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How to Use Stretching as a Recovery Tool in Competition

Stretching does much more than elongate tight muscles.

During competitions, stretching can be a particularly useful way to accelerate post-race recovery and improve pre-race warm ups with minimal exertion. Performing dynamic stretches prior to warm up and static stretches following warm down will help your body stay sharp when you’re racing on that third or fourth day of a meet. Stretching a muscle boosts blood flow to that area, increasing circulation. Better circulation improves the delivery of oxygen and nutrients to muscles and the removal of waste like lactic acid that builds up during races. If you feel tight after a thorough warm down, stretching is a great supplement to help you reset before the next performance.

Let’s discuss how pre- and post-race stretching differs.

Prior to your warm up, use dynamic stretching to loosen your muscles. Also known as active or ballistic stretching, this involves the rehearsal of motor patterns that the body will make in the competition, such as swinging a leg back and forth, lunging, squatting, or even bouncing. Static stretching is the traditional passive stretching in which you lengthen a muscle group to its end range of motion and breathe steadily, holding the position for about 30 seconds. This is best done after a warm down from a race when the muscles are sufficiently warm and will lengthen with less resistance. Both forms of stretching enhance blood flow to muscles, but according to a recent study dynamic stretching leads to better power output and muscle strength than static stretching prior to an athletic event1.

Stretching can seem like a chore on a regular basis, but if you incorporate it into your daily routine at competitions, it can be extremely helpful. Because it requires little physical exertion, stretching is a fantastic way to help clear lactic acid from muscle and get your body ready for the next performance!

References:
1. J Strength Cond Res. 2012 Apr;26(4):1130-41. doi: 10.1519/JSC.0b013e31822e58b6.
A dynamic warm-up model increases quadriceps strength and hamstring flexibility.
Aguilar AJ, DiStefano LJ, Brown CN, Herman DC, Guskiewicz KM, Padua DA.

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Nick Folker, BridgeAthleticNick Folker is the Co-Founder and Director of Elite Performance at BridgeAthletic. Nick’s athletes have won 22 Olympic Medals, 7 team NCAA Championships and over 170 individual and relay NCAA championships. Megan Fischer-Colbrie works as the Sports Science Editor at BridgeAthletic.  Megan was a four-year varsity swimmer at Stanford, where she recently graduated with a degree in Human Biology.

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marc
9 years ago

Find a Stretch Zone to discover the next generation of stretching

Shane
Reply to  marc
9 years ago

Two comments:
1. When you stretch, you are not elongated the muscle, but actually stretching the tendons & tendon Aponeurosis. There is no research suggesting stretching increases muscle cells in arris (thus making the muscle longer).
2. There is little if any good research on stretching increasing blood flow to the muscles. As well, ‘lactic acid’ is not a negative factor in perfo lance or recovery.

Jman
9 years ago

Dynamic the same as ballistic? I think not

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