Hip flexors - the most underdeveloped muscle group in strength
training
Despite their importance to a wide range of athletic and
sporting activities, the hip flexors are the most neglected
major muscle group in strength training. It is very rare to find
training programs that include hip flexor exercises. By contrast
there is usually a great deal of emphasis on exercises for the
leg extensors.
There are some obvious reasons for this comparative neglect. The
principal muscles involved in hip flexion are the psoas and the
iliacus, collectively known as the iliopsoas. Because they are
relatively deep-seated rather than surface muscles they may have
been overlooked by bodybuilders who have traditionally been the
major innovators in strength training. Secondly, there are no
obvious ways to adequately exercise them with free weights.
Finally, these muscles do not have the obvious functional
importance of their extensor counterparts. Yet, as antagonists,
both hip and knee flexors perform a vital role in controlling
the rate of descent and ascent in leg extension exercises such
as the squat.
There is no corresponding problem of underdevelopment with the
muscles responsible for knee joint flexion, the hamstring group.
Because they cross two joints they are active in both leg
extension and leg flexion. They act to flex the knee joint and
also to extend the hip joint. Therefore they tend to be
strengthened by complex leg extension exercises. Also hamstrings
can be developed and strengthened through the use of the leg
curl apparatus.
Strong hip flexors provide an advantage in a wide range of
sports and athletic activities. In sprinting high knee lift is
associated with increased stride length and therefore
considerable attention is given to exercising the hip flexors.
However, they are usually not exercised against resistance and
consequently there is unlikely to be any appreciable strength
increase.
Hip flexor strength is directly relevant to a range of
activities in football. Kicking a ball is a complex coordinated
action involving simultaneous knee extension and hip flexion, so
developing a more powerful kick requires exercises applicable to
these muscle groups. Strong hip flexors can also be very
advantageous in the tackle situation in American football and
both rugby union and rugby league where a player is attempting
to take further steps forward with an opposing player clinging
to his legs.
In addition those players in American football and rugby who
have massively developed quadriceps and gluteus muscles are
often unable to generate rapid knee lift and hence tend to
shuffle around the field. Having stronger flexors would
significantly improve their mobility.
It is commonly asserted that marked strength disparity between
hip extensors and hip flexors may be a contributing factor in
hamstring injuries in footballers. It is interesting to
speculate on whether hip extensor/flexor imbalance might also be
associated with the relatively high incidence of groin injuries.
Other sports where increased iliopsoas strength would appear to
offer benefits include cycling, rowing and mountain climbing, in
particular when scaling rock faces.
The problem in developing hip flexor strength has been the lack
of appropriate exercises. Two that have traditionally been used
for this muscle group are incline sit-ups and hanging leg
raises, but in both cases the resistance is basically provided
by the exerciser's own body weight. As a consequence these
exercises can make only a very limited contribution to actually
strengthening the flexors.
Until now the only weighted resistance equipment employed for
this purpose has been the multi-hip type machine. When using
this multi-function apparatus for hip flexion the exerciser
pushes with the lower thigh against a padded roller which swings
in an arc. One difficulty with this apparatus is that the
position of the hip joint is not fixed and thus it is difficult
to maintain correct form when using heavy weights or lifting the
thigh above the horizontal.
With the release of the MyoQuip HipneeFlex there is now a
machine specifically designed to develop and strengthen the leg
flexors. It exercises both hip and knee flexors simultaneously
from full extension to full flexion. Because the biomechanical
efficiency of these joints decreases in moving from extension to
flexion, the mechanism is configured to provide decreasing
resistance throughout the exercise movement and thus appropriate
loading to both sets of flexors.
The absence until now of effective techniques for developing the
hip flexors means that we do not really know what benefits would
flow from their full development. However, given that in elite
sport comparatively minor performance improvements can translate
into contest supremacy, it is an area that offers great
potential.