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The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% Season 7 Number 1 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_07 1:05:39–1:05:39
Right.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% Season 6 Number 10 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_03 47:57–47:57
Right.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% Season 6 Number 9 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_09 50:43–50:59
The difference between the implicit knowledge that you have versus what you're showing everyone else, like, and then what you're also showing yourself, what you write down, because if it didn't click initially, you probably wouldn't have brought it on board, like included it in the model.
tacit knowledgeexplicit knowledgeknowledge transfer
The Bill Hartman Podcast for the 16% - Season 16 - Number 3 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_02 28:57–29:05
Okay. There's like one dude that has a flight phase. And I think you ran an 18-second hundred.
age-related declinesprinting mechanicsforce application
The Bill Hartman Podcast for the 16% - Season 16 - Number 2 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_04 37:00–37:07
I just jumped, even though I got the early representation on the table, I just jumped into a middle activity too quickly and wasted.
progressive loadingcompensatory strategiesexercise progression
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 17 - Number 6 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_00 25:02–25:21
Well, again, it's like, who are we messing with here? It's like, okay, I had a professional baseball player in yesterday and then also had a female client that had never played a sport in her life. It's like, which one do you think I put their foot up on a box? I mean, clearly the baseball player had no coordination whatsoever. I mean, he's only played at the professional level for a few years. Right, yeah. No, it's just, you got to make it easier. You got to make it like that's how you make it easier for people to find these contacts and cues. It's like, where was the weight before? Well, the weight was way back on the right heel, so they don't know what the left heel feels like.
individualized coachingprogressive loadingmotor coordination
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 18 - Number 2 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_02 24:32–24:49
Okay, so pay attention to the knee position, pay attention to your pelvis, and pay attention to your foot. Got it? Okay, step away from the wall, put your foot on the ground. Simulate going into and out of the cut and tell me if you ever get into that position when you're going into and out of a cut.
cutting mechanicslower extremity positioningbiomechanical analysis
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 17 - Number 8 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_07 32:27–32:27
Completely.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 15 - Number 7 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_01 24:51–25:13
Which goes towards my kind of where I'm going with this is so for a wide ISA individual, would you just sort of need to bias them towards activities that go more towards that counter-nutation and elevation type strategy as a means of starting to alleviate that? Yes. All right, that's all right.
pelvic orientationcounter-nutationelevation strategyISA (Inferior Sacral Angle)
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 15 - Number 5 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_02 42:06–42:20
Yes, that was implemented on Tuesday. A big, tall guy was squeezing intensely. When we did that, everything improved very quickly. So yes.
exercise techniquesquat mechanicspatient outcomes
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 15 - Number 4 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_00 28:12–28:20
Well, you just did that and I felt where the IR goes.
rear foot mechanicsinversion/eversionankle joint function
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 15 - Number 2 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_03 37:58–38:00
Right?
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 15 - Number 1 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_05 25:57–25:58
Yes. Yes. I understand.
foot mechanicsinternal rotationrear foot movement
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 10 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_05 32:25–32:43
That is external rotation of your hand. Okay. So I'm going to use PT school terminology just for you. I'll probably get some horrible disease from it, but I will express it to the best of my capabilities.
hand orientationwrist mechanicsexternal rotation
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 9 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_05 31:37–31:58
Hey Bill just chiming in on that. Yes, sir. Could you do a reverse, you know the one that you do where you hold the dumbbell, thumb side up over the preacher bench? Could you basically flip that completely so that you're doing like a reverse curl with the dumbbell on the pinky side? Reverse curl over preacher bench with the dumbbell on the pinky side.
dumbbell exercisessupination trainingreverse curlpreacher benchforearm rotation
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 8 Podcast
Bill:
Bill Hartman 34:40–35:04
Absolutely he does, because that's the shape of everything. So there's actual skeletons compressed at the peak, but so is his spine. Gotcha. Okay. So you're going to have to figure out how to gradually reintroduce some form of AP expansion via some sort of lateral compression. Okay. So how do you do that? Well, you can build up one side. Is he comfortable on his back? Okay. Do you have towels where you work? Yep. Awesome. Okay. You can start to induce the AP. So I take towels and I put it under one side of his pelvis and I put it under one side of his thorax and that creates this gentle little turn that's probably still within his helical orientation. Okay. And I start to do this one side at a time. So if I can create that shape and it doesn't bother him, I'm creating the same shape inside the spinal canal. Okay. So he starts like this. You see this? Okay. And I build up one side. And so this, so this is the side that's going down to the table. This is the side that, that is, built up.
AP expansionlateral compressionhelical orientationspinal canal mechanics
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 7 Podcast
Bill:
Bill Hartman 35:44–36:26
Increase. There you go. So you're in a little bit of a pickle, right? You don't have like any one great trait within that archetype and configuration that lends itself to high pressure going upward, like to be able to push into the ground so I can move upward. They are getting driven into the ground. Their downward velocity is biased. Their velocity is downward biased. So again, it tends to be the greatest challenge in regards to overcoming gravity.
biomechanicsgravitypressure dynamicsvelocity bias
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 6 Podcast
Bill:
Bill Hartman 30:25–30:26
Okay.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 5 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_02 37:48–37:49
Gotcha.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 4 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_05 35:47–35:48
Now is it just creating like an ER orientation?
joint orientationexternal rotationinternal rotation
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 2 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_01 24:04–24:22
When the arm is behind the body in an exercise such as a dip, for instance, how would you describe that arm position relative to the body? Is that just really an external rotation (ER) position?
external rotationshoulder biomechanicsexercise techniquedip exercisearm position
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 10 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_08 45:14–45:14
Straight leg.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 9 Podcast
Bill:
Bill Hartman 35:39–35:58
So I guess another way of saying it could be, if I just apply needle lateral pressure, having them breathe into it and kind of wrap my hand around, is that sufficient? Or would I also need to pull back a little bit anteriorly, try and get a shape change?
rib cage mechanicsrespirationmanual therapy
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 8 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_02 40:00–40:19
OK. Yeah. So then I've been trying to move away from the retraction, depression, upward and downward rotation. Yeah. Well, or at least trying to, you know, superimpose the model onto onto those kinds of movements.
scapular movementshoulder mechanicscompression strategy
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 7 Podcast
Bill:
Bill Hartman 23:28–23:57
It's when I go from the square to the front knee, and when I get the initial, like the eccentric overcome of the connective tissues, I get the foot that starts releasing energy up, and I get the proximal tibia that starts ER-ing again relative to the distal femur.
knee mechanicsenergy releaseconnective tissuestibia rotation
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 6 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_01 25:52–26:17
So essentially what you're doing is creating the top down on one side and the bottom up on the other side. The elevated side in the upper extremity would be the delayed representation. So that's going to be bottom up. It's just going to be hand to shoulder. The other side that's got the hand on the ground is going to be shoulder to hand. You see it?
biomechanicsneuromuscular representationpostural strategies
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 5 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_04 38:11–38:20
Well, based on my population, I almost never prescribe that because it's always the same.
knee mechanicspelvic orientationindividualized programming
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 4 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_05 31:05–31:31
When I put him on a goblet squat with the roller against the wall, he feels no pain at 90 degrees of knee flexion, but around 40 degrees on the way up, he experiences pain again. However, when I have him perform a squat while holding a barbell and moving from 90 degrees up and down, he feels no pain at all.
knee mechanicssquat techniquepatellar painmeniscus injuryknee flexion
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 2 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_09 23:10–23:13
Yeah. Clear. Thank you.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 12 - Number 9 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_04 33:04–33:05
Yeah.