1 / 29

Free Throw Analysis

Free Throw Analysis. By Kellen cooke , KJ Medina, & Brittany Craven. Phases. Muscles Involved in Lower Extremity. QUADRICEPS GROUP Rectus femoris Vastus medialis Vastus lateralis Vastus Intermedius. LOWER LEG Gastrocnemius Soleus Tibialis anterio r.

kaylee
Télécharger la présentation

Free Throw Analysis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Free Throw Analysis By Kellencooke, KJ Medina, & Brittany Craven

  2. Phases

  3. Muscles Involved in Lower Extremity QUADRICEPS GROUP • Rectus femoris • Vastusmedialis • Vastuslateralis • VastusIntermedius • LOWER LEG • Gastrocnemius • Soleus • Tibialis anterior

  4. Muscles Involved in Lower Extremity HAMSTRINGS GROUP • Biceps femoris • Semitendinosus • Semimembranosus

  5. Muscles involved in upper extremity • SHOULDER JOINT & GIRDLE • Trapezius • Rhomboids • Serratus anterior • Pectoralis minor • Deltoid • Coracobrachialis • Subscapularis • Infraspinatus • Teres minor • Supraspinatus

  6. Muscles involved in upper extremity • ELBOW JOINT • Biceps brachii • Brachialis • Brachioradialis • Triceps brachii

  7. Muscles involved in upper extremity • WRIST JOINT • Extensor carpi radialisbrevis & longus • Extensor carpi ulnaris • Extensor pollicislongus • Flexor carpi radialis • Flexor carpi ulnaris • Flexor digitorumsuperficialis • & profundus • Pronator teres • Supinator

  8. Preparatory phase

  9. Preparatory: lower extremity chart

  10. Preparatory: shoulder girdle chart dominant & non-dominant • Other muscles involved in isometric contraction: • Supraspinatus • Infraspinatus • Teres minor • Subscapularis • Levator scapulae • Trapezius • Rhomboids

  11. Preparatory: Shoulder joint chart dominant & Non-dominant

  12. Preparatory: elbow & wrist joint dominant & non-dominant

  13. Preparatory: wrist joint action on dominant side

  14. Execution phase

  15. Execution phase: lower extremity dominant & non-dominant

  16. Execution phase: shoulder girdle dominant & non-dominant

  17. Execution phase: shoulder joint dominant & non-dominant NON-DOMINANT

  18. Execution phase: elbow Joint dominant & non-dominant WRIST JOINT DOMINANT NON-DOMINANT

  19. Follow through

  20. Follow through phase: Lower extremity dominant & non-dominant **Positionof the hip & knee in the follow through are the same as in execution phase, however they are now isometrically contracting.

  21. Follow through phase: Shoulder Joint & girdle dominant & non-dominant • **See shoulder joint & girdle slides of execution phase. There is no change in joint movement going into follow through. ELBOW JOINT DOMINANT & NON-DOMINANT **Reference elbow joint slide of execution phase for follow through as well. There is just further extension of the dominant elbow joint.

  22. Follow through phase: wrist joint DOMINANT NON-DOMINANT

  23. MOST COMMON PATHOLOGIES OCCURING FROM FREE THROW • 3 very closely related pathologies: • Shoulder Impingement- space between acromion & rotator cuff tendons is narrowed when arm is raised, causing the tendons to be pinched or impinged. • Rotator Cuff Tendonitis- tendons become irritated or rubbed from repetitive lifting or overhead use. • Bursitis- bursa becomes inflamed, which causes it to swell and fill with more fluid (usually accompanies rotator cuff tendonitis)

  24. symptoms • Sudden pain and stiffness when arm is lifted • May also have pain when arm is lowered from elevated position • Radiating pain from front of shoulder to side of arm • Pain at night • Loss of strength & motion • Difficulty with motions behind the back such as buttoning or zipping.

  25. Treatment: Considering patient age, activity level, & general health • Before resorting to surgery, a physician may prescribe: • Rest • Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medication • Physical therapy • Cortisone injection • If none of these are effective, the patient and orthopedist may decide on arthroscopy. • (Pictured to the right)

  26. Exercises Dumbbell front raises Dumbbell lateral raises Back squats Tricep extensions

  27. Exercises (cont’d) • Most importantly….. • The Donkey Calf Raises And pictured to the right is Arnie repping out some donkey calf raises with a pal.

More Related