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					  <title><![CDATA[Does It Help, Does It Hurt - A Look At Training For Baseball And Common Shoulder Injuries]]></title>
					  <link>http://www.globalsportszone.com/Articles/articles/507/1/Does-It-Help-Does-It-Hurt---A-Look-At-Training-For-Baseball-And-Common-Shoulder-Injuries/Page1.html</link>
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<p>Is your training increasing or decreasing your risk of injury? Our goal is to function at the highest level possible while reducing the risk of injury. Baseball is a sport that involves strength, speed, endurance, flexibility, and mobility to name a few. What I have been seeing with baseball players from little league, early adolescence into their adult lives is the widely accepted notion that to become a better athlete you have to train for form, not so much function. What is the difference?</p>
<p>Form is what can be termed bodybuilding, building the body with focus on big muscles or prime movers of the body. The chest, shoulders, abdominals, arms and quads, also known as mirror muscles, what we can see in the mirror, are most commonly developed using machines and free weights. Bench press, crunches, biceps curls and knee extensions are the exercises of choice. What is wrong with that, you may say? I thought that to be involved in athletics, I have to become stronger and condition the body for that sport? Yes and no. Let me explain, let&#8217;s look at function.</p></span>]]></description>
					  <author>no@spam.com (Ethan Bowlin)</author>
					  <pubDate>Mon, 10 Sep 2007 18:51:33 MST</pubDate>
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