights a little faster or throw weighted items, like medicine balls to a partner. “You will see a good transition of that power and agility carry over into pickle ball." To reach more balls, you can also work on range of motion, flexibility, and mobility by incorporating SAQ class, yoga, Pilates, or tai chi movements into your routine.


3 Strength Exercises for Pickleball Players

Strength training will not only help you build a strong base of support to move around the court, but you might also find yourself winning more matches — and having more fun! Here are three of starter moves for pickleball players. 


As always, safety is key. Check with your doctor before beginning a new exercise program.


1. Multidirectional Lunges 


Lunge back, forward, and side to side. Do 10 reps in each direction. Work up to holding light weights.

Here’s how to do a basic Reverse Lunge.

  • Stand tall and place your hand on the chair for support.
  • Shift your weight to one leg and lift the other knee up.
  • Hinge forward slightly, stretch your lifted leg back, and place your toes on the floor.
  • Find your balance here, and then lift your chest up tall so your shoulders are over your hips.
  • From here, keep your weight in your front foot as you bend your knees to lower down for a lunge. Exhale and squeeze your leg muscles to lift back up.


For a Forward Lunge, you will step to the front. For a Side Lunge, you will step out to the side.

Press play to try a Reverse Lunge:

Press play to try a Forward Lunge:

Press play to try Side Lunge Variations:

2. Bent Over Row

  • Hold a light weight in each hand.
  • Stand with your feet shoulder-width apart and your knees slightly bent.
  • Push your hips back and lower your torso until it's almost parallel with the floor.
  • Let the dumbbells hang at arm's length from your shoulders, palms facing in.
  • From here, squeeze your shoulder blades together as you bend your elbows and pull the dumbbells up to the sides of your torso.
  • Pause, then slowly lower the dumbbells to return to the starting position. That's one rep.
  • Do 12 to 15 reps.


3. Farmers Carry

  • Hold a light weight in each hand (or even two small bags of groceries).
  • Walk for 10 to 15 feet with the weight at your sides, keeping your shoulders square and upright.
  • Set the weights down, turn around, pick them up and carry them back.
  • That's one rep.
  • Do two to three reps.



Chiropractic and Pickle Ball

* Preventing Injuries *



The game of pickleball has been gaining momentum and players over the last few years, and in 2019 ranked as the fastest-growing sport in the United States. Starting in 1965, it provides many people with an overall low-impact exercise that gives them a community and space to enjoy themselves while working on getting their recommended 150 minutes of exercise each week.


Basic Pickleball Information


The basic rules and small amount of needed equipment make it a great sport to pick up quickly. With the median age of pickleball players being around 55-65.


Pickleball combines movements and similarities to tennis, badminton, and ping-pong. Using the same size court as badminton, a flat paddle like racquetball, and a ball similar in looks to a whiffle ball and closer to the size of a baseball. 

Games are typically quick and go to a score of 11, and it is a community of athletes always looking to add new members! Whether you play at home or when traveling, you can complete a quick google search of pickleball “in the surrounding area,” and it will give you places and times you can join in. 


Common Injuries Related to Pickleball


While pickleball is considered a low-impact sport, it doesn’t come without risk of injury. As with any sport that has you using your entire body, you can still get hurt if you don’t stretch correctly or get lost in a play and happen to trip and fall. 


Some common injuries related to pickleball include


  • Knee injuries from rapid stopping, starting, and pivoting
  • Wrist injuries from the frequent turning of the paddle as well as falling with the arm outstretched
  • Plantar fasciitis and heel bruising from hard surfaces
  • Blisters if you use improper footwear
  • Sprains and strains in the lower and upper body-from lunging, twisting, reaching for the ball, and quick body movements


Now that you know what injuries are common in pickleball, you must understand how to prevent them from happening and what you can use after they happen to recover more quickly. 


Chiropractic Care and Physical Therapy take holistic views of your body and allow you to set up a plan that will factor in any sports-specific ergonomics. Being proactive and having a plan before an injury will give you the upper hand in preventing and overcoming pickleball injuries.

By keeping up with spinal adjustments, you are giving your body an increased range of motion, improving strength, and keeping your nerve centers firing to your muscles more efficiently. 


Physical Therapy, while often thought of as a reactionary method of healing, can be a great tool to have in place as a preventative tool. When you have a solid physical therapy routine, you are helping your body increase flexibility, balance, endurance, strength, posture, and overall wellness. Physical therapy informs you of the most effective stretches to complete to have your muscles operating at peak performance anytime you decide to step on the pickleball court, reducing your chance of many common injuries. 


If you didn’t have a solid plan and found yourself suffering from a pickleball injury, getting chiropractic care and physical therapy can significantly speed up your recovery and have you back on the court enjoying your sport and community. 




13 SIMPLE EXERCISES TO IMPROVE YOUR PICKLEBALL GAME


Pickleball may not sound like the hottest trend in sports, but, trust us, it’s a strong contender. The game grew an impressive 15% from 2020 to 2021, according to the USA Pickleball Association, and now draws 4.8 million players of all ages. Incorporating elements of different racket sports, pickleball is played on a court roughly the size of a badminton court with a net shorter than a tennis net and paddles slightly larger and squarer in shape than Ping-Pong paddles. Players say that it’s addictively entertaining, not only because it’s easy to pick up, but it can be played as doubles, making it a natural pre-happy hour—or anything hour—activity.


“The pickleball court is small, so it’s easy to jump in and learn the game,” explains Julie Johnson, a senior pro pickleball player and physical therapist.

 

“Plus it’s a lot of fun and something the whole family can do together.”


And if a solid workout is what you’re looking for, pickleball delivers on that, too. An American Council on Exercise study found that the game torches about 350 calories an hour and that playing regularly meets cardiovascular exercise guidelines.

But like with any sport, you’ll want to make sure to incorporate pickleball warm-up exercises and strengthening and stretching exercises to avoid injury while—bonus!—improving your game. The P.volve Method’s functional movement routines target the whole body, including the muscles that pickleball calls on. Get started with the moves below.


Agility Exercises for Pickleball

“Pickleball requires short, quick bursts of movement,” says Johnson. “The court may be small, but you need to be fast to cover it.” Use these three agility exercises to put some speed in your step while building balance and control—all of which will up your pickleball game. 


FAST FEET 

Stand with feet wider than hip distance and slightly bend at your knees and hinge at your hips so that you’re in a mid-squat position. Staying low, run in place, keeping on your toes.
Continue for 15 to 20 seconds, alternating feet as quickly as you can without losing form. 

SKATERS 

Stand with feet hip distance and step right leg back, then slightly bend at your knees and hinge at your hips into a small lunge. Look down, then push off your left foot and jump out to the right, landing on your right foot while drawing your left leg behind you with your knee bent. Push off your right foot to jump to the left, landing on your left foot with your right leg bent behind you.
Continue for 15 to 20 seconds, continuing to alternate directions. 

GRAPEVINE

Stand with feet hip-distance apart, elbows bent, and arms at chest height. Step left foot behind right foot, then quickly step right foot out to the right. Immediately step left foot in front of right foot, and step right foot out to the right again (so that you’re forming a quick crisscross motion). Continue with this crisscross movement to the right, then switch directions, stepping right foot in front and behind while you move toward the left.
Repeat for 45-60 seconds, continuing to alternate directions. 

Pickleball Shoulder Exercises

Pickleball doesn’t put as much

strain on the shoulder as tennis does, says Johnson, but it’s still important

to strengthen this area of the body to avoid injury. Work toward stronger

shoulders with these pickleball shoulder exercises. 

CHEST FLY

Start in a hip hinge (feet hip-distance, slightly hinged at hips with a soft bend in knees, and abdominals engaged) holding a pair of light weights out in front of you at chest height. Squeeze your shoulder blades together and open your arms out to the sides, then return arms to start position.
Continue for 15 to 20 seconds. 

T-SPINE ROTATION WITH CHEST FLY

Stand with feet hip distance, hold a pair of light weights out in front of you at chest height, then step your left leg back and slightly bend at your knees and hinge at your hips into a small lunge. Keeping hips square, punch left hand forward while rotating at spine to open right arm out behind you. Rotate back to start position.
Repeat 15 to 20 seconds and then switch sides. 

ROTATOR CUFF ROTATION

Stand with feet hip distance and hold a light weight in your right hand with arm bent at a 90-degree angle, palm facing in (imagine you’re squeezing a piece of paper between your arm and body). Keeping a 90-degree bend and maintaining that squeeze, externally rotate your arm out to the right from the rotator cuff, then rotate back in toward your body.
Repeat 15 to 20 seconds, and then switch sides. 

Pickleball Elbow Exercises

Ever heard of tennis elbow?

Pickleball elbow is a thing too. Making sure you have the correct grip size is

important, says Johnson (if the paddle handle is too large, you may increase

the chance of the overuse injury). Additionally, use these three pickleball

elbow exercises to help strengthen the area around your elbow joints. 

TRICEPS EXTENSION

Kneel on a mat with legs at a 90-degree bend, core engaged, and light weights in hands. Press hands up to the ceiling, then hinge forward at hips, keeping back straight while pressing arms behind you. That’s one rep.
Do 20 reps. 

BICEP CURL

Stand with feet underneath the hips and hold weights at shoulder height with palms facing in. Roll the shoulder blades down the back then, keeping core engaged and elbows at sides, lower the weights then squeeze biceps while lifting weights back to shoulder height. That’s one rep.
Do 20 reps. 

HAMMER CURL

Stand with feet underneath the hips and hold weights in front of you, arms bent 90 degrees, palms facing each other and elbows at sides. Keeping core engaged, press the right weight to shoulder height while simultaneously lowering the left weight to your side. Then lower the right weight to your side while simultaneously pressing the left weight to shoulder height. That’s one rep. Do 10 to 15 reps.


Pickleball Warm-up Exercises

Warm up your body and lubricate

your joints before a pickleball game—or cool down post-match—with the below

feel-good dynamic movements.

 Johnson also suggests

stretching out your lower back with exercises like downward dog to help ease

any aches caused by standing in the “ready position” at the net. And because

pickleball’s quick changes in direction on the court can place stress on the ankle

joint, it’s smart to add on these ankle mobility exercises or an ankle weight workout.

ANKLE CIRCLES

Stand with feet hip-distance apart, hands on hips. Lift your left foot off the floor and roll your ankle in a circular motion for 20 seconds, switching direction of your circles halfway through. Return to start position and repeat on the other side. 

STANDING HIP STRETCH

Stand with feet hip distance and step right foot back and to the side with both knees slightly bent. Keeping your back flat, sit back into your right hip while reaching arms back on the right side, then shift your weight into your left foot to return to standing while rotating your body and sweeping arms up and to the left side. 

ARM REACH AND ROW 

Start in a wide hip hinge (feet wider than hip-distance, slightly hinged at hips with a soft bend in knees, and abdominals engaged) and hold a foam roller at hip height with a hand on either side. Keeping back straight, reach down then sweep arms forward and push through feet to press foam roller overhead. Pause for a moment and actively stretch up, lifting the sternum. Then glide arms down with your elbows bent to return to start position. 

TRICEPS STRETCH

Kneel on a mat, sitting back on your heels, and bring

your right arm behind your head so that your hand is on your back. Use your

left arm to press down gently on the right elbow for a stretch. Hold 10 to 15

seconds, then release and repeat on the other side. 

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