In the history of man, and of training there have been more than a few training programs that have been passed off as the best thing since sliced bread, and a lot of them have been exposed as bunch of junk as we (coaches and fitness pros) have gotten smarter.
In general training programs are starting to include better and better movements. The general public and athletes alike are shying away from the use of machines and moving towards training on their feet, with free weights and tons of other awesome tools. Unfortunately some great movements are often being done poorly.
When your training program has bad movements in it, your program is broke. When your training program has good movements that are being done poorly, your program is busted.
Even in my gym we have had to break down some of the movements we train regularly and figure out better ways to coach them and teach them. In some situations we have developed a keener eye for the movement itself and in some situations we have taken the advice of smart people and made some corrections to the movements we do.
Lets fix those busted programs. The next 7 movements are awesome to do, but not when they are done poorly.
Hang Snatches
Lets just get this straight first. There is no inherent problem with the movement itself. Hang snatches rock. The biggest problems I see with athletes doing the hang snatch is in the initiation and completion of the lift.
Athletes that need to fix the initiation of their hang snatch slide their knees forward immediately when starting the lift above their knees. This forward weight shift will lead to an incomplete extension of the hips and typically mean a missed lift at higher weights or a forward jump to receive the bar at lower weights.
At the moment of the catch the athlete needs to work on a timely and powerful punch overhead. Catching the bar with poor timing, arms unlocked with a press out following, is going to lead to a ton of missed lifts. A great movement to improve strength and timing overhead is the snatch balance.
Box Jumps
As a movement in and of itself the box jump is pretty awesome. It gives athletes a target by which they can measure progress and reduces the impact of landing from a jump. That being said there are TWO big problems that need to be fixed when athletes are doing box jumps.
Problem 1: Jumping down from the top of the box. When we get down to it one of our benefits of using a box jump is the reduction of the impact of landing from a maximal effort jump. Why then, may I ask you, does it make any sense to jump down from the box? The answer is it doesn’t. Make your athletes create a path down from the box and step down.
Problem 2: Jumping on a box that is too high. Our goal while training athletes should be to provide them with opportunities to safely improve techniques that are applicable in the field of play. Jumping on boxes that require the athlete to pull their knees to their chest does not accomplish this task. Instead it creates an unsafe movement patterns, and will eventually ruin the athlete’s chances of becoming a shin model in the future.
I could have filmed a video that expressed the same thing, but Coach Mike Boyle talked about this very subject in a staff meeting a while back. He does a good job of expressing what I feel about what can be an awesome movement.
Rotational MB Throws
For the most part I think that many programs are seriously lacking in work in the transverse plane, there is so much work done in the sagittal plane that athletes are hampered in their ability to move rotationally. There is much to be said about mastering the sagital plane first but for athletes that compete in rotational sports, learning the right way to deliver power rotationally is very important
The problem that I see all too often is rotational power being produced through movement in the lumbar spine. Regardless of what your opinion is about how much movement should come in the lumbar region, it definitely
isn’t a region that is made for producing power. Rotational medicine ball throws need to occur through
movement that originates in the lower body, and is expressed through the upper body, a stable lumbar region is key to making sure that the most power is transferred. Pay attention to the back foot on rotational movements to ensure that the movement is starting with the lower body.
Chin Ups
Lets all get together and say what we are thinking right now. Chin ups should never again be denoted as “chest to bar chin ups” because really, what’s the point in pulling only your chin past the bar? Chest to bar needs to be the standard from now on.
Doing chin ups, and pull ups for that matter, that go only to chin above the bar miss out on much of the great functional portion of the movement. When doing the partial movement there is little low trap involvement. Going a little functional anatomy on you, low traps are largely responsible for scapular depression, going only to the chin above the bar is primarily a movement dominated by the lats.
Trap Bar Deadlift
The trap bar deadlift is a great movement, but it doesn’t readily fit into the categories of movement that we like to use to create our training programs. Is it a squat pattern or is it a hinge pattern?
My personal preference is to make it a hinging pattern. Quite simply most athletes get plenty of squatting patterns in their training without our assistance. Making the trap bar a hinge pattern can alleviate this issue.
Teach athletes to do the trap bar deadlift just as you would teach them to go to the ground in the power clean. Hinge first (RDL) then squat until their hands are on the handles. Drive the knees back on initiation and then finish with hip extension.
Mike Boyle weighed in on this idea recently on T-Nation, it is a great read, right here.
Split Squats
Split squats are good right?
To me it all really depends on how you do them. As I have done coached this movement more and more I have realized that the tendency of most athletes while training is to let the knee slide forward very quickly after the getting them set up in the start position.
Cueing athletes out of this movement can correct the problem for many athletes, but we have adopted a solution that can fix this problem for EVERY athlete.
The concept of blocking a movement to prevent the incorrect pattern can be adopted for most any movement, while I was a thrower we would do this to prevent unwanted technical problems in the shot put and hammer throw by placing a physical barrier between myself and the bad pattern.
With the split squat we use a bench or a band stretched across a rack to prevent the knee from moving forward. In the bottom, 90-90 position the athlete’s front knee should be in contact with the bench. Push up and down from that position.
Mike Robertson weighed in on blocking last fall and helped me solidify my opinion of this sweet technique.
Power Clean starts
(Wait you didn’t think I would go a whole post without talking about the power clean, did you?)
The start on the power clean is one of the most commonly butchered movements in the weightroom. Among many pre-lift rituals that can put athletes in terrible positions, the lift-off from the floor is often misunderstood.
While the bar is on the floor it is a distinct unit from the body, meaning that both the body and the bar have their own center of gravity. The bar’s center of gravity is always in front of the lifter’s while the bar is on the floor. The goal when lifting the bar off the ground is to link those two centers of gravity. This means that upon lift-off the bar must move back and up toward the athlete and not vertically (and definitely not forward).
Many athletes don’t get this right and always pull the bar in front of the body, and are unable to reach full hip extension in the final portion of the lift.
For more info on some other serious mistakes made in the power clean check out my free download Top 10 Power Clean Mistakes (only if you subscribe).
Fix these problems and your program might not be perfect but you are on your way to getting the most out of some awesome movements.
Until next time.
Wil
As always, great stuff, Wil!
Thanks BJ.
Good article, except I “kind of” disagree about the box jumps. I have to agree that jumping on higher boxes makes the athlete simply bring their legs up faster and can result in injury, HOWEVER, so much in sports is about not only about maximal force production, but ALSO about the SSC stretch shortening cycle. The ability to create a maximal force into the ground and then recover the legs extremely rapidly is of the utmost importance to sprinters, or any explosive sport. With that being said, I do think that very high box jumps are not a great exercise for beginner or intermediate athletes, and even with advanced athletes, I prefer continuous hurdle hops (4-6 hurdles) because they have a greater effect on the nervous system, are safer, and teach athletes how to “Get off the Ground QUICKLY”.
Thanks for the reply. On some nice boxes especially, I think that you are right on the money. The analogy to sprinting is right on. We just happen to have the type of boxes that take pride in removing flesh from the shins. Thanks again for the comment!
Safety above all should be stressed with box jumps.
I knew a kid who led the country in passing for Juco
QBs that got a scholarship and broke his leg
Doing box jumps on the unforgiving metal boxes.
When I played football the the U of Oregon
, S and C coach Jimmy Radcliffe had us jump on high jump
Pits. Risk vs. Reward. He was ahead of his time.
All your stuff had been in alignment with Coach Rads
Stuff. Check him out if you haven’t yet. He is the secret
Behind all the sports programs at the U of O.
Thanks for the comment. Coach Radcliffe is a legend, and for you to say that my ideas are in alignment with his, is an extraordinary compliment.
Sorry I forgot to say that the most important part of that whole QB
Story was that injury ended his career. I’d hate to be that strength coach
That led that workout program.