Friday, October 21, 2011

Oct 19, 2011 - Day 19 - How to Tape Your Hands

I have to improve my running. Today's WOD needed a lot of cardio and that's my weakness. I have to improve my body's ability to oxygenate my cells and strengthen my lower back.

WOD: AMRAP 15 minutes: Alley Sprint (100m), 15 box jumps, 30 double unders.
My Score: 5 rounds. I suck big time.

Squat: 5-5-5 225lbs

CF Invictus Tape Step One

How To Tape Your Hands
Written by Calvin Sun
(Editor’s Note – This article was originally published on June 2, 2009. I try not to repeat our content, but given the fervor of many of our members looking to score as many points as possible in next Monday’s Look Good, Feel Good, Play Good Challenge, I have been asked several times recently how to prevent tearing while maintaining a rigorous pull-up practice schedule. I hope this helps, and look forward to watching everyone excel on Monday!)

Every CrossFitter has experienced a torn callus but I think it’s completely avoidable if you take the proper precautions. Perform callus maintenance regularly, don’t use too much chalk, and avoid workouts with hundreds of pull-ups. But what’s a CrossFit athlete to do when the inevitable tear happens? Taping your hands is certainly a good option. The problem I see is that most people have no clue on how to tape their hands. The most common “technique” I see employed is simply taking a length of athletic tape and wrapping it around the palm several times. Without a doubt, this is the best way to waste athletic tape and do absolutely nothing to protect your hands. Anyone who has taped with this method can tell you, a few pull-ups is all it takes to turn this shoddy tape job into a rolled up bundle of tape, chalk, and skin.

Most tears occur at the base of either the ring finger or middle finger, so it’s pointless to tape your palm. The best way to protect your hands and to prevent tears is to cover these hot spots. A former co-worker of mine was a gymnastics instructor and a few years ago she showed me this great way to tape the hands:

  • Step 1. Take approximately 5 inches of standard athletic tape and fold it length wise. Wrap it around the base of your finger and overlap the excess. The ends should cover your tear/hot spot.
    CF Invictus Tape Step One
  • Step 2. Take another length of tape approximately 10 inches. Tape the wrapped section to one end of the tape and fold width wise so that the other end of the tape also covers the wrapped section.
    CF Invictus Tape Step Two
  • Step 3. You now have a grip for your hands. If you did it correctly, there should be enough excess below the wrist joint to secure it with tape. Simply wrap some tape around your wrist to hold it in place.
    CF Invictus Tape Final Step

Instead of having 1 or 2 layers of tape to cover your callus tear, you have 6 layers of tape over that spot if you use this technique correctly. You don’t have to wait until you tear to use this method either. If your callus is already showing signs of failure and there’s plenty of pull-ups in the WOD, you might want to consider taking some preventive measures.

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