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  2. The 8 Best Warm-Up Exercises for Your Entire Body - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/8-best-warm-exercises-entire...

    These pre-workout moves will ensure you crush your next training session. These pre-workout moves will ensure you crush your next training session. Skip to main content. Sign in. Mail. 24/7 Help ...

  3. Warming up - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warming_up

    Players of Legends Football League do a warm-up exercise, US 'Warming up' is a part of stretching and preparation for physical exertion or a performance by exercising or practicing gently beforehand, usually undertaken before a performance or practice. Athletes, singers, actors and others warm up before stressing their muscles.

  4. Michael Yessis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Yessis

    In 1975, he and athlete Fred Wilt coined the term plyometrics while observing Soviet athletes warming up. [2] In 1982, Yessis traveled to the Soviet Union to work with Yuri Verkhoshansky, a biomechanist and sports trainer. [citation needed] Yessis' teaching career focused on a performance-based version of sports conditioning and training. [3]

  5. Strength training - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strength_training

    A warm-up may include cardiovascular activity such as light stationary biking (a "pulse raiser"), flexibility and joint mobility exercises, static and/or dynamic stretching, "passive warm up" such as applying heat pads or taking a hot shower, and workout-specific warm-up, [8] such as rehearsal of the intended exercise with no weights or light ...

  6. Easy Warm-Up Exercises to Do, Based on Your Workout - AOL

    www.aol.com/easy-warm-exercises-based-workout...

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  7. Plyometrics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plyometrics

    Plyometrics, also known as jump training or plyos, are exercises in which muscles exert maximum force in short intervals of time, with the goal of increasing power (speed-strength). This training focuses on learning to move from a muscle extension to a contraction in a rapid or "explosive" manner, such as in specialized repeated jumping. [ 1 ]

  8. Radio calisthenics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_calisthenics

    The idea for radio broadcast calisthenics came from "setting-up exercises" broadcast in US radio stations as early as 1923 in Boston (in WGI). [1] The longest-lasting of these setting-up exercise broadcasts was sponsored by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (now MetLife), which sponsored the setting-up exercise broadcasts in WEAF in New York which premiered in April 1925. [1]

  9. Aerobic exercise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerobic_exercise

    Aerobic exercise and fitness can be contrasted with anaerobic exercise, of which strength training and short-distance running are the most salient examples. The two types of exercise differ by the duration and intensity of muscular contractions involved, as well as by how energy is generated within the muscle. [ 34 ]