Margaret Hofmann-Nein

Strengthen Your Knees Ladies

by Margaret Hofmann-Nein, posted June 23 2010

Two Key Exercises For Helping Female Athletes Strengthen The Knee & Prevent Injury

File_name

This is a strength training tip for female athletes and their parents and coaches. The squat and the lunge are two critical exercises that should be in every girl’s exercise program to strengthen the legs, hips and core. The motions used in both of these exercises will strengthen the muscles and ligaments and tendons that surround the knee and help stabilize the joint, such as the thigh muscle (quads), hamstrings (back of the thigh), glutes (buttocks) and inner and outer thigh muscles (abductors and adductors).

If done correctly these exercises will help ward off the potential for a serious knee injury. Female athletes are sustaining ACL knee injuries at alarming rates in comparison to boys in the same high risk sports. We should be training girls in the prevention of this serious knee injury. I would highly recommend that these be mastered at a young age by using only ones body weight, at a time when you start to play organized sports. As you get older and stronger then add external resistance such as holding a medicine ball or light dumbbells.

Beginners should start by performing 1 set of 8-12 repetitions per exercise, 2 times per week, a day of rest in between sessions. Intermediate and advanced exercises can perform 2-3 sets of 10-15 repetitions per exercise, 2-3 times a week, a day of rest in between sessions. Gradually increase weight with medicine balls and light dumbbells as you get older and stronger.

Exercise Descriptions:

The Squat: Start upright with feet hip width or wider, toes pointed forward or slightly turned out. Hands out in front or out to the sides for balance. First motion in the squat should be back. Move hips back and slowly descend into a squat. Act as if you are going to sit down in a chair. Keep chest up and chin up, no excessive rounded back or forward lean. Keep knees over the feet (no wobbly knees) and back behind the toes. Don’t take hips lower than the knees. Keep heels down. Push off heels to return up to standing position.

The Lunge: Start upright, feet together, hands out to the sides for balance. Take a comfortable lunge forward, keeping toe pointed straight ahead and knee in line and over the foot, (no wobbly knee). Keep knee back behind the toes. Sit down in the lunge and drop knee of rear leg down close to the floor. Keep torso upright, chest up, chin up. Push back off heel of forward leg to starting position and repeat with the opposite leg.

Athletes, make sure these two key exercises are a part of your strength training program. You will be surprised how much better you will be at your sport when your legs are strong, the knee is more stable and you are injury free and in the game instead of on the sidelines.

Margaret Hofmann-Nein, MEd, is the Owner and Director of Female Athletes First (FAF) in Columbus, Ohio. She has spent her entire career in the athletic and fitness industries, establishing herself as a fitness industry leader and expert in issues facing the female athlete. She is a master strength and performance coach and mentor who specializes in The Making Of The Female Athlete. She is also a 15-year fitness industry veteran, a certified Personal Trainer through the American Council on Exercise (ACE) and an IDEA health and fitness association Masters member with specialty certificates in golf conditioning and postural analysis. Visit her website at: www.femaleathletesfirst.com.

Log in or Sign up to post your comment.

  • July 20, 2010

    I'm going to dance

  • Jen
    July 17, 2010

    thanks for the info to bad my softball seson is already over

  • July 15, 2010

    Yes, I wish my daughter had been doing a little bit of knee strength training, as she did tear her acl this season during a game, and is due for surgery next month.

  • July 12, 2010

    Thank you! We've been training our young players in this manner for years.

Real Moms, Real Kids

Play Weplay Moms TV
This Week's Webisode

In this episode of Become we meet Paula. A single mom with 4 kids, Paula manages to hold down multiple jobs and be there for her kids every step of the way. Whether it's her support in sports or in schoolwork, she knows putting in time with her kids is her number one priority and she wouldn't have it any other way.

As long as he does something that’s from the heart that will make him happy, I’ll be good.

Yolanda Bunn

Featured Authors

Weplay Moms features award winning parenting writer Lisa Cohn and Youth Sports Psychology expert Dr. Patrick Cohn, co-founders of The Ultimate Sports Parent.
Other featured authors

Do you write a blog that should be on Sideline Moms? Syndicate your blog to Sideline Moms!