It’s 105 degrees in a yoga studio in New York, and Joe Johnson is in one of 26 possible set stretching poses.
Johnson, a six-time NBA All-Star, is doing bikram yoga four hours prior to the Brooklyn Nets’ tip-off. Despite logging tens of thousands of minutes in the NBA, the 31-year-old claims the yoga sessions leave him rejuvenated and refreshed.
“It’s pretty strenuous as far as a workout,” he told The Huffington Post. “It loosens me up, actually. If we have to be at the gym at 5:30, I’ll go about 3 p.m. and I get out at 4:30. I go straight to the arena. I’ll already be loose and ready to go. It’s very relaxing. I’ve never meditated before, or anything of that nature, but when I started doing bikram, it just kind of goes with [it]. I found myself meditating and really relaxing and clearing my thoughts.”
Kent Katich is currently the yoga coach of the Los Angeles Clippers and a founder of All Sport Yoga. In 2010 he was dubbed the “yoga guru of the NBA” by ESPN. He remembers a time not too long ago when athletes weren’t as open as Johnson to the benefits of the practice.
“Commercials and images of women in tights doing hyperflexible positions or Indian images of chanting initially kept athletes at bay,” Katich said via email. “But in today’s society, young people are able to research and obtain tons of information extremely quick.”
Professional athletes are turning to yoga with hopes of improving flexibility, recovery time and, perhaps, prolonging their careers. Yoga advocates also believe the practice presents a helpful option to relieve the mind and body from the toll of an incessant travel schedule and the physical demands of being a pro athlete.
Three-time Pro Bowl running back Steven Jackson, who practices yoga once a week, is one member of this contingent…
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