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Strong
Hips Make for a Long Golf Drive
Above-par hip strength may be one secret of a lower golf handicap,
new research findings suggest.
The study of 82 golfers found that
those with the best game also had the strongest hips, pointing
to the importance of the hip musculature in coordinating a golf
swing, the researchers say.
Dr. Scott Lephart, director of
the University of Pittsburgh's Neuromuscular Research Lab, presented
the findings at a recent meeting of the American College of Sports
Medicine in Indianapolis.
For the study, Lephart and his
colleagues divided the golfers into three groups based on their
golfing handicaps. They found that greater hip strength during
abduction exercises, in which the hip moves the leg out and away
from the body, was related to a better handicap. And the best
players -- those with a "scratch" or better handicap -- tended
to be stronger in all hip movements that were tested.
Lephart explained that he and his
colleagues have been studying hip injuries among elite golfers,
who have a high incidence of the problem. Muscle strength, he
said, is "critical" to hip injury prevention, but it's also needed
to help stabilize the lower body while the torso and shoulders
rotate at the high velocity required for a pro-like driving distance.
Hip strength, Lephart noted, is
probably something elite golfers possess, then continue to improve,
now that the golf world is recognizing the importance of conditioning.
He said he and his colleagues just
completed a clinical trial that shows that improving strength
and flexibility in the hips and torso can boost "torso velocity"
during a golf swing -- and tack on 20 yards to a golfer's driving
distance.
Reference
Source 89
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