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A dynamic warm-up for kids

Help children prevent injuries and enhance their athletic performance with this fun and easy warm-up the whole family can do.

By Michele Drake

Parents are often rushing to get their kids to sports activities as they juggle the family's schedules. This makes everyone feel hurried, and often warm-up time before a game is sacrificed.

When warm-ups are brief, muscles are not ready for the activities they are forced into once adrenaline takes over. Traditional static stretches prelude the action, but this can do more harm than good before a game or physical activity. Imagine a muscle getting lengthened and relaxed right before heading into a ballistic activity. That is quite a shock to muscles.

Peter Twist, an 11-year veteran NHL strength and conditioning coach, says that "the goal of a warm-up is to warm the muscles and link the mind and muscles so when your brain commands the muscles to move skillfully and quickly, they comply." This means a more active warm-up is required prior to play.

Below is a basic dynamic warm-up drill. This type of warm-up prepares the body for the demands of the activity to follow. The warm-up feels a lot like a workout and prepares the body mentally and physically for the demands of playing a game.

Basic dynamic warm-up
Warm-ups should start with easy movements that are slow, progressively moving into faster movements that incorporate angled and zigzag patterns and graduating into side-to-side movements. Do all of the movements on the next page at least one width of a soccer field.

Before you start
Safety When decelerating to change direction, bend at the knees and get low! Avoid stop/starts with children under 12 because their joints do not favour this, as their tendons aren't fully formed.

Abdominals (the core) are extremely important! Always keep form -- standing tall with abs flexed -- and do not fold forward from the hip. Keep your chest back and eyes forward. Children find it fun if you tell them to brace themselves as if someone is going to wallop them in the stomach (this ensures they are holding the core tight).

How do you keep your kids fit and active? Discuss with other parents in our forums!

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