Resistance Training: Is Resistance Training Beneficial for the Artistic Athlete? How Do We Incorporate It into Training? - Part 1

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Resistance Training: Is Resistance Training Beneficial for the Artistic Athlete? How Do We Incorporate It into Training? – Part 1

While resistance training, and specifically resistance training with weights, has become commonplace in the training regimens of many sports, it still seems that among artistic athletes there is a pervasive belief that resistance training is not for them and will not be beneficial to their practice.

So let’s break it down, what is the benefit of this kind of training for dancers, gymnasts, acrobats, aerialists, and other artistic athletes, and how do we best incorporate it into a training regimen? While these disciplines do not traditionally incorporate— and often used to discourage— resistance training, research studies continue to show that the benefits of an appropriately applied resistance training program outweigh any potential risk.

Injury Prevention

Resistance training done as part of a sport-specific training regimen has been shown on numerous occasions to reduce the risk of both overuse and acute injuries. One study has even shown that when appropriately applied, strength training halved the risk of overuse injury.

Like we talked about before, resistance training can be used as a means to train the body to be able to tolerate the loads and forces that are unavoidable in sport. It helps us to build good movement patterns that promote proper and efficient body alignment for take-offs, landings, overhead control, etc., in a safe and more controlled environment.

In artistic sports, though, much of what we do is done with body weight. During take-offs, landings, and dynamic movement, we are often asking our body to absorb and translate forces equal to multiples of that. Weight training allows us to systematically load and adapt our bodies to be able to handle these forces, e.g. the high loads on arms and legs of tumbling, jump landings and dismounts, and the high force overhead upper body traction seen in gymnastics and certain aerial apparatus.

Here’s an example of how to put this idea into practice: Your athlete or student is unable to do a body weight pull-up, which is a foundational movement for circus athletes and gymnasts. To supplement the body weight training of band-assisted or eccentric pull-ups, incorporating exercises such as a lat pulldown (with a machine, or with a band) can help build up the strength for the full pull-up.

Here’s another one: For an acro porter or a cheerleading base, rather than conditioning by pressing their partner overhead over and over again after having already done so in practice, performing a conditioning set of 3-5 sets of 4-8 reps of 60-85% of a one-rep maximum can still allow one to increase their strength— and therefore their performance ability— while staying within a safe amount of total load, and decreasing the risk of developing an overuse injury.

As well, proper resistance training technique teaches 360-degree core bracing strategies and can be used to slowly expose the spine to increasing loads. This can help gymnasts, acrobats, and figure skaters protect their lower backs during the force translation of landings.

Cross-Training Benefits the Body and Mind

Maintaining variety in your training regimen is important to help avoid burnout and maintain overall body fitness. Many artistic sports have elements that are performed predominantly with one side of the body, leading to an imbalance in strength and or flexibility on that side. Cross-training with resistance training helps to mitigate these imbalances by providing an opportunity to train both sides equally.

Let’s take the example of a circus performer who performs a sequence of dynamic beats on their right side for their straps act. While they may train their left side equally, the right side is going to get more reps regardless, as that is their performing arm. In a conditioning session, they may then add in oblique pull-ups, or single arm rows to bias more to the left side and keep their strength even.

Aside from the reasons discussed above, this added variety in training also helps to mitigate the risk of overuse injury by giving the body a break from its repetitive sport-specific movements while still training its fitness. Keeping variety in your training regimen increases the body’s ability to adapt to new stimuli and learn new skills. Cross-training allows us to condition other aspects of our fitness that are important for overall body balance, but may not be the basis for our sport.

Increase Strength, Power, Speed, and other Aspects of Fitness

Appropriately applied and implemented resistance training programs have been shown to increase several aspects of performance in dancers and other artistic athletes. All artistic athletes have to be strong, never mind for injury prevention as previously discussed, but simply to be able to perform the movements and skills required for these sports. Certain skills will require high levels of power output and flexibility, and performing routines requires both cardiorespiratory and muscular endurance. Neurological control and coordination allow for more efficient movement and therefore, for increasing our power and amplitude of skills.

Resistance training can be used as an adjunct to sport-specific training to help improve these aspects of fitness and therefore enhance performance in these sports. For example, increasing strength in the quadriceps muscle group via a leg extension exercise translates to improved strength for leg extension in fouettes; increasing power via training with an explosive front squat can improve jumping ability in dancers, gymnasts, and figure skaters; and increasing flexibility by incorporating exercises such as Romanian deadlifts or Nordic hamstring curls which will increase dynamic control, muscle length, and active flexibility of the hamstrings.

Improving core control as part of a targeted exercise program— for example, by adding weighted carries to a training program— has also been shown to increase dynamic stability in dancers, allowing for better control during turns, jump landings, and take-offs.

Going back to our first example of a porter: using weights to train their overall upper body power development will allow them to better toss their flyer. Adding in dynamic core control exercises will help make their movements more efficient as they will be better able to brace the core and translate force during their skills.

How to Incorporate this into my Training Regimen

When deciding on how to implement resistance training into your training regimen, it is important to consider not just the time of the season that you or your team are in, but also how it fits into your training throughout the week. The training age (as well as biological age) of all participants must also be taken into account when designing a program for a team or individual.

Heavy/high-intensity resistance training should be used during the off-season as a means of increasing fitness and prepping for the on-season. Pre-season resistance training should continue to build, but decrease in intensity and frequency. It should become more sport-specific as regular sports training commences. During the competitive season, resistance training should be designed to maintain strength, develop energy systems, and prevent injury.

For circus performers and professional dancers, this can be a little bit more difficult as on- and off-seasons do not exist in the same way they do for organized sports. Performers should try to incorporate resistance training into their training regimens for at least one day per week, and tailor its intensity based on their total workload for the week. Increases in training intensity and changes in overall training goals need to be designed around their contract schedules.

Let’s be clear here; should resistance training replace your usual sport-specific conditioning? No way! But it can and should be used as an adjunct to our training to help decrease the risk of overuse injury, increase overall strength and power, and prevent burnout.

Want to talk about how best to incorporate resistance training into your or your team’s training regimen?

References:

  1. Lauersen JB, Bertelsen DM, Andersen LBThe effectiveness of exercise interventions to prevent sports injuries: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials.British Journal of Sports Medicine 2014;48:871-877.
  2. Lauersen JB, Andersen TE, Andersen LBStrength training as superior, dose-dependent and safe prevention of acute and overuse sports injuries: a systematic review, qualitative analysis and meta-analysis. British Journal of Sports Medicine 2018;52:1557-1563.
  3. Burke, Edmund R. Ph.D., C.S.C.S., The Wisdom of Cross Training, Strength and Conditioning: February 1994 – Volume 16 – Issue 1 – p 58-60
  4. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. Cross training. OrthoInfo. 2011.
  5. Dave Tilley. Changing Gymnastics Culture: Lessons, Reflections, and Visions for the Future. 2018. https://shiftmovementscience.com/cgcebookchapters/
  6. Kalaycioglu, T., Apostolopoulos, N. C., Goldere, S., Duger, T., & Baltaci, G. (2020). Effect of a Core Stabilization Training Program on Performance of Ballet and Modern Dancers. Journal of strength and conditioning research, 34(4), 1166–1175. https://doi.org/10.1519/JSC.0000000000002916
  7. Escobar Álvarez, J. A., Fuentes García, J. P., Da Conceição, F. A., & Jiménez-Reyes, P. (2020). Individualized Training Based on Force-Velocity Profiling During Jumping in Ballet Dancers. International journal of sports physiology and performance, 15(6), 788–794. https://doi.org/10.1123/ijspp.2019-0492
  8. Dowse, R. A., McGuigan, M. R., & Harrison, C. (2020). Effects of a Resistance Training Intervention on Strength, Power, and Performance in Adolescent Dancers. Journal of strength and conditioning research, 34(12), 3446–3453. https://doi.org/10.1519/JSC.0000000000002288
  9. Watson, T., Graning, J., McPherson, S., Carter, E., Edwards, J., Melcher, I., & Burgess, T. (2017). DANCE, BALANCE AND CORE MUSCLE PERFORMANCE MEASURES ARE IMPROVED FOLLOWING A 9-WEEK CORE STABILIZATION TRAINING PROGRAM AMONG COMPETITIVE COLLEGIATE Dancers. International journal of sports physical therapy, 12(1), 25–41.

This article was originally posted at benddontbreak.net

Yasmine Mucher
CAT(PC), R.Kin, CSEP-CPT
From Toronto, Ontario, Yasmine Mucher is a provisionally certified Athletic Therapist, Registered Kinesiologist, and CSEP Certified Personal Trainer. She started training in circus arts 2008, specializing in all things trapeze. This sparked her love and curiosity for the capabilities of the human body, but pain and injury exposed to her the lack of research and knowledgeable practitioners in the area of circus arts and the needs of the artistic athlete’s body. Graduating with a Bachelor of Science in Kinesiology from Dalhousie University in 2017, and an Advanced Certificate in Athletic Therapy from Mount Royal University in 2020, throughout her education and thereafter, Yas worked as a circus performer and coach for people of all ages, applying scientifically informed methods to her own and her clients’ training and reaping the results. www.benddontbreak.net
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Yasmine Mucher

From Toronto, Ontario, Yasmine Mucher is a provisionally certified Athletic Therapist, Registered Kinesiologist, and CSEP Certified Personal Trainer. She started training in circus arts 2008, specializing in all things trapeze. This sparked her love and curiosity for the capabilities of the human body, but pain and injury exposed to her the lack of research and knowledgeable practitioners in the area of circus arts and the needs of the artistic athlete’s body. Graduating with a Bachelor of Science in Kinesiology from Dalhousie University in 2017, and an Advanced Certificate in Athletic Therapy from Mount Royal University in 2020, throughout her education and thereafter, Yas worked as a circus performer and coach for people of all ages, applying scientifically informed methods to her own and her clients’ training and reaping the results. www.benddontbreak.net