Elite professional sports athletes treat yoga as a core part of training
Yoga is widely used by professional sports athletes to improve durability, performance, and mental focus. Many elite professional athletes treat yoga as a core part of training rather than “just stretching, according to National Institute of Health.
NBA superstar LeBron James has called yoga one of his “secrets” for endurance over long seasons, and NBA Hall of Fame Kareem Abdul‑Jabbar credits yoga as a key to his longevity.
Professional athletes like James and Abdul-Jabbar use yoga because the practice:
• Improves flexibility and joint range of motion, which supports speed, change of direction, and technical skills while reducing soft-tissue strain.
• Enhances balance, coordination, and body awareness (proprioception), which transfers directly to cutting, landing, and contact situations.
• Supports recovery by improving circulation, reducing delayed-onset muscle soreness, and shifting the nervous system into a parasympathetic “rest and digest” state.
• Reduces injury risk by strengthening stabilizing muscles, improving movement mechanics, and mitigating mental fatigue and stress that correlate with higher injury rates.
• Builds mental skills: studies report less anxiety and depression, better sleep, increased motivation, and sharper focus in athletes who add yoga to training.
Research showed that a10‑week yoga program in male college athletes significantly improved flexibility and balance compared with a non‑yoga control group, suggesting potential performance benefits in sports that rely on those qualities.
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