Rotating grip helps strengthen hands, wrists
MURFREESBORO — With
forearms of granite and fingers like vices, Jason Gulley sports a grip like few
others.
To share that ability with others, the Murfreesboro resident
and Marine combat veteran started Gulley Grip LLC. The small business
manufactures and sells a thick-grip rotating handle he created — a Gulley Grip
— that attaches to cable machines, kettle bells or to rubber bands for gym
or home use.
The 32-year-old MTSU alumnus graduated in December 2012 with
a degree in aviation maintenance management. But Gulley has lofty aspirations
beyond the aviation industry involving a passion he’s developed over the years
to help athletes and others develop stronger hands.
Gulley said the company is devoted to creating technology
that increases the actual applied strength of the everyday laborer, individuals
seeking rehabilitation therapy and athletes of all kinds.
“Simply, you can't pinch or crush it if you can’t stabilize
it,” he said. “The folks that have this stabilizing power today are defined by
coaches as having ‘country boy strength.’ Imagine an entire team having this
kind of stability in the hands.”
An athlete himself, Gulley played for the Blue Raider
football team several years ago, an undersized defensive lineman and special
teams player who had superior hand strength — known by coaches as the Gulley
Monster. After his football playing days, Gulley became an avid arm wrestler
and began studying the technical aspects and strength training surrounding the
sport.
After studying the benefits of various techniques such as
rice bucket exercises and weight training using ropes, Gulley decided to
develop a two-inch thick, rotating grip. He thanks professor Walter Boles and
Rick Taylor in the MTSU Department of Engineering Technology for making the
first prototype, as well as MTSU professors Colby Jubenville and Don Roy for
their help with marketing.
The business is also a Gulley family affair. With
manufacturing support from his uncle and sales and marketing support from his
brother, Gulley is able to mass manufacture the grips, which can be ordered
from his website, gulleygrip.com.
The product targets the “support grip,” which is the ability
to hold onto something and stabilize it. Using the grip during exercises fatigues
the hand and wrist muscles, gradually increasing their strength and producing
“new levels of stability,” Gulley said.
Fellow MTSU alum SaCoby Carter, 24, is a believer. Carter,
who graduated in 2011 and played defensive end for the Blue Raiders, wishes the
grips had been around during his college playing days, but now uses them daily
as he works toward a shot at playing in the NFL.
Carter said surgery on one of his arms last year weakened it
significantly. Using the Gulley Grip quickly helped him to begin restoring that
strength within a matter of weeks.
“I could tell a difference in my forearms immediately,”
Carter said. “I could tell most of the strength was coming back.”
Carter said there are other types of oversized grips
available that can somewhat help, but they don’t have the rotating feature the
Gulley Grip has. He noted that football players, particularly defensive and
offensive linemen, use their hands extensively. The Gulley Grip strengthens the
player’s ability “to move another player,” he said, a key advantage on the
field.
Gulley said 15 or more area high school teams are using his
grips. On campus, MT Athletics has about a dozen of them available in its
weight room and Campus Recreation also uses them. Testimonials and videos of
grip users also can be seen on the gulleygrip.com website.
For more information, contact Gulley at 615-920-2658 or via email at gulleylee1231@gmail.com.
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