Dr. Jamie Phillips

652 posts

Dr. Jamie Phillips

Dr. Jamie Phillips

@JamiePhillips30

Hockey Rehab Specialist | Founder: Ghost Rehab and Performance | Physical Therapist | Pro Goalie Coach

Grand Rapids, MI Katılım Mart 2010
179 Takip Edilen1.1K Takipçiler
Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
4/ This opens space in the hip and reduces pressure on the front of the joint. Most athletes feel immediate relief. Redistribute load. More knee bend. Better ankle mobility. Keep the chest slightly more upright
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
Is Your Stride Causing Your Hip Pain? The final FAI 🧵 ( for players) 1/ A lot of players come in with hip pain that shows up only during acceleration or crossovers. Often the root cause is their stride.
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
3/ If your hip hurts only when you accelerate, your stride is the first place to look.
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
2/ If a player already has a cam or pincer, that position increases irritation fast. Too much forward lean forces the hip into deeper flexion. Add rotation and the joint hits end range on every push.
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
4/ If a young athlete keeps mentioning stiff hips, do not ignore it. Addressing it early protects them long term. Please reach out to me if you need help! ghostrehab.com
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
2/ During adolescence the hip is still developing. High skating volume, early specialization, and year-round training increase stress on the joint. The hip responds by adding bone at the femoral head. That is how early cam formation starts. I typically see cam lesions
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
3/ Kids often describe it as tightness. Not pain. Tightness in a developing athlete is the first red flag. Strength balance, smart volume control, and technique coaching make a massive difference at this age.
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
Youth Hockey and Early Sports Specialization A fun 🧵 1/ I am seeing more young hockey players with hip issues we used to associate with adult athletes. The reason is simple.
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
4/ Clean up the stride pattern. Build glute endurance. Improve hip rotation control. Most players see improvement quickly. If a player keeps getting the same pinch, get it assessed early. It is easier to fix at the start than months into irritation.
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
2/ Skating forces the hip into deep flexion with internal rotation layered on top. If a player has a cam or pincer, the joint runs out of room.
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
3/ Over time that repeated contact irritates the labrum and cartilage. The athlete starts to feel stiffness, clicking, or loss of rotation. Most players try to stretch their way out of it. Stretching helps muscles, not bone. Technique and strength solve the real issue.
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
Why So Many Hockey Players Get Hip Pinching** A 🧵 1/ Hip pinching is one of the most common issues I see in hockey players. It is not random. It is usually a clear mechanical problem.
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
Your core and your groins work together. If one’s weak, the other works overtime. Side planks, Pallof presses, lower abs are not optional if you want to stay healthy.
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
This week's topic. The dreaded FAI 😎
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
Most warm-ups I see are useless. Hop on the bike, roll for 2mins, then hit the ice? Get real. Your groins and the rest of your body need activation. Wake them up after pre game nap!
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
Still not doing Copenhagen planks? They’ve been shown to cut groin injury risk by 40%. Two to three times per week. That’s it. No excuses.
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
One of the easiest red flags for groin risk? If your adductors are less than 80% as strong as your abductors. That’s a problem. Start squeezing them legs!
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
If you’re not training your adductors, you’re increasing your injury risk. It’s that simple. Add Copenhagens to your warm-up or your lift. Prevention is way easier than dealing with a strain mid-season.
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Dr. Jamie Phillips
Dr. Jamie Phillips@JamiePhillips30·
4/ The research on it is actually pretty solid. Copenhagens increase eccentric adductor strength and can cut groin injury risk by around 40 percent. It’s rare something this simple works that well.
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