My perspective on the BOSU

Some of you may be familiar with the sarcastic remark I make on occasion about those in our industry that feel functional training means doing a one-legged stance on a Dynadisc or BOSU with the eyes closed, singing the Star Spangled Banner while holding a puppy overhead. If taken the wrong way, you might think I was anti balance devices. That couldn’t be farther from the truth.In fact, the inventor of the BOSU, my friend Dave Weck was at a talk I was doing here in San Diego in the spring. I made a similar comment regarding the puppy, etc. and Dave called me out on it. It was then that I realized that there might be a perception that I was not a fan of the BOSU or other air balance devices.

Dave is helping me with the development of my own balance device (and there is NOTHING like it available!). During a visit, Dave asked me to put my perspective down on paper. He asked me because there are hard line trainers and coaches out there that have put out a lot of negative comments about the BOSU. Which is absolutely ridiculous. So they following article is what I wrote putting things in perspective.

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A BOSU Believer

By

Anthony Carey M.A., CSCS, CES

Function First

If you are a personal trainer, strength coach, athletic trainer or physical therapist, then you are also an environmentalist. Maybe not the recycling kind, but you are an environmentalist nonetheless. Webster defines environmentalist as “one concerned about environmental quality especially of the human environment”.

In this context we are not talking about air, water or trees. We are talking about the environment that you create to maximize your client’s function, performance and reduce their chances of injury.

The environment must match the goals and needs of your client or athlete. That’s why we don’t train our running athletes on their backs or our seniors with depth jumps. But the environment also must provide a way to challenge the body outside of its normal operating environment because that is where injury typically occurs.

Some in the health and fitness industry have polarized philosophies of training. On one end of the spectrum are those that believe either traditional machine and/or Olympic style lifting is the only way to go. On the other end are those that believe that every exercise must be triplaner and performed in an unstable environment.

Who is right? Neither. If you agree with the previous statement “…the environment that you create to maximize your client’s function, performance and reduce their chances of injury”, you can not justify either position exclusively.

Those that are anti training on unstable apparatus inevitably refer to the naïve professional they have witnessed who has their client/athlete doing an exercise on a BOSU that the client can not perform successfully on solid ground. And they make a valid point. That environment is not appropriate for that client at that time.

But to disregard the benefits of the BOSU is also naïve. If the body is not challenged outside its current modus operandi or “M.O.” via the training environment, when it does venture there out of necessity or as the result of the current environment (i.e. change in playing surface, opponents, momentum, etc.), the body is predisposed to injury.

Consider the linebacker whose training regime consists of traditional Olympic power lifts and plyometrics. Both of which are essential to power development necessary for the sport. All of these are movements in which the athlete has prior knowledge (feedforward) of where his base of support is or will land. He also has prior knowledge of where his center of gravity (COG) is based either on his current starting or landing position or as a result of the external weight of the barbell. And he has prior knowledge of the consistency of support surface he is training on in the facility.

Now consider that same linebacker who is engaging blockers while moving, who must control his COG in three dimensional space while working to overcome the mass and momentum of his opponents all with unpredictable arrangements of his body parts. These are situations that no Olympic lift or plyometric exercise can produce. The shear number of variables and combinations of situations make it impossible to physically train the body in every potential scenario.

Therefore, the next best thing is to train the body’s systems that will be expected to gather and interpret changes in the environment to give the body and opportunity to produce, reduce or control forces as necessary. That’s where the BOSU comes in. The BOSU demands that the user make use of the body’s three primary feedback mechanisms for the purpose of controlling it’s COG. These include:

     1. Somatosensory (muscles spindles, golgi tendon organs, joint mechanoreceptors, and cutaneus receptors)

    2. Visual

    3. Inner ear

It then requires the body to integrate the gathered information into an appropriate motor response (sensorimotor integration). If the body does not elicit the appropriate motor response or does not illicit the response fast enough, the user’s COG will be disrupted and they fall off of the BOSU or over correct with inefficient motions.

Many people view the BOSU strictly as a lower body (when standing on it) balance device using the somatosensory receptors. But it will also effect the visual feedback as the user’s gaze fixation is disrupted during involuntary shifts in the COG. The same will produce motion of the head that requires input from the inner ear as well. Neither of which are adequately challenged using Olympic lifts or even plyometrics.

The BOSU is an environment. And it is an environment that is a progression from solid ground and can be a progression from uniplaner balance devices. Although the BOSU surface does not reproduce the base of support for most activities, it does provide an environment to challenge and enhance the sensorimotor mechanisms at work on the ground.

Can anyone really argue that improving one’s reaction time, proprioceptive awareness and activation rate of stabilizing muscles is not beneficial? Of course not. But can they argue that the progressions to the BOSU ball or while on the BOSU are at times inappropriately applied? Absolutely.

To borrow a slang saying, “don’t hate the player, hate the game”.

I believe that we should never lose perspective on the roll of the BOSU or any other training device or environment. We use them. They don’t use us. They are a means to an end. If we attempt to structure any exercise program around a piece of equipment, the equipment is using us.

Anthony Carey M.A., CSCS, CES is the CEO of Function First in San Diego, CA. He has been using his approach to functional corrective exercise for the past 16 years helping people feel and function better.

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6 Responses to “My perspective on the BOSU”

  1. Hello…Man i love reading your blog, interesting posts ! it was a great Sunday

  2. Eric says:

    Eric

    Thanks for the post. I couldn’t agree with you more.

  3. Lisa says:

    As in all fitness endeavors, variety is the key. The BOSU provides variety and challenge on many different levels, for all ages. That’s why I like to include it in the design of my clients’ training programs!!

  4. Max says:

    Hi – just wanted to say good design and blog –

  5. Kenny Croxdale says:

    One of the rules of training is the “Law of Specificity.” Training a linebacker in on the field with drills that place them in an unstable inviroment is much more SPECIFIC than the use of a BOSU ball.

    Standing on a BOSU ball and trying to maintain balance, one’s Center of Gravity (COG) is COMPLETELY different than solid ground.

    If that worked, then having skiers train on a snowboard would make them better skiers…which it does NOT!

    The “body’s system” will more effectively be “eductated” to “gatehr and interpret changes in” an “enviroment” that is the same. Football coaches already utilize many on the field methods to do this.

    Bascially, as Tudor Bompa once said, “If you play on a wobble field, train on a wobble board.” Thus, instability drills on the field for a linebacker are light years ahead of an athlete’s use of a BOSU ball.

    Instability device (BOSU, etc) dampen reaction time, the do NOT improve it.

    “Proprioceptive awareness and activation rate of stabilizing muscles” is much better developed on the field with specific drills.

    Training on a BOSU ball only make one good at performing on a BOSU ball. There is little carry over to the playing field.

    With that said, instability devices are show to be great rehabilitation devices. Physical Therapist use them for that reason.

    However, these instability devices have little value for the average person and even less value for athletes.

    Kenny Croxdale, CSCS

  6. The bosu ball and unstable surfaces are one of my favorite topics!

    I agree with some statements made by Mr. Carey, but I tend to lean more towards Mr. Croxdale’s perspective.

    After doing a SportDiscus search on unstable surfaces, I found a great proportion of research indicating that unstable surface training does not increase strength, does not increase muscle activation (EMG) and dampens reaction time. After further review, studies with the opposite conclusion appeared to be poorly conducted or poorly interpreted. If I’m not mistaken, most studies on unstable surfaces and rehabilitation are all “unstable” v. “stable” training methods and fail to address the implications of detraining or training age. I suspect that research conducted with “stable” v. “unstable” v. “mixed stable/unstable” (with proper progression) may be more appropriate.

    At this point, I maintain that creating an “unstable” environment in the body may be better achieved by manipulating the variables of force application on a stable surface. However, I do agree that utilizing an unstable surface or a bosu ball “challenges” the motor programming of the CNS – but does this challenge truly result in a performance benefit or increased injury prevention? I will be interested to see how the theory and application of this topic develops.

    Lauren Betancourt, MS, NSCA-CSCS, ACSM-CPT

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