Tip Do This Before You Press Overhead

Tip Do This Before You Press Overhead

Tip Do This Before You Press Overhead Search Skip to content Menu Menu follow us Store Articles Community Loyal-T Club Loyal-T Points Rewards Subscribe to Save Search Search The World s Trusted Source & Community for Elite Fitness Training Tip Do This Before You Press Overhead Most shoulder warm-ups are insufficient Protect your shoulders with this simple drill by Chris Peil November 8, 2019April 5, 2021 Tags It Hurts Fix It, Training The barbell overhead press is the king of shoulder exercises. And for that reason, it's often first up in lifters' workouts. The only problem? Most people do insufficient warm-ups for their shoulder sessions. You see it all the time. They'll usually do a rotator cuff warm-up then go straight into pressing. The Standard Insufficient Warm-Up There are a few problems with dumbbell warm-ups. First, if like in this video, you're standing doing rotations, you're misunderstanding how gravity works. You're not loading the rotator cuff unless you're swinging the dumbbells around and having to decelerate them, and that would be a bad idea as your warm-up. All you're getting is an isometric bicep workout. Here s Another Thing People Do Is this how YOU warm up? If you're in the position in this video it makes a bit more sense, but not much. In that position you only get a load on the external rotators. And it only significantly loads the muscles at the bottom when the shoulder is internally rotated and the arm is in that specific position at the bottom of a pressing cycle, not through the full range of a pressing motion. When you overhead press, you're pretty much fully externally rotated at the shoulder. That means it's the internal rotators you want to be simultaneously flexible, strong, and recruited well enough to stabilize the shoulder. This means you'll get into a good position and be able to drive the weight. It also means you'll have more stability which will stop you from going too far backwards. Even the better of the two dumbbell warm-ups above is loading the wrong set of rotator muscles in the wrong range of shoulder rotation... and doing it only in one part of the pressing cycle. What s the best way to do it then I call it the Peil press. Take a look... This is a warm-up variation that involves using a broom handle and a band to get the direction of force pulling you into external rotation throughout a full shoulder pressing cycle. It stretches everything required to improve your pressing position while firing up all the stabilizing muscles that resist external rotation – the ones that stop you from losing the barbell backwards when pressing overhead, hurting yourself and killing your training partner! Ease into this. It takes the shoulder through the classic dislocation position so be cautious, particularly if you have a history of shoulder instability. That said, with sensible loading and progression, the risk of this exercise is also what gives it a fantastic protective benefit. Get good at it and it will condition you against shoulder instability. Bonus: If you have stiff shoulders on squat days, try using it before you get under the iron, especially if you're a low-bar squatter. Get The T Nation Newsletters Don' t Miss Out Expert Insights To Get Stronger, Gain Muscle Faster, And Take Your Lifting To The Next Level related posts Training Tip Reverse Your Romanian Deadlift Use this exercise to ingrain a good hip hinge, make your lower back feel better, and build a bigger deadlift. Deadlift, Powerlifting & Strength, Tips, Training Dr John Rusin October 24 Training Single-Leg Training Modifications for Knee Pain Got knee pain? Don’t skip leg day. Use these single-leg lifts to build your legs and strengthen your knees. It Hurts Fix It, Legs, Mobility, Soft-Tissue Techniques, Training Ben Bruno March 16 Training The Lost Art of Movement Capacity You're big. You're strong. But how well can you move? Here's how not to get “muscle bound.” Athletic Performance, Metcon, Training Mike Ranfone April 8 Training Targeted Fat Mobilization Spot reduction is a myth... except when it works. Here's how to target stubborn body fat stores with specialized training. Fat Loss Training, Metcon, Training Christian Thibaudeau & Chris Shugart March 18
Share:
0 comments

Comments (0)

Leave a Comment

Minimum 10 characters required

* All fields are required. Comments are moderated before appearing.

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!