What do you mean your back hurts?!?

Similar documents
The Golf Swing Speed Challenge (103) - First 3 Weeks

Baker Strength Coaching

THE DEAD LIFT: PART I. The Conventional Dead Lift. Dave Mansfield MA, MSPT, CSCS

Top 5 Mass Building Exercises! By weightgainpro.com

5x5 for Intermediate Lifters

Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 4 Day 5 Day 6 Day 7 Workout 1 Workout 2 Workout 1 Workout 2 Rest Workout 1 Rest

Viking Strong Exercise & Stretch Ebook

Table Of Contents. Complete Guide To Muscle Building MUSCLE BUILDING INTRODUCTION... 3 TRAINING EXERCISES...

Barbell Good Morning. 2 sets 10 reps

Beginner Workout. Wall sit with bicep curl- How To: - Target Muscles-Biceps, Quads, Glutes, Hamstrings

Reverse Lunge & Step Up Reverse Lunge & T-Bend Seated Curl Seated Curl and Tate Press Shoulder Press Shoulder Press &

12-Week Vertical Jump Program Trial Version (first 5 weeks of program)

LIFTING EXERCISE GUIDE. (By body part alphabetically, then by exercise alphabetically)

RESISTANCE STRENGTH TRAINING EXERCISE

Static Flexibility/Stretching

Exercise Program WARNING: DO NOT USE THIS OR ANY OTHER EXERCISE PROGRAM WITHOUT FIRST BEING CLEARED BY YOUR DOCTOR.


EATA Workshop 2010 Boston

knees and hips, catch the bar over the head by extending the elbows, locking the shoulders, palms facing up, and head slightly forward.

Weight: Snatch. Grip Deadlift. 1 5x5 5x5 5x5 5x5 x5 x5 2 5x5 5x5 5x5 5x5 x5 x5 3 5x5 5x5 5x5 5x5 x5 x5 4 3x10 3x10 3x10 3x10 x5 x5.

Back Squat Purpose: Grip: Rack: Start Position: Technique-Descent: Ascent Key Points:

Quads (machines) Cable Lunge

USING FREE WEIGHT EQUIPMENT

DAY 2 III. WORKOUT RULES

WOW Workout on Weights Repeat this entire sequence twice. Squat with front deltoid raise with bands Incline Pushups: 12 repetitions

THE STRENGTH WORKOUT FOR RUNNERS

YOUR FREE COMPREHENSIVE GUIDE TO HELP RELIEVE LOWER BACK PAIN NATURALLY

BACK VIBE PROGRAM STEP 3: INCREASE STRENGTH. Copyright 2012 All Rights Reserved. VibrationExercise.com Page 1

2011 EliteSoccerPower.com


Mathias Method Strength to Change the World By Ryan Mathias

TRINITY FREE BIKINI BODY GUIDE GYM WORKOUT PROGRAMME

CHEST. movement to press the up. 4. Again without pausing at the top repeat the motion. 1. Lie on the bench and grasp the bar shoulder

CHERRY Creek Baseball. Fall workout CHERRY CREEK BASEBALL STRENGTH TRAINING

Is your Deadlift Stuck? (Or does it just suck?)

SECRETS DARYL S SECRET LIFTING VAULT. drive and to break the rut in your training. 1. Parallel Dips and Chinning Combined: Once you complete a set of

Table of Contents. What is CrossFit? 2. The Bracing Sequence 2. The Building Blocks of CrossFit The Nine Foundational Movements 3

Advice on Resistance Exercise

FULL BODY WORKOUT ROUTINE OVERVIEW 3 WORKOUT A BEGINNER VERSION 4 WORKOUT A INTERMEDIATE VERSION 5 EXERCISE TUTORIALS 6 ADDITIONAL COMMENTS 13

3 DAY GYM TRAINING PROGRAM. Author: Holly Expert

Mathias Method By Ryan Mathias

CHOOSE YOUR MOVEMENTS

Summary of exercises included on last page

THE V-TAPER SOLUTION WORKOUT EXERCISE DESCRIPTIONS

EXERCISE INSTRUCTIONS

Supplements are to be used to improve performance in the gym and to enhance health on a day to day basis.

Taking Your Resistance Band to a New Level!

WEEK 1 ADVANCED BOOTY BUILDING PROGRAM BOOTY BUILDING PROGRAM

Resistance Training Program

Pheidippides Marathon Cramping

TRAINING FREQUENCY STUDY 2015:

Exercises. Barbell Squat

Resistance Training Program

Physical Capability Exam Testing Protocol

TOP 30 Exercise Tutorials

WORLDS GREATEST WARM UP

Side Split Squat. The exercises you need to hit with more power and accuracy every time

EFS Beginner Training Manual By Jim Wendler

CONTENT WHY SHOULD I USE RESISTANCE LOOP BANDS? Resistance Exercise... 1 Flexibility Exercise... 1 THE RESISTANCE LEVEL... 2

KNOCKED-UP FITNESS 4 BONUS PRENATAL WORKOUT PRINTOUTS

DISCLAIMER - PLEASE READ!


Mathias Method By Ryan Mathias Strength to Change the World

LEG EXERCISES FOR FITNES

Preparing for ORPAT. Major areas of fitness: 1. Flexibility 2. Cardiopulmonary Endurance 3. Muscular Strength 4. Muscular Endurance

EXERCISE AND CYSTIC FIBROSIS: MY EXERCISE RECORD

Round 4: Lower Body Exercises: BOSU Jump Over Squats: Begin with one foot on the BOSU ball and one on the ground. Perform a squat until legs are at 90

Bench Press (free weights) Pullover (dumbbell) Prone-grip pull-up (tower/assisted platform

TRAINING GUIDE S H O U L D E R H E A L T H & P E R F O R M A N C E P A R T N E R W I T H

7 Morning Stretches to Start Your Day

Daily. Workout MOBILITY WARM UP. Exercise Descriptions. (See Below)

USING FREE WEIGHT EQUIPMENT

FEEL GOOD GLOW Low intensity workout

SUBMARINE SERIES - LEVEL 3

EXERCISE AND CYSTIC FIBROSIS: MY EXERCISE RECORD

WALL PUSH UPS TABLE PUSH UPS


Zeus General Strength Gym

Sportlyzer s Core Exercises

Osteoporosis Exercise:

Strength Training for Marathoners

Exercise for Health Aging

ESTABLISHING A FOUNDATION: Leg Strength for Young Goaltenders By: Mike Potenza M.Ed., CSCS

The Fastest Way to Sculpt! the best dumbbell workout to drop pounds, flatten your belly, and firm up your trouble zones.

1. Abs Triangle of Control Muscle: Upper abdominals Resistance: Body weight Body Connection: Legs

E-GUIDE PULL UP ASSISTANCE BANDS

LEVEL 3. Training Program. Getting Started:

Colorado State University. Incoming Athlete. Summer Program

SECTION 6 PERFORMANCE: EXERCISE DESCRIPTIONS

Full Body (medicine ball) Saggital Front Reach

STEP IT UP Moderate intensity workout

What skill level is this Workout Program designed for? Everyone! Workout # 1: Whole Body Work Out Describe this Workout.

Being active is crucial to shaping a New You!

Page 1

Total Body Exercises for Volleyball

GOTIMETRAINING. P O S T N A T A L EXERCISES BY RAYMOND ELLIOTT T R A N S F O R M Y O U R L I F E 0-3 WEEKS POST NATAL

TRAINING GUIDE G O L F P E R F O R M A N C E T R A C K

Foundation Lower Body A (60 min)

Daily MOVEMENT PREP CIRCUIT 3 SETS. Double Kettlebell Clean to Squat. 3 rounds minimal rest in between exercises. Exercise Descriptions

Pushups and Pistols April 2018 Challenge

Transcription:

What do you mean your back hurts?!? The deadlift is as much an art form as it is a lift. It is a combining of muscles, tendons, and ligaments, working as one unit to move a massive weight from a dead stop to lockout. It requires tremendous total body strength, from the traps to the calves. You have to have a back of steel, hands like talons, and a mind of solid granite. It isn t a lift for everyone. Throw open the doors on any commercial gym and take a look around. See anyone deadlifting? But, one must face the very simple facts about the taboo exercise known as the deadlift: Nothing is better at adding muscle and strength to the entire body! Take a look at a good deadlifter. They will be as thick as an old oak. They will have huge traps, big lats, and a massive set of spinal erectors. Their hips will be wide and boxy, and they will have legs the size of tree trunks. They didn t get this way doing pulldowns and leg presses. They got this way slinging around heavy iron! Gene Bell: 766 @ 198 1/13/2005 1 Deadlift 101

Franco Columbo: Bodybuilder & Deadlift Master Take a look at those physiques, and the massive amount of weight they are capable of deadlifting. Next time you think to yourself, The deadlift can t be that hard! Better think again. Keep in mind; you won t develop those kinds of physiques slinging around 200 pounds! You have to pull until your eyes bleed. You have to make a conscious effort to add weight to the bar each and every time you deadlift. Yes, there will be times you will want to vomit. If you tell yourself that right now, and accept it, it will be much easier when you are banging out sets of 10 with 500 pounds and your Fruity Pebbles spew out onto your t-shirt. A look inside the deadlift Though the deadlift appears to be an easy lift to execute, nothing could be further from the truth. When watching people deadlift, the same mistakes always stand out. Not using the legs enough, bowing the back, bending the arms, etc. All of these mistakes are easy to correct. Nine times out of ten, you have to swallow your pride, take a couple plates off the bar, and start at the beginning. Start the lift by setting up in front of the loaded bar. It is my belief that in order to maximize pulling, you should not have the shins tight against the bar from the start, but rather line up the first knuckles of the toes with the bar. When you squat down to grasp the bar, you will now have contact with the bar and be in the right position. The width of your set-up is dependent on a lot of scientific jargon: length of the torso versus the length of the legs, length of the arms in comparison to the body, bla, bla, bla. I say experiment, and see what works the best for you. You will either be one of three types of deadlifters: conventional, semi-sumo, or sumo. See which one maximizes your strengths and body type, and go with it! More on this later. 1/13/2005 2 Deadlift 101

Once in front of the bar, suck in a deep breath of air, squat down, keeping the hips and butt low, and grasp the bar. Conventional style starting position. Note the low hips and tight back. Semi-Sumo style starting position. Flat back, low hips. 1/13/2005 3 Deadlift 101

Sumo starting position. Again, note the flat back and low hips. You should feel compressed like a giant spring waiting to pop. Get the hips as low as humanly possible for your build and flexibility. You should still be holding that breath in order to maintain tightness. At this point, I like to keep my head up to help keep my back straight and tight. Looking forward, or down, tends to make me hunch forward at the start of the pull. Now that you are in the start position, it is time to initiate the lift. Most people think you pull on the bar to start the lift. WRONG ANSWER! Pulling up tends to make you lose your tightness and hunch you over. Instead, concentrate hard on driving your feet into the platform and squatting the weight up. This will bring the hips, glutes, and legs into the movement. As you do this, the arms stay straight. They are merely hooks and play no part in lifting the weight. Bending them is not only a good way to miss the lift, but a great way to tear a bicep! Driving the feet into the platform on the semi-sumo style. Back stays tight! 1/13/2005 4 Deadlift 101

Lift Off! Driving the feet with the sumo style. Head up, back tight, arms straight. As the bar leaves the platform, it should be on the shins. Continue to drive the platform as you glide the bar up over the shins and knees and onto the thighs. At this point, you will drive the hips forward into the movement to put the bar into the locked out position. Conventional style at lockout. Tight! 1/13/2005 5 Deadlift 101

Semi-Sumo. Throwing the hips into lockout. No arm bend! 1/13/2005 6 Deadlift 101

Sumo. Throw those hips forward and minimize distance traveled. That s it! Now that you know HOW to do it right, lets look at a couple of common mistakes that lifters make when deadlifting. The biggest problem I encounter with beginning and seasoned lifters alike is the hips shooting up without the weight. Instead of driving into the floor with the feet, the lifter will initiate the lift by pulling. More often then not, this will make the hips pop up first, taking the hips, glutes, and legs almost entirely out of the movement. This will also bow the back and increase the chances of a back injury from deadlifting! When someone tells me they hurt their back deadlifting, all I have to do is watch their form. Do their hips shoot up first? 1/13/2005 7 Deadlift 101

NO! Conventional style. Hips are up first, back is bowing. Best to abandon this lift right away! NO! Semi-Sumo style. Hips are up, legs are almost straight, and the back is bowed. Notice the bar has only moved about 6 inches. Bad news. Zatsiorsky tells us in Science and Practice of Strength Training that the loads on the lumbar intervertebral disks from a mere 50kg load will amount to a whopping 630kg with a bowed back! When the back is held in the arched, tight position, the same 50kg exerts a load of 380kg, respectively. Is there any wonder people injure their backs? A second common mistake is the arm bend. I guess from all the years and years of curling and rowing, people automatically think the arms should be bent on the deadlift. To stop this, think of the arms as hooks only, and concentrate on relaxing them through out the lift. Squeeze the bar tight, but relax the arms. Training 1/13/2005 8 Deadlift 101

So how does one build a strong deadlift? What training techniques work? What doesn t work? Most importantly, how often does one deadlift? Although I am fairly young in years, I am still old school when it comes to training the deadlift. I am a firm believer that you need to pull at least once a week if you are going to consistently add weight to the deadlift. However, I also believe in using many variations of the deadlift, as well as many assistance exercises, in order to make the deadlift skyrocket! Let s start with some basic assistance exercises. The first I want to mention is the barbell good morning. In my opinion, nothing is better for strengthening the structures of the lower back for big pulls. This exercise can also be extremely risky if you are not careful. Beginners should start out light, with an empty bar, and strive to add only 5- pounds a week. It is a risky exercise, and you do it at your own risk. To me, the benefits I see in my deadlift, and squat, far outweigh the risks. Start with the bar on your back like you would if you were performing the barbell back squat. Use the same stance width you use when squatting or deadlifting. Keep the back tight and push the butt back as you lower the weight. Take the weight down to about waist height, keeping the back tight the entire time. No rounding! Your weight should be on your heals and your butt should be back. The stress should be felt on the low back as well as the hamstrings. No flex the back and hamstrings to return the weight to the standing position. Throw your ego out the door! Go light, strengthen the back, and reap the benefits of this great exercise! 1/13/2005 9 Deadlift 101

Lower slow and under control. Keep the head forward and use a controlled movement. The next assistance exercises are for the hips. I am a firm believer of strengthening the hips as much as possible. As the hips get stronger, your sumo and conventional pull will increase. As a matter of fact, I believe in this theory so much that I train all my pulls sumo style until I am two to three weeks out of a contest. Only then do I switch to conventional. With that, one of the best ways to strengthen the hips is to pull sumo! Concentrate hard on pushing the feet into the platform and spreading the floor. A second way that is tremendous in strengthening the hips is the barbell box squat. Use a wide stance and squat onto a box that is a little below parallel. Lower slow to the box, do not bounce or slam onto it! Once on the box, relax the hip flexors then flex them hard to pop off the box and lockout the weight. Drive out on legs the entire time, lowering and lifting. Spread the floor with the feet hard! 1/13/2005 10 Deadlift 101

On the box with weight and bands. Wide stance, good form. To learn how to box squat properly, visit www.elitefts.com and read the articles on box squatting. Reps, sets, weight, etc. are all explained in great detail. A third exercise I like to use on my hips is the bottom-up chain suspended squat. This movement requires a cage and some heavy-duty chains. I set the cage pins up so when the chains are attached, the bar is below parallel. Bar suspended by the chains. I then wiggle under the bar, get set-up as straight as possible, then concentrate on driving my feet into the ground and lifting the weight with my hips only. 1/13/2005 11 Deadlift 101

Standing on the 45 s allows me to get a little deeper, thus using more hips. Locked out off the chains. Keep your back straight the whole time and use the hips. Drive out hard with those feet. A quick word on why I use the chains instead of the cage pins: the chains allow me to use my proper form as opposed to being locked onto the pins. Also, with the chains, I can really wiggle under the bar, as it is free to move with me. Along with these assistance exercises, I also pull at least once a week. This is a constantly changing process; sometimes I may do regular pulls from the ground, sometimes I will do a rack pull, sometimes I will go off a box, and sometimes I will do a specialty lift such as adding bands or chains. One movement I really like to do is the rack pull. Put the bar in the cage at your sticking point. For me, this is about 14 off the ground. I tend to slow down at this point and it 1/13/2005 12 Deadlift 101

causes my deadlift to grind to a halt. Experiment to find your sticking point, but you can do these from as low as 1 from the ground and as high as above the knees. Everything about your form stays identical as it would to pulling off the ground. I do singles and triples with these, and I always use a semi-sumo style. Semi-sumo rack pull from 14. Another great movement in building deadlift speed is the band deadlift. Loop a couple of Jumpstretch bands over the bar like so: Bands are draped over the bar, and then stood on. Now pull like you normally would. Use perfect form and make sure to pull with speed. If you don t-you won t make it to lockout! Use 60-80% of your max, and then add bands of your choice. Do triples, as many as ten sets. 1/13/2005 13 Deadlift 101

Bands locked out, conventional style. If you have access to chains, you can use them as well. Just drape them over the bar, then go to it. More chains = more weight at lockout! Some 5/8s chain being used with the sumo style. Another great way to overload the top for a strong lockout is to use dumbbells. Beware, dumbbells are much more intense then chains or bands because the weight gain is not gradual, but rather instant. Chain some dumbbells to each side of the bar like so: 1/13/2005 14 Deadlift 101

An 85-pound dumbbell chained to the barbell. Make sure to measure the chain and have the dumbbells kicking in right at your sticking point. This works okay off the ground, but even better in the cage, as you wont have to worry about hitting the dumbbells on the way down. Use this for singles work. Weight at lockout. Dumbbells off the ground-an instant 170-pounds at the sticking point. WHEW! If you have access to the Jumpstretch bands, you can also do the reverse-band deadlift. I love this lift as it really strengthens the lockout portion of the deadlift. Simply attach the bands of your choice to the cage pins at a desired height, or the top of the cage. The higher the bands are attached, the more they will help off the ground. Then attach the bands to the bar. You will notice, depending on what bands you use, you will need a certain weight just to keep the bar on the ground. This weight can be used as the amount the bands are actually de-loading from the bottom. 1/13/2005 15 Deadlift 101

Light bands de-loading from the cage pins. At lockout, the weight is almost entirely supported by you as the bands are relaxed. Adjust the band height higher or lower for more or less help. With all this talk about lockout strength, how does one strengthen the bottom of the lift? Nothing is better then the deadlift off a box. Stand on a box that allows the bar to almost touch the tops of the feet. Keep your form the same as you would if pulling a regular deadlift, only now you must get the hips much deeper to initiate the pull. Everything stays the same! You will find you will have to use much less weight to perform this lift. 1/13/2005 16 Deadlift 101

575 conventional off a 4 block. Training this way will make your starting strength soar through the roof! However, don t neglect the lockout. Onward and Upward How you use each of these exercises is entirely up to you. I do the box squats once a week and wave my weights up and down from 47% to 53% over a three-week period. I also vary the band tension. I pull once a week, using a four-week cycle. Week one I may do regular semi-sumo pull from the ground for ten singles, or five sets of triples. Week two, I may do a lockout from my sticking point for singles or triples. Week three may see a deadlift off a box. Week four I may use the dumbbells. When week five rolls around, I am back to semi-sumos off the floor. The goal is to see a strength increase during the four week cycle on the pulls off the floor. This may or may not work for you. Experiment and see! Hip work is done twice a week, incorporating the bottom-up squats, or a sumo belt squat. Glute-hams are also done twice a week with one day being ten to twelve rep range and the other being six to eight, or heavy. Low back work in the from of a weighted back extension, or good morning is also done twice a week for four sets of eight reps. The biggest thing with the deadlift is to train it intelligently, and diligently. You need to listen to your body, experiment with form, and train your weaknesses. Who knows, you might be the next big thing when it comes to deadlifting! I leave you with the following picture, for motivation and for your next pulling session: 1/13/2005 17 Deadlift 101

This is Andy Bolton deadlifting 900+ pounds! Good luck, good lifting, and as always, TRAIN HARD! Rick Walker, CSCS 1/13/2005 18 Deadlift 101