Overlooked Uses for a J-Band – Part 1

About the Author: Eric Cressey

Go to just about any baseball field in America, and you’ll find Jaeger Bands (J-Bands). They’re well established as great tools for getting in some quality arm care – and doing so conveniently.

What you might not realize, though, is just how many exercises you can do beyond the traditional J-Band sequence. With that in mind, I thought I’d introduce ten exercises our guys often do with J-bands when they’re looking to step up their training while on the road. Today, we’ll cover the first five.

1. Chops and Lifts – Popularized by the innovative rehabilitation specialists at Functional Movement Systems, these exercises are awesome for teaching core stability as it relates to resisting excessive rotation through the lower back. Depending on the height of the band, too, they can also challenge an athlete’s ability to resist extension (too much arching of the lower back).

2. 1-arm Rotational Row w/Weight Shift – I absolutely love this drill for guys who have poor extension down the mound and need to learn to accept force on the front leg. The goal is to get in and out of the front hip – and also learn how to “sync” this loading/unloading up with proper movement of the thoracic spine, scapula, and arm.

3. Lateral Lunge w/Band Overhead Reach – Similar to the chops and lifts from above, you get great core recruitment in resisting extension and rotation, but in this drill, we also add some additional upper body and hip mobility challenges.

4. Serratus Wall Slides w/J-Band – I love me some serratus activation drills – and the J-Band is a great way to progress these exercises. Before you try it with a J-Band, though, give it a shot with a foam roller using these cues:

Then, grab your J-Band and go to town on a dugout wall. If you don’t feel “cleaner” scap movement at ball release, I’ll be stunned.

5. Side Bridge w/Band-Resisted Hip Extension – Side Bridges are some of the best lateral core exercises there are – but some folks will do them with incomplete hip extension, thereby falling into a faulty stabilization pattern that overrelies on the hip flexors. I like using the band to teach that terminal hip extension. To make this challenging, do them “high-tension” style: brace as hard as you can, squeeze the glutes together like you’re trying to crush walnuts between your buttcheeks, and exhale as hard as you can. If you’re doing them correct, you should be struggling by the end of five breaths – and you’ll probably gain some hip internal rotation in the process.

That does it for part 1! I’ll be back in a few days with five more creative uses for a J-Band. In the meantime, you can pick up a J-Band at https://www.jaegersports.com/J-Bands-Cressey/.

*A big thanks to Marlins pitcher Tyler Kinley for the help with demonstrations for this article!

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