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Fascia is the Missing Link: Is this Why Lacrosse Players Get Hurt?
Fascia actually transmits force, stores elastic energy, and fully determines how efficiently the body moves. When fascia is healthy, movement feels smooth and powerful. When fascia is restricted, the body loses elasticity, timing breaks down, and injury risk skyrockets.
Mark Wine CSCS
Feb 225 min read


STRENGTH and Lacrosse: Athletes Break Down Without It‼️
as much as you might think strength is not about size, it is about force control. Every sprint, cut, shot, and collision places massive stress on joints, tendons, and connective tissue. If the body cannot absorb and redirect that force efficiently, something has to give. Usually it’s the hamstring, the groin, the hip flexor, the knee, or the low back. All of these injuries are predictable outcomes of weak links (hips & glutes) being exposed at game speed.
Mark Wine CSCS
Feb 164 min read


SPEED → Why Lacrosse Athletes Need Speed Training!!
Lacrosse is not an endurance sport, no matter how much running is built into practices. It is a sprinting (power) sport. Short bursts of acceleration, sudden deceleration, violent changes of direction, and rapid re-acceleration define this game. Watch film, do it, and count how often an athlete moves at a steady pace for longer than 20 seconds. Almost never. The game lives in five-second bursts.
Mark Wine CSCS
Feb 94 min read
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