Good reaction video, but it should be more about gym injuries less about you. I mean, You should be in small window and gym injuries @ full screen, not the opposite. The power of reaction vireo is that people want to see gym injuries with you, not you watching gym injuries 🙂 Stay strong ;-)
Fella in the thumbnail was my coach for a couple of years. He walked away from that stone landing on his chest, nothing but some scrapes and bruises, and was at the afterparty later that night. Nothing broken. Big Loz did an interview with him during the pandemic, if you want the details straight from the man himself.
The videos are absolutely brutal, but Mitchell went beyond the basic "oh my god that was terrible" reactions and provide solid advice for people, which makes all the difference. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
No, Larry did not know what he was doing there. His opponent was in an arm break position, Adam runs over to tell him "pull, don't side press" and in just that moment Larry moves to the side (it's as if he was doing what Adam was telling the other guy not to do). This is exactly why you wanna be super careful pulling beginners. I hope he learned from this.
i think he was saying that larry knows how to armwrestle and not necessarily the situation that he was in. in other words he has technique and strength.
@@jerppazz4525 That could very well be true, but I thought it's important to mention. Because if he was training with professionell armwrestlers, they would prevent him from breaking his arm.
@@strawberrysherbet96 true although breaking my back and neck young sucked it's helped me too self aware but it's inadvertently saved me from being stupid. I couldn't bend over at all in hs now I'm touching the floor with my nose no hands! I be doing light weight but high rep or super slow up and down and I feel great. Would like to bulk up some but I need to lean out before anything.
@mitchellhooperstrongman, that’s me in the deadlift section! I was watching your vids this week gearing up for my first strongman comp and there I was. Absolutely geeked over it! You are an inspiration and wealth of knowledge.
@@crendler9912you'd be surprised. Combat sports are not that injurious. I actually had a lot more injuries from casual basketball than from kickboxing. In fact, sprained ankle from glancing kicks are the only injuries I got from it.
I really don't understand why people overload the leg press like that. The advantage of the leg press is that you can do high rep sets and get a deep stretch without wearing out your cardiovascular system.
There's not and there will never be a leg press competition, because of how unsafe the machine potentially is with big loads. Anyone who does this is immature and clearly doesnt take strength training seriously.
Sure.. but Once you torn them ligaments.. bearing your whole body on that leg one leg when you're standing will not feel the same again. And It'll gave you a dull ache, then later, It'll get inflamed as a bonus!. I now carry a stylish umbrella in case of needing to stand on longer, for let's say.. waiting in line as the results now..
This deserves so much subscribers such a gentleman and polite and the MEGA plus part is he’s a strong man an has awesome trophies he has my support much love💯💪
Trying to teach myself how to use straps efficiently specifically because of 11:02-on. Every now and then with an over-under grip, the under-grip arm almost reflexively starts to pull up. I figured the safest thing to do was just drop the bar and start the lift over, focusing on keeping the arms perfectly straight.
I don't get why people ego lift at the leg press, that guy had knee wraps, used his arms for support and only did 1/4 reps. No one will be impressed by that and he will gain little to no strenght/muscle at all.
Leg press is a hypertrophy movement for me, as deep as possible, in the nasty 10-20 rep range to near failure. I'm fortunately so stiff that I can't even lock out. I'll make it work with 2-3 red plates on our leg press, not much past what I can currently squat. Hurts like crazy in the right ways, but it feels pretty safe.
I saw a guy doing almost this exact thing (minus the injury) last time I was in the gym. His upper body looked like he had been working out for awhile, but it stuck out to me that he had tons of weight on the press despite having very thin looking thighs. I'm fairly new to all of this, but it didn't seem to match up with the advice that folks like Dr. Mike and Jeff give.
@@espenstoroTHIS! The leg press is an accesory. It should never be at the start of any workout. Testing your max when youre locked in place is never a good idea.
Had that bicep tear last summer. I'm a stickler for form inside the gym, so of course it happened elsewhere. I will note I was a bit dehydrated at the time which I think contributed to it.
Keep these videos up Mitch, great video and great info. These videos showcase you knowledge of the sport and the medical knowledge you possess, besides being extremely informative and helpful. The more knowledge you have the less likely it is to be injured in the gym and outside of it as well.
The text isn't readable (maybe it needs impact style font) but I only noticed after I stopped cringing from the pain. Props for including your own injury.
I clicked on this video because I want to support your channel but I didn't watch it yet because I was about to train chest🤣🤣 Btw the stone lifting tutorial from the other day was great! Super interesting. I didn't know that there was that much prep that went into it.
@@mitchellhooperstrongman Hopefully you didn't have to train right after your video editor had you watch those! Great video! I remember watching JF's log injury live :( That was terrible. There are so many lifting fail videos on the internet sometimes it seems like people are rupturing bicep tendons left and right, but in reality its a safer sport then most. Thanks for sharing those stats. It should encourage people to take up lifting if anything!
4:38 I was in a comp where the organizers decided to do an atlas load to platforms where the athletes were on opposite sides of the platform. A stone is loaded by one guy, none of the people that were supposed to be paying attention did, so the stone rolls over and off of the platform on the other side where the other atlete is bent over a stone. Thankfully it only hit him on the shoulder. Had it been a few inches to one side, the guy would have gotten his head crushed between 2 atlas stones.
I had a somewhat related injury to my ankle (to your injury in the stone lift) when I slipped on an ice patch nestled inside a tire rut. Normally, the foot should have slipped all the way sideways, but it got stopped by the 'wall' of the rut. I went down with an outward rotation of the lower leg or calf. I heard a loud crack as my ankle sustained an incomplete Pott's Fracture (only the fibula snapped, not the lower end of the tibia as well). Also, the stabilizing ligament that attaches the fibula to the lower tibia was completely avulsed. I described it to my doctor as a reverse ankle sprain! Took a year and a half to a full recovery. I used to go to many gyms in the seventies and eighties, and I only once saw a bad injury. There was a guy doing heavy medial rotations (while lying supine) to build the strength of his subscapularis side pressure for arm wrestling, and he snapped his upper arm with a 130 lb dumbbell.
Broke my tib/fib right leg twice 1st time jumped a flight of stairs compounded 2nd time was dirt biking in the mountains foot slipped off in front of the foot peg as i hit a rut and it folded my boot in half backwards, Stars air ambulance came and got me
Plenty of armwrestlers who have broken arms all say it actually turned into an advantage afterwards as that boje heals stronger than it was before. But this can be avoided by using good proper armwrestling technique. Proper technique and you're almost 100% gaurenteed you won't break you're arm
Fantastic video, great jo!! One thing though, I'd like to know more about though is the metrics of the study you mention, ie physical level of participants (athelete, average joe etc), size of study group, timeline covered etc
Had to physically put something over the part of the screen with the videos to watch. You made me really glad I didn't see any of it by your reactions😂also when is your squatting moose tattoo coming?👀
Could handle all the injuries until the last one. That one was truly horrifying, something you would see out of a movie with special effects, except it was real.
On the old fashioned squat (with the tom platz look alike), if you watch the video from that day, you'll hear the Late great Terry Todd talk about how this was way too much weight for him. He had just previously missed a prior attempt. I think he decided to add like 30 kg on to his failed weight
1:08 I would say that bodybuilding, done well, science based all that jazz, is safer. Because you're basically trying to achieve the greatest stimulus with lower loads. More full range of motion and controlled repetition, which over time reduces the probability of injury, more than a powerlifting style, faster, more explosive, and heavier loads.
I think pulling trucks and planes is a lot safer than the fridge carrying. Instead of having a vertical load on the joints and trying to move perpendicular to the load, pulling events have a load parallel to the ground, and its a lot harder to lod it incorrectly and itlf you cant support it, it just doesnt move.
Knees bother me so bad. Watching the dude doing leg press you know he had no business at all on that. I will use my hands if everything else is planted as feelers but never for extra help that's just asking for trouble when you start cheating.
Powerlifting being the safest of the sports shown actually makes a lot of sense if we look at the actual kind of activity. Basketball (and Netball), Tennis, Squash, Soccer, Hockey (I asume they are talking about field hockey here) and Rugby all are sports where you often rapidly change directions all the time, jumping a lot, having almost constantchanges of pace... All of that obviously leads to something (most likely your ankles, knees or any other part of your lower extramities) has to give eventually. Fun fact: Soccer, Basketball and Handball are actually the sports with the most joint injuries, for obvious reasons. I for example just started playing Handball this year You know: Constantly running up and down the field, stopping, pivoting, twisting and juming. During one of those jumps I landed akwardly last week in practice, rolling my ankle... turns out I sustain a strain and a sprain in my left ankle and I won't be back in practice until fucking the middle of october, missing what was supossed to be my first ever matches (as well as thinning out a roster, which wasn't even that wide to begin with)...
I broke my t9 t10 verts when i was young and found the gym after graduationg and its helped a ton but the worry of my back is holding me back. Best thing ive found is working on stabilizer muscles, farmer walking with 2 different weights.
Should've had Tempa's bilateral quad tear on here. That was ghastly. Also, that arm wrestling one didn't look like a radial fx. It looked like an ulnar dislocation and possible medial collateral ligament injury.
I'm a 22 yo 120 kg man . I've been training for 3 years , but my deadlift and squat haven't improve from 160 and 140 kg . It has been 2 years of dealing with such problem. My technique and form is ok but don't get stronger anymore
Are you bracing properly? Are you eating enough? Are you drinking enough water? What type of deadlift? What accessories for posterior chain are you doing? Could you be doing them at the end of your workout and be fatigued?
Just take roids joking 😂 Your likely over training take a step back and do volume like 3 by 5s and start at like 50% of your max up the weight by 5-10kg each week
That last video is why I will never do anything over 1k lbs on a leg press outside of doing a single 4 digit. I'd rather do lower weight, controlled reps for muscle gain/maint instead of trying to go all out on bad form.
I got a spiral fracture on my right humerus while drunk arm wrestling and he’s totally right guys, the bone can reach an artery or, in my case, the radial nerve. Luckily almost 3 years later I’m even stronger than before but it was super painful at the moment and also the rehab process later.
I wish I could say that was the worst arm-wrestling injury I've ever seen. I broke my friend's arm this way earlier this year, and he violently shook. Luckily, the spiral fracture did not leave any splinters, and as bad as the break was, he did not need surgery. Probably shouldn't arm wrestle again.
lol, shaw and eddie doing reaction vid's, see you hoped on that wagon too haha, good stuff mitch (regarding atlas stones, obviously Tom's the GOAT atm on those but i've seen how he goes with the side grip on the heavier 240/250 kg stones, just curious of your opinion as to why tom might resort to that grip with the heavier atlas)
@mitchellhooper the first Atlas stone guy passed out, and he didn't shatter his arm, he just had a scrape. He was VERY LUCKY. can confirm nothing happened to him.
1:15 I do not remember the specifics or the name of the study, so take this with a grain of salt but to my knowledge, this also depends on the way you define injury. Iirc, this study defined injury as stopping you from training for or participating in your sport (for a certain period of time?) but aches and nagging injuries that are still an issue but don't take you out were not considered. Another study found strength sports to be some of the riskier sports you could do when it comes to these chronic issues like knee pain etc. But again, I don't remember the specifics, I read this years ago.
This is missing the clip of a woman doing a legpress and getting her knees completely caved in. Thats a fear that i will never overcome in my life and its the reason i will never lock out on a legpress.
Yeah, that one's a rough watch...honestly, it looked to me like her knees are hypermobile. Any kind of excess mobility past straight alignment is very dangerous under load, hopefully everyone who can move their joint past normal extension knows to keep a healthy bend just in case. Plus, it keeps the joint from taking load off the muscle, which is just good for training anyway.
Totally watchable man, just peek behind your hands for anything that you are worried about. Excellent advice.given.in this.vid, strongly reccomend checking it out
The powerlifting "safety" stat is hugely misleading, as it goes by "hours of participation" when powerlifting has an inherently low level of participation time compared to many sports". You need to go by ' per event' ( 1 powerlift meet vs. 1 soccer game) to get a better picture
If I recall right, the blonde crazyman failed his previous weight attempt and decided to jump to a damn WR weight as his next attempt. Even the announcers say like "This is a bad idea" and here we have the horrible result :/
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Good reaction video, but it should be more about gym injuries less about you. I mean, You should be in small window and gym injuries @ full screen, not the opposite. The power of reaction vireo is that people want to see gym injuries with you, not you watching gym injuries 🙂 Stay strong ;-)
@alalik8586 except for the whole it's his RUclips page thing. Lol
Fella in the thumbnail was my coach for a couple of years. He walked away from that stone landing on his chest, nothing but some scrapes and bruises, and was at the afterparty later that night. Nothing broken. Big Loz did an interview with him during the pandemic, if you want the details straight from the man himself.
Now that's insanely Lucky. Happy for him. It felt so painful just to watch.
I havent watched the video because of the thumbnail 🤣
Came to the comments to find out if its too much gore or not
Wait a little bit, he’s gonna feel it
Must have an angel watching over him
big z stood up and asked the stone if it was ok
The videos are absolutely brutal, but Mitchell went beyond the basic "oh my god that was terrible" reactions and provide solid advice for people, which makes all the difference. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Mitchell: *shows a disturbing injury*
Also Mitchell: "if you look closely"
NO Mitchell!! I'm not going to!!
I had to look away a couple times bc of his “I’m going to watch that at .25 speed now.”
Loving the tips, but I have to look away for most of them. 😢
"If you watch closely..."
I DON'T! 😭
right.
I looked away at first on a couple of them when i knew what was coming, but ended up watching when he replayed it. Gnarly nasty stuff.
No, Larry did not know what he was doing there. His opponent was in an arm break position, Adam runs over to tell him "pull, don't side press" and in just that moment Larry moves to the side (it's as if he was doing what Adam was telling the other guy not to do).
This is exactly why you wanna be super careful pulling beginners. I hope he learned from this.
i think he was saying that larry knows how to armwrestle and not necessarily the situation that he was in. in other words he has technique and strength.
@@jerppazz4525 That could very well be true, but I thought it's important to mention.
Because if he was training with professionell armwrestlers, they would prevent him from breaking his arm.
@@HorstEwaldyeah, I kinda wish he didn’t covered this topic, because I think it leads to arm wrestling being greatly misunderstood.
@@youtubeenjoyer1350 I actually don't have a problem with that. Money ruins every sport. AW can stay niche for all I care
Injuries is 100% my biggest fear. Strongman and competing is my whole life I can’t imagine not being able to do it for an extended period of time
How long have you been training for? I broke my back at a younger age and it hold me back from trying to hard in the gym but wanna go for it moreso
@@Professionalminutestealer been training 4 years but strongman specific for nearly 2
@@Movielover123451 good shit keep on keepin on hope you hit all the goals you set out fir yourself!
I think everyone in every sport are afraid. Injuries set u back hard. Now I train for longevity no more ego lifting. Just one step at a time.
@@strawberrysherbet96 true although breaking my back and neck young sucked it's helped me too self aware but it's inadvertently saved me from being stupid. I couldn't bend over at all in hs now I'm touching the floor with my nose no hands! I be doing light weight but high rep or super slow up and down and I feel great. Would like to bulk up some but I need to lean out before anything.
@mitchellhooperstrongman, that’s me in the deadlift section! I was watching your vids this week gearing up for my first strongman comp and there I was. Absolutely geeked over it! You are an inspiration and wealth of knowledge.
Oh man, I felt every bit of that knee dislocation on the fridge carry!
seen many of this clips before, but I love hearing the breakdown of the injury and how to avoid said injuries while still performing the lift 👍
That little research paper at the beginning forgot cheerleading and gymnastics lol. Lot of injuries in those two sports
Definitely
Not to mention American football.
@@TearTheRoof0ff I am sure UFC has a lot.
@crendler9912 for sure, the sport is basically learning how to manage getting injured, while injuring others 😂
@@crendler9912you'd be surprised. Combat sports are not that injurious. I actually had a lot more injuries from casual basketball than from kickboxing. In fact, sprained ankle from glancing kicks are the only injuries I got from it.
I really don't understand why people overload the leg press like that. The advantage of the leg press is that you can do high rep sets and get a deep stretch without wearing out your cardiovascular system.
That was some ultimate ego lifting, he probably should have used like a quarter of the weight in there, so the reason is mostly idiocy
There's not and there will never be a leg press competition, because of how unsafe the machine potentially is with big loads.
Anyone who does this is immature and clearly doesnt take strength training seriously.
@@ValDJesus What about the Shaw Classic leg press for reps.
Hmmmmm I've got a strong stomach but watching this on my lunch break is not a good idea lmao
Try to watch It better before sleep as I'm doing right now 😉
someone gave me a tip before to never lock your knees straight on leg presses... always leave some kind of minimal bend on the knees...
Watching this on my deload week
Wow, knees are way more flexible than I thought!
As someone that has torn their ACL in both knees, i can personally attest to that
Sure.. but Once you torn them ligaments.. bearing your whole body on that leg one leg when you're standing will not feel the same again. And It'll gave you a dull ache, then later, It'll get inflamed as a bonus!. I now carry a stylish umbrella in case of needing to stand on longer, for let's say.. waiting in line as the results now..
I'm literally sitting in the gym listening to this while lifting lol
This has made me recall my past injuries which I did not want to rehash in my mind
This deserves so much subscribers such a gentleman and polite and the MEGA plus part is he’s a strong man an has awesome trophies he has my support much love💯💪
Trying to teach myself how to use straps efficiently specifically because of 11:02-on. Every now and then with an over-under grip, the under-grip arm almost reflexively starts to pull up. I figured the safest thing to do was just drop the bar and start the lift over, focusing on keeping the arms perfectly straight.
That's why I always take squatting and leg-pressing very seriously and don't mess around with form.
I don't get why people ego lift at the leg press, that guy had knee wraps, used his arms for support and only did 1/4 reps. No one will be impressed by that and he will gain little to no strenght/muscle at all.
Just not worth going that heavy if you’re not looking to professionally compete.
Leg press is a hypertrophy movement for me, as deep as possible, in the nasty 10-20 rep range to near failure. I'm fortunately so stiff that I can't even lock out. I'll make it work with 2-3 red plates on our leg press, not much past what I can currently squat. Hurts like crazy in the right ways, but it feels pretty safe.
I saw a guy doing almost this exact thing (minus the injury) last time I was in the gym. His upper body looked like he had been working out for awhile, but it stuck out to me that he had tons of weight on the press despite having very thin looking thighs. I'm fairly new to all of this, but it didn't seem to match up with the advice that folks like Dr. Mike and Jeff give.
@@espenstoroTHIS!
The leg press is an accesory. It should never be at the start of any workout. Testing your max when youre locked in place is never a good idea.
Every time someone trains with Larry their risk of injury increases to 99.9 %.
Had that bicep tear last summer. I'm a stickler for form inside the gym, so of course it happened elsewhere. I will note I was a bit dehydrated at the time which I think contributed to it.
Keep these videos up Mitch, great video and great info.
These videos showcase you knowledge of the sport and the medical knowledge you possess, besides being extremely informative and helpful.
The more knowledge you have the less likely it is to be injured in the gym and outside of it as well.
The text isn't readable (maybe it needs impact style font) but I only noticed after I stopped cringing from the pain. Props for including your own injury.
Imagine the hamstring stretch on the last clip
The hypertrophy is off the charts
I clicked on this video because I want to support your channel but I didn't watch it yet because I was about to train chest🤣🤣
Btw the stone lifting tutorial from the other day was great! Super interesting. I didn't know that there was that much prep that went into it.
Wise choice waiting to watch 😂! Glad to hear you enjoyed the stones video!
@@mitchellhooperstrongman Hopefully you didn't have to train right after your video editor had you watch those! Great video! I remember watching JF's log injury live :( That was terrible. There are so many lifting fail videos on the internet sometimes it seems like people are rupturing bicep tendons left and right, but in reality its a safer sport then most. Thanks for sharing those stats. It should encourage people to take up lifting if anything!
4:38 I was in a comp where the organizers decided to do an atlas load to platforms where the athletes were on opposite sides of the platform.
A stone is loaded by one guy, none of the people that were supposed to be paying attention did, so the stone rolls over and off of the platform on the other side where the other atlete is bent over a stone.
Thankfully it only hit him on the shoulder. Had it been a few inches to one side, the guy would have gotten his head crushed between 2 atlas stones.
I knew this would make me feel sick, but watched it anyway.
I had a somewhat related injury to my ankle (to your injury in the stone lift) when I slipped on an ice patch nestled inside a tire rut. Normally, the foot should have slipped all the way sideways, but it got stopped by the 'wall' of the rut. I went down with an outward rotation of the lower leg or calf. I heard a loud crack as my ankle sustained an incomplete Pott's Fracture (only the fibula snapped, not the lower end of the tibia as well). Also, the stabilizing ligament that attaches the fibula to the lower tibia was completely avulsed. I described it to my doctor as a reverse ankle sprain! Took a year and a half to a full recovery.
I used to go to many gyms in the seventies and eighties, and I only once saw a bad injury. There was a guy doing heavy medial rotations (while lying supine) to build the strength of his subscapularis side pressure for arm wrestling, and he snapped his upper arm with a 130 lb dumbbell.
That bicep tear is why you never do mixed grip
Would have loved to hear more about bicep tears in other events than deadlift, such as tire flip and stones which are very common in strongman.
Broke my tib/fib right leg twice 1st time jumped a flight of stairs compounded 2nd time was dirt biking in the mountains foot slipped off in front of the foot peg as i hit a rut and it folded my boot in half backwards, Stars air ambulance came and got me
Franco's injury makes me ill every time I see it. My knee did that playing rugby once- horrific in every way believe me
Plenty of armwrestlers who have broken arms all say it actually turned into an advantage afterwards as that boje heals stronger than it was before. But this can be avoided by using good proper armwrestling technique. Proper technique and you're almost 100% gaurenteed you won't break you're arm
"This guy clearly had no business doing this much weight" will be on my tombstone
Thanks for the video, couldn't watch most of the injuries.
11:10 The fact that the ref let him hold that for like 4 more seconds is almost criminal, what on earth ...
A fridge super yoke would be the closest thing to that era and much safer.
The appellation for this kind of episode should be “Ask Dr. Hooper.”
Thanks for the study
Fantastic video, great jo!! One thing though, I'd like to know more about though is the metrics of the study you mention, ie physical level of participants (athelete, average joe etc), size of study group, timeline covered etc
I've watched the Franco vs Fridge clip, literally a thousand times probably.....and it still ain't easy watching his leg go "ziggy zag" 😱
Had to physically put something over the part of the screen with the videos to watch. You made me really glad I didn't see any of it by your reactions😂also when is your squatting moose tattoo coming?👀
The last one just reminded me of the scene in rick and morty where Morty breaks his legs 😭
The squat I believe is Paul Jordan 1977 worlds. (760 lb squat)
He competed once more in 1979 with a 711/507/677.
I guess he recovered fairly well!
If i remember correctly he failed his previous squat and still decided to make a big jump in weight for his next attempt.
@@lucavanantwerpen3752 that’s insane.
apparently he started training race horses
Could handle all the injuries until the last one. That one was truly horrifying, something you would see out of a movie with special effects, except it was real.
Glad i watched this AFTER maxing on bench.
The blonde guy screaming before he did his rep had me laughing, but then I saw what happened, and OW! Dude's body crumbled and bent in new directions.
On the old fashioned squat (with the tom platz look alike), if you watch the video from that day, you'll hear the Late great Terry Todd talk about how this was way too much weight for him. He had just previously missed a prior attempt. I think he decided to add like 30 kg on to his failed weight
1:08
I would say that bodybuilding, done well, science based all that jazz, is safer.
Because you're basically trying to achieve the greatest stimulus with lower loads. More full range of motion and controlled repetition, which over time reduces the probability of injury, more than a powerlifting style, faster, more explosive, and heavier loads.
I think pulling trucks and planes is a lot safer than the fridge carrying. Instead of having a vertical load on the joints and trying to move perpendicular to the load, pulling events have a load parallel to the ground, and its a lot harder to lod it incorrectly and itlf you cant support it, it just doesnt move.
That last one was rough.
Knees bother me so bad. Watching the dude doing leg press you know he had no business at all on that. I will use my hands if everything else is planted as feelers but never for extra help that's just asking for trouble when you start cheating.
Those were gross. Exactly the reason I'm not trying to do too much with my injured shoulder right now.
Watching injuries isn't that bad, but hearing them is another story 💀
Powerlifting being the safest of the sports shown actually makes a lot of sense if we look at the actual kind of activity. Basketball (and Netball), Tennis, Squash, Soccer, Hockey (I asume they are talking about field hockey here) and Rugby all are sports where you often rapidly change directions all the time, jumping a lot, having almost constantchanges of pace... All of that obviously leads to something (most likely your ankles, knees or any other part of your lower extramities) has to give eventually. Fun fact: Soccer, Basketball and Handball are actually the sports with the most joint injuries, for obvious reasons. I for example just started playing Handball this year You know: Constantly running up and down the field, stopping, pivoting, twisting and juming. During one of those jumps I landed akwardly last week in practice, rolling my ankle... turns out I sustain a strain and a sprain in my left ankle and I won't be back in practice until fucking the middle of october, missing what was supossed to be my first ever matches (as well as thinning out a roster, which wasn't even that wide to begin with)...
Nice video! Now I'm off to the gym.
i felt pain
The last one triggered my fight or flight and my gag reflex
I broke my t9 t10 verts when i was young and found the gym after graduationg and its helped a ton but the worry of my back is holding me back. Best thing ive found is working on stabilizer muscles, farmer walking with 2 different weights.
With the atlas stone drop Craig was actually completely alright besides a little bit of bruising also it happened in Kitchener Ontario
Yup, that’s Max Boudreault’s coach
Should've had Tempa's bilateral quad tear on here. That was ghastly. Also, that arm wrestling one didn't look like a radial fx. It looked like an ulnar dislocation and possible medial collateral ligament injury.
I remember the fridge carry injury. I saw that on TV as a kid
I agree lifting is after than explosive sports. Weightlifting is a lot more controlled than sports where you change direction and explode rapidly.
That last one almost made me lose my lunch. I was just leg pressing this morning.
I gave myself tendonitis in my shoulder a month before a 1200 mile offroad motorcycle ride. I had to stop working out to let it heal.
shoulder tendonitis is a sneaky bitch. right when you think your good, your not. Thankfully PT is now my religion
I'm a 22 yo 120 kg man . I've been training for 3 years , but my deadlift and squat haven't improve from 160 and 140 kg . It has been 2 years of dealing with such problem. My technique and form is ok but don't get stronger anymore
Are you bracing properly? Are you eating enough? Are you drinking enough water? What type of deadlift? What accessories for posterior chain are you doing?
Could you be doing them at the end of your workout and be fatigued?
Just take roids joking 😂
Your likely over training take a step back and do volume like 3 by 5s and start at like 50% of your max up the weight by 5-10kg each week
That last video is why I will never do anything over 1k lbs on a leg press outside of doing a single 4 digit. I'd rather do lower weight, controlled reps for muscle gain/maint instead of trying to go all out on bad form.
I am an aspiring armwrestler, and you can completely avoid spiral pressure to the humorous by rotating with the pressure not against it
The leg press one, dudes leg became a straight up spaghetti 😭😭
Watching videos like these will make you throw a little caution into the wind.
I got a spiral fracture on my right humerus while drunk arm wrestling and he’s totally right guys, the bone can reach an artery or, in my case, the radial nerve. Luckily almost 3 years later I’m even stronger than before but it was super painful at the moment and also the rehab process later.
I wish I could say that was the worst arm-wrestling injury I've ever seen. I broke my friend's arm this way earlier this year, and he violently shook. Luckily, the spiral fracture did not leave any splinters, and as bad as the break was, he did not need surgery. Probably shouldn't arm wrestle again.
I actually have a fear of “Arm Wrestling”…
I don’t think I’ll ever do it again even messing with friends 😬
I popped something in my lower back and it’s the worst injury I’ve had lifting. It’s not just going to heal.
I would be curious to know how dangerous Crossfit is in comparison to powerlifting and the other sports on that list.
lol, shaw and eddie doing reaction vid's, see you hoped on that wagon too haha, good stuff mitch (regarding atlas stones, obviously Tom's the GOAT atm on those but i've seen how he goes with the side grip on the heavier 240/250 kg stones, just curious of your opinion as to why tom might resort to that grip with the heavier atlas)
Clicked video and liked for support. but can't watch this one lol
@mitchellhooper the first Atlas stone guy passed out, and he didn't shatter his arm, he just had a scrape. He was VERY LUCKY. can confirm nothing happened to him.
Man. Larry sure let go of that arm in a hurry. That had to feel awful
1:15 I do not remember the specifics or the name of the study, so take this with a grain of salt but to my knowledge, this also depends on the way you define injury. Iirc, this study defined injury as stopping you from training for or participating in your sport (for a certain period of time?) but aches and nagging injuries that are still an issue but don't take you out were not considered. Another study found strength sports to be some of the riskier sports you could do when it comes to these chronic issues like knee pain etc.
But again, I don't remember the specifics, I read this years ago.
This is missing the clip of a woman doing a legpress and getting her knees completely caved in.
Thats a fear that i will never overcome in my life and its the reason i will never lock out on a legpress.
Yeah, that one's a rough watch...honestly, it looked to me like her knees are hypermobile. Any kind of excess mobility past straight alignment is very dangerous under load, hopefully everyone who can move their joint past normal extension knows to keep a healthy bend just in case. Plus, it keeps the joint from taking load off the muscle, which is just good for training anyway.
When Z dropped the stone on himself I was worried for the stone!
Hard to watch while recovering from a fractured fibula 4 weeks post surgery
7:46 Franco competed in 1997 WSM 😆
Watched this before training
was about to watch this before training, see you later mitchell
I have really bad hyper extending, specially when I bench. It hasn't been a problem yet, I'm sure it will be in the future.
damn i didnt realize jf caron had retired, that sucks but the mans legs were destroyed, hamstring tear prior then double quad tear off
OOF....that last one geezus
you should make a second censored version of this video so i can watch it lol
Totally watchable man, just peek behind your hands for anything that you are worried about. Excellent advice.given.in this.vid, strongly reccomend checking it out
It's a good one to listen to for the tips.
This is why fridge carry should never be done again
You mean a midshaft fracture of the humerus which could damage the deep brachial artery and maybe the deep radial nerve.
I want to know more about the hand injury from this year... was this covered anywhere?
I want to hear Mitch’s thoughts but I can’t bare to watch the accidents 😅
The powerlifting "safety" stat is hugely misleading, as it goes by "hours of participation" when powerlifting has an inherently low level of participation time compared to many sports".
You need to go by ' per event' ( 1 powerlift meet vs. 1 soccer game) to get a better picture
If I recall right, the blonde crazyman failed his previous weight attempt and decided to jump to a damn WR weight as his next attempt. Even the announcers say like "This is a bad idea" and here we have the horrible result :/
"Never let really heavy weights fall on you." - Advice from me.