Are shoulder injuries caused solely by improper stroke mechanics? Can we avoid all pain using perfect technique? Can we throw away the ice pack forever? Or can shoulder pain be caused by other factors as well? Vote if you have an opinion.
In 34 years of coaching I've seen no evidence fly is "hard on shoulders." You may even have technique that's less sound than you think.
I would much rather be doing this :hug:. I think I'm actually on record as praising Terry for his advice, interest and coaching in many other threads. Indeed, I think I've told others to follow his technical advice to avoid injury. I would be happy to do :hug: here too if I hadn't been scolded for being a bad lawyer and told that 34 years of coaching trumps anything I might say about fly.
In 34 years of coaching I've seen no evidence fly is "hard on shoulders." You may even have technique that's less sound than you think.
I would much rather be doing this :hug:. I think I'm actually on record as praising Terry for his advice, interest and coaching in many other threads. Indeed, I think I've told others to follow his technical advice to avoid injury. I would be happy to do :hug: here too if I hadn't been scolded for being a bad lawyer and told that 34 years of coaching trumps anything I might say about fly.