Foot, Ankle, & Achilles Training

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Foot, Ankle, & Achilles Training

Brian Fox

 

Simple Training

In the lower leg, the calf area, there are several layers of tissue. Muscle tissue as well as layers of connective tissue (gastrocnemius, soleus, deep foot/toe flexors, plantar fascia, and achilles structures).

This training is a simple means of compressing training and time to affect these layers to make larger changes over time.

This training was filmed and performed from the achilles case I have written about in the past.

 

Anatomy and Trainable Elements

  • Joint workspace of the ankle
  • Capsular workspace of the ankle
  • Connective tissue architecture
  • CT load-bearing capacity. Behavioral qualities of the connective tissues.
  • Muscle tissue (fast/slow + conditioning or hypertrophic effects). In this instance we did 2 minutes of calf raises to produce slow-twitch conditioning-like effects.

This training emphasizes the connective tissue architecture of multiple layers (superficial to deep) and its ability to lengthen under load.

We begin in the most superficial layer and work our way deeper over time by changing the training position slightly.

After the 2.25-3 minutes of time under tension and at length, I like to train the regressive “stuff” of the foot (beware of cramping).

 

Training Solution

  1. Ankle CARs
  2. 45 seconds in three different positions. Continuous tension from superficial to deep and blending connective tissue inputs in with holding isometrics (HIMAs)
  3. 2 minutes of calf raises
  4. Ankle CARs holding a towel to work the toe and foot flexors

 

VIDEOS OF THIS ACTIONS CAN BE FOUND ON BRIAN’S SUBSTACK HERE.

 

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