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  2. 5 easy exercises for your hips and hamstrings to alleviate ...

    www.aol.com/news/5-easy-exercises-hips...

    The hip flexors — the muscles that run along the front of the hip — become compressed and shortened. Over time, like a rubber band left untouched in a drawer for a year, they lose elasticity.

  3. List of weight training exercises - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_weight_training...

    The person bends forward and bows at the hips and recovers to upright. The good-morning is so called because the movement resembles bowing to greet someone. It involves the hamstrings but is primarily used to strengthen the lower back; the degree of knee bend used will change the focus – nearly straight-legged involving the hamstrings most.

  4. The 15 Best Core Workouts You Can Do at Home, No ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/15-best-core-workouts-home-100000707...

    This move will also help improve hip mobility. Common Mistakes: Arching your back, sagging your hips, hyperextending your hips, too much shifting/movement in the upper body. Step 1: Begin on all ...

  5. Plank (exercise) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plank_(exercise)

    Secondary: gluteus maximus (glutes), quadriceps (quads), and hamstrings. A study in British Journal of Sports Medicine of 270 trials found that isometric exercises which involve engaging muscles without movement, such as wall sits and planks, were more effective than other types of exercise for reducing blood pressure .

  6. Gluteal muscles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gluteal_muscles

    The gluteus maximus arises from the posterior gluteal line of the inner upper ilium, and the rough portion of bone including the crest, immediately above and behind it; from the posterior surface of the lower part of the sacrum and the side of the coccyx; from the aponeurosis of the erector spinae (lumbodorsal fascia), the sacrotuberous ligament, and the fascia covering the gluteus medius.

  7. Semimembranosus muscle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semimembranosus_muscle

    The semimembranosus muscle (/ ˌ s ɛ m i ˌ m ɛ m b r ə ˈ n oʊ s ə s /) is the most medial of the three hamstring muscles in the thigh. It is so named because it has a flat tendon of origin. It lies posteromedially in the thigh, deep to the semitendinosus muscle. It extends the hip joint and flexes the knee joint.

  8. Posterior compartment of thigh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posterior_compartment_of_thigh

    The hamstrings are innervated by the sciatic nerve, specifically by a main branch of it: the tibial nerve. (The short head of the biceps femoris is innervated by the common fibular nerve). The sciatic nerve runs along the longitudinal axis of the compartment, giving the cited terminal branches close to the superior angle of the popliteal fossa.

  9. Hamstringing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamstringing

    In humans, the hamstring extends between the hip and knee joints. The hamstring muscle group is made up of the biceps femoris, semitendinosus muscle, and the semimembranosus. [2] It facilitates both the flexing of the knee and hip extension, [3] making it a vital contributor to normal leg-movement. By severing these muscles or the tendons ...