What if you could identify movement dysfunction in seconds-and correct it with precision instead of guesswork?
Clients train hard but still feel pain. Athletes stretch endlessly yet remain tight. Rehab patients "finish" therapy but relapse months later. Too often, corrective exercise is reduced to random mobility drills and generic activation work-without understanding root causes. Compensation patterns go unnoticed. Imbalances return. Progress stalls.
You know something is missing-but most programs only treat symptoms, not systems.
Corrective Exercise Training - 2026 Edition delivers a structured, science-driven blueprint for identifying, prioritizing, and correcting dysfunctional movement patterns at their source. This is not a collection of random exercises. It is a systematic framework for assessment, intervention, progression, and long-term resilience.
Inside, you'll learn how to decode compensation patterns, restore optimal joint mechanics, and rebuild efficient movement from the ground up-whether working with general population clients, high-performance athletes, or post-rehab cases.
Benefits of this book:
- A step-by-step corrective assessment framework
- Clear guidelines for identifying mobility vs. stability deficits
- Evidence-based protocols for common dysfunction patterns
- Progressive activation, integration, and strengthening strategies
- Practical screening tools for trainers and clinicians
- Movement re-education sequencing for long-term results
- Return-to-performance bridging strategies
- Real-world case applications
- Updated 2026 insights on neuromuscular adaptation
- Programming templates for seamless implementation
Built on established principles of biomechanics, motor control, exercise physiology, and rehabilitation science, this edition integrates current research with field-tested application. It bridges the gap between theory and practice-making it relevant for strength coaches, personal trainers, physical therapists, athletic trainers, and movement professionals.
Corrective exercise isn't about doing more drills-it's about seeing what others miss. Once you understand the deeper patterns behind dysfunction, you'll never look at a squat, lunge, or gait cycle the same way again.
The real question is: what will change in your clients' results when you stop chasing symptoms-and start correcting systems?