Bill Hartman 45:49–48:46
Yes, it is. Welcome to the conundrum of anterior knee pain. And then like I said, sometimes you just don't know and then you do the right thing and they get better. And you go, okay, I'm going to make a mental note. The next time I see this behavior and this, this representation, I'm going to do that intervention again. And I'm going to see what happens. And then the more times you do that, the more likely your intervention is correct. And then you can surmise from the response as to what the mechanism may be. Makes sense. Yeah. That's kind of how you figure stuff out. Like they say, oh, static stretching takes away power, but it does come back after a while, right? That's why. Good morning. Happy Friday. I have no coffee in hand and it is perfect. All right. kind of a weird Friday, kind of a busy Friday, got a dig right into today's Q&A. This is another segment that I did with Drew Keele from the QB Docs. This was actually not part of the podcast, actually. This was an extra conversation that we had, and we said, hey, this is really good stuff, let's just record it. And so we started talking about yielding actions and how they actually work. And then we used throwing as a context. So Drew's a quarterback coach. And so it made sense to take this into his realm. So you get a little bit of a context so you can kind of see how this actually works in that framing. Very, very useful conversation, I think, because I don't think a lot of people understand how these connective tissue behaviors actually work and how important they are. This is where all of this velocity and power output is going to be coming from. And so we actually talk about that a little. We also talk about the influence of static stretching on connective tissues and why you see the behaviors that you do in the literature. So again, very, very useful. If you would like to participate in a 15-minute consultation, please go to askbillhardman at gmail.com, askbillhardman at gmail.com. We will arrange that at our mutual convenience. Don't forget to put 15-minute consult in the subject line so I don't delete it. Podcast will be up on Sunday, per usual. Everybody have an outstanding weekend, and I will see you next week. We're talking about yielding. Yeah, okay. And I always talk about rate. Because it's it's one of the easier ones to see represented and then we can talk about the why okay, so When I move quickly when I move quickly So it's a higher rate of loading on connective tissues. The connective tissues behave more stiffly, right? When I apply a force over an extended period, then the soft tissues gradually give away and store energy. So we're unkinking the collagen fibers, right? When we're yielding, right?
anterior knee painyielding actionsconnective tissue behaviorstatic stretchingrate dependent behavior