Los Angeles Times

Yes, you should stretch

It can be vital to a good workout, but only if it’s performed properly

- By Roy M. Wallack health@ latimes. com

Some experts say stretching before exercise helps performanc­e and lessens injuries. But, believe it or not, others say stretching does the opposite. Who’s right?

Proponents point to people who can’t afford to be wrong: Athletes.

The Clippers stretch before every game. And Meb Keflezighi, an Olympic silver medalist and the 2014 Boston Marathon winner, stretches before every run.

“Stretching restores your tightened connective tissue to normal length and puts your joints in correct alignment. That lets you go faster and avoid injury,” said physical therapist Robert Forster, founder of Phase IV performanc­e lab in Santa Monica.

So what to make of studies that claim the opposite — that stretching actually takes the spring out of your step and puts joints at risk by over- loosening them?

Evidence can be traced back to two 2013 studies that found that extensive pre- exercise “static” stretching ( in which stretches are held in a fixed position for a minute or so) done “cold” — without a warmup — hurt the performanc­e of weight lifters and competitiv­e athletes.

One of those two studies, published in the Journal of Strength and Conditioni­ng Research, found that the maximum weight f it young men could hoist after static stretching versus after no stretching was 8.3% less. The other study, published in the Scandinavi­an Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports, found an overall strength decline in some athletes who used stretching as their only warmup. It concluded that static stretching should not be used as the sole warmup activity.

These findings seem to validate the anti- stretching camp. But they may be sounding a false alarm. Experts who work with pro athletes question the way the studies were carried out and insist that stretching is beneficial.

“These studies often put subjects in unrealisti­c situations that do not ref lect what works in the f ield,” said Dennis Colonello, the Clippers’ team chiropract­or.

Before a game, the Clippers do short- duration stretching — not intense, yoga- style static stretches. And that is part of an extensive, hours- long warmup that includes skipping rope, running on treadmills and shooting. Ten minutes before game time, players go through a formal group stretch led by the strength coach.

“They don’t hold each stretch for more than a few seconds,” says Colonello. “They’ll pull halfway and release. That activates the muscle and gets the joints loose, but not too loose. Longer stretching and yoga is fine for recovery on off- days.”

This pattern — short, light stretches as part of an active warmup before an event and long, static stretching afterward and the next day — is the general rule for many top athletes.

“I stretch before my warmup — a f ive- to- seven minute routine while I’m drinking my white tea in the morning,” says Keflezighi, whose recent book, “Meb for Mortals,” includes stretching- and- f lexibility routines customized to the type of workout planned. “I don’t hold the stretches too long or push too deep; that’ll get me too loose and will cause a loss of elasticity.” He then uses a foam roller for deep tissue massage for a few minutes before hitting the pavement for a slow, three- minute warmup run.

Only then does Keflezighi do his full running workout.

After his workout, the San Diego- based 40- year- old does 60- second- long static stretches, followed by a core workout. On recovery days, he’ll often take a yoga class.

The true goal of stretching is not to warmup or mentally prepare you for your workout, although it may help to do that, Forster said. “It’s to align your bones just right so that they move through the joints with natural biomechani­cs.”

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