hello, to all of you..
i have had the book, stretching scientifically( printing 3), by mr.kurz, for quite some time...and i have been able to do the side splits ( in the manner of toes pointing up) for a very long time, to where my thighs can touch to the wall when my back is against the wall...my question is, when is it considerd a full split?? what is the degree, 170-180-or more???
i could not find the answer in the book.
also i am thinking about getting the new fourth edition, is it "better"???
any help would be great.
thank you all for your time
chris
what is full side split degree wise ( 180 or higher)
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thanks, russI always believed it to be when your thighs touch the floor. As in 180 degrees.
is that in the side splits with toes pointing up..it seems that all the references on degrees of splits, all seems to talk about the type that kurz does with the innerthighs touching the ground..
maybe im missing something..
dont know,..
thanks for the reply
chris wright
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I think a normal range for toes up for a normal range is not 180.
The only reason why a toes down split looks flat is because of the 'give' in the knees (look at the photo at the top of the forum).
So with toes up if you had one foot and you butt on the wall (with your back to the wall) your other foot shouldn't touch the wall - this is for the normal range - I think.
But then again everyone is different, especially if you started training at a young age where elongation of tendons was possible.
The only reason why a toes down split looks flat is because of the 'give' in the knees (look at the photo at the top of the forum).
So with toes up if you had one foot and you butt on the wall (with your back to the wall) your other foot shouldn't touch the wall - this is for the normal range - I think.
But then again everyone is different, especially if you started training at a young age where elongation of tendons was possible.
Matt
If you always done what you always did, you will always get what you always got.
If you always done what you always did, you will always get what you always got.