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The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 17 - Number 9 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_04 10:25–10:40
So if you're holding their left arm up, you'd be compressing on the right ribs. Doing what? It depends on what you're doing. But the stuff you're doing, like the harmonic method, trying to get that pulsation.
rib mechanicsharmonic methodrespiration
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 17 - Number 8 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_04 2:08–2:24
Put your foot out in front of you, put your foot behind you, right? Those are ER representations. They have less IR on them. It's the left side going up on a wide ISA.
joint mechanicsinternal/external rotationlimb positioning
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 15 - Number 7 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_02 1:33–1:47
Yeah. All right. A good amount of pain bending over. Or just like anything where it was like a flex posture, like sitting. She's a swimmer, so swimming's actually fine, but if she has to do her flip turn, she'll feel it.
pain assessmentmovement limitationsswimming biomechanics
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 15 - Number 6 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_09 6:04–6:04
Yeah.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 15 - Number 5 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_02 2:17–2:20
And I wanted to- Right handed pitcher?
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 15 - Number 4 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_03 3:13–3:18
Can you say that again a little slower? Please.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 15 - Number 3 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_03 6:18–6:26
So that will just position sense, but also where you're most comfortable putting force into the ground.
proprioceptionground reaction forcevestibular system
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 15 - Number 2 Podcast
Bill:
Bill Hartman 6:58–7:01
But you keep on thinking. Go ahead.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 15 - Number 1 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_03 3:46–3:46
To the right.
spine mechanicspelvic movementspinal alignment
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 10 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_03 2:35–3:10
Yeah, I'm more of a late worker, but anyways. Well, a longtime listener, first time caller. I had a question for you on split squat programming. So I will say with most of my patients' clients, I have avoided starting or using an early or negative shin angle going into a mid-range position. So if an early knee flexion to a mid-range on the front leg is what you're thinking, I mean, the reason why would be because of the table and tour we just had seen. I felt like a lot of people ended up just pushing forward through the pelvis.
split squat programmingshin angleknee mechanicspelvis positioning
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 9 Podcast
Bill:
Bill Hartman 3:32–3:34
Yeah, I get it.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 8 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_04 4:56–5:07
So I'm just guessing that one of the mechanisms that would help would be to learn the transition of the tibia over the ankle to capture that medial.
tibial internal rotationankle mechanicsknee rehabilitation
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 7 Podcast
Bill:
Bill Hartman 5:37–6:14
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Great. And people move through space all the time that they're not the world's greatest at doing it. They don't know it, but they're not. And so, yeah, you got to make it a little bit easier for them. So, like, you can drop somebody into a, like, some hook lying, you can put them in a reclined. So if you did like a TRX squat where they're leaning away from the TRX, like that, that reduces the demand, right? And that puts it in an early representation. So, so you can use that.
exercise modificationearly representationspatial movementTRX squatreclined position
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 6 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_03 4:53–4:54
Okay.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 5 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_04 11:02–11:36
It's about the helical angle. I watched some rotation videos of you on the YouTube channel and sometimes you mention the helical angle, but when I search for 'helical angle' as keywords on the channel, there isn't a lot—there isn't a video that's focused on the helical angle. Do you have any videos just to explain what the helical angle is and how it affects the movement of the power plant?
helical structuremovement mechanicsISA archetypes
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 4 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_07 5:01–5:04
Okay. Do you have your pelvis?
pelvisanatomy model
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 3 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_05 5:53–6:25
So, like in, cause I know what the why is that they're sort of the caliber situation. So it's fairly easy to see and feel where they're sort of like tucking their ribs into their pocket. I guess I'm trying to figure out, so it's like, once we get some malleability to not have the ribs be so straight, like in that case, am I still sort of creating that IR from that side with my hands, like still tucking into the pocket?
rib mechanicsrespirationmanual therapy
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 2 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_10 3:15–3:35
You see the groove? That was made to put your thumb right there. See it? You ever do a cuboid on a foot? Yeah, same position.
cuboid manipulationfoot anatomymanual therapy
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 14 - Number 1 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_05 3:48–3:50
OK.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 10 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_03 3:30–5:26
Okay, so anywhere that you see the expanded representation. Keep in mind that this is going to be a load that's going to be a magnitude dependent representation. If we were looking at a knee from a rotational perspective in 2D representation, as you bend the knee, you have a compression strategy on the posterior aspect and an expanded representation on the anterior aspect. With tibial rotation, if you start from the loaded representation and consider the center of gravity, you're not in a yielded state until you start to descend. The knee goes through its loaded representation, expanding anteriorly. As you sit and relax into the bottom of a squat, you can feel the expansion of the connective tissue behavior at the knee. Some lifters might sort of bottom out in that position, where the contact at the knee is radically different when passively expanded. You lose some of the congruence of the knee joint as they descend. That would be a sensation where you understand the expansion concept.
connective tissue behaviorknee biomechanicsjoint loadingtibial rotationsquat mechanics
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 9 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_04 6:15–6:16
What does that mean?
connective tissue behaviorselastic energy storagebiomechanicsplyometrics
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 8 Podcast
Bill:
Bill Hartman 6:12–6:12
Upstairs.
exercise progressioncarry technique
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 7 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_03 3:05–3:06
Apologies.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 6 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_07 2:22–2:22
Proximal femur.
femur anatomyhip mechanicspelvic position
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 5 Podcast
Bill:
Bill Hartman 4:33–4:34
Yeah.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 4 Podcast
Bill:
Bill Hartman 5:00–5:02
Here, late, late.
foot mechanicstibial rotationarch support
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 3 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_04 3:48–3:48
Yeah.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 2 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_04 2:55–2:55
Yeah.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 13 - Number 1 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_02 5:17–5:17
Yeah.
The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 12 - Number 10 Podcast
Bill:
SPEAKER_04 4:07–4:09
Maybe they don't fully understand this.