Author Topic: analyse my squat bar path  (Read 16110 times)

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entropy

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Re: analyse my squat bar path
« Reply #15 on: September 09, 2013, 10:14:59 am »
0
Actually forget that noise. I dont have to conjecture about this stuff, I can just go outside and test shit out. That's what i'll be doing on wednesdays and fridays, get my heavy 3RM set (FS or BS depending on the day) and then do a bunch of technique work with the opposite exercise (FS if heavy BS on that day, or BS if heavy FS).

I might need more thoractic mobility. knees breaking first is fine on HBBS it gives me a lot of benefits  but why should my chest start to incline as a downside? That could be a mobility issue somewhere.


The problem is, as I try this out now with a PVC pipe as my bar, when you break first at the knees, that's fine. But if the bar doesn't go forward that actually places a lot of stress on the knees. And that's with unweighted squats! Imagine what happens with weighted ones.  So the body reacts by unlocking at the hips and inclining at the waist. Now the load isn't on the knees. Which is good. But the bar path  is now ahead of midfoot. Perhaps i'm looking at this wrong by trying to maintain a strict vertical bar path. maybe I can bring bar back into midfoot as I go descend. Although that sounds incorrect.... :/

edit 3
hmm, so if I break first at the knees and try to hold bar position it over-stresses the knees. But suppose I break first at the knees but hold the weight on the heels? Perhaps this will allow the best of both worlds.. will explore that further.
« Last Edit: September 09, 2013, 10:33:16 am by entropy »
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LBSS

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Re: analyse my squat bar path
« Reply #16 on: September 09, 2013, 10:35:50 am »
+2
comparing weighted and unweighted squats is a stupid crossfit fallacy. there is no comparison.
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

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https://www.savannahstate.edu/cost/nrotc/documents/Inform2010-thearmstrongworkout_Enclosure15_5-2-10.pdf

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entropy

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Re: analyse my squat bar path
« Reply #17 on: September 09, 2013, 11:17:32 am »
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True but you can still learn a few things just have to be careful about your conclusions. Like if you're forward of midfoot unweighted, well, adding weight will shift the weight even further. So that's a useful diagnostic. I'm learning more by doing unweighted stuff than anything I do with weight. The final judge is weighted heavy of course cause that's what matters in the end. But to fix technique it's ok to take the simplest system available (unweighted) since there are less variables to consider!
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AlexV

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Re: analyse my squat bar path
« Reply #18 on: September 11, 2013, 08:38:30 pm »
+1
I guess it depends on your goal.

The first back squat image is almost impossible to attain UNLESS you are front squatting.  Of course the pic is a back squat and a drawing so the laws of physics don't apply (you could rest the bar on the neck).  This squatting style will build quads and some glutes (a traditional front squat will have quad and more glute plus be easier on the knees).  It will place more stress on the knees and requires a ton of ankle mobility.  Also be sure to drive the knees outward.  That will clear space in the hips AND the ankles.  Knees should travel WAY outside the foot.  If you wanna squat like this then goblet squat and front squat.  Getting into the position will be easier.  IME Olympic lifters don't really front squat in that position.  That crazy position mostly comes from the catch phase in heavy cleans.  Their back squats and front squats are more traditional.

The second image is more balanced.  You will get quad and glute work (although lesser) and hamstring strength.  All 3 are needed for athletes who run so this is the more common approach.  It also allows more weight so ou see it is more similar to a power lifter squat.  Starting strength is a classic example  of this style.

The third pic is what your squat will look like if you try the first style and dont have enough hip and ankle mobility.  Goodbye spine.  Watch out a disk might shoot your eye out.
« Last Edit: September 11, 2013, 08:46:00 pm by AlexV »
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AlexV

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Re: analyse my squat bar path
« Reply #19 on: September 11, 2013, 08:44:56 pm »
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Jst did a quick google search of images showing olympic squats back and front.

The only pics where the knees even come close to that far forward is in a front squat.  Even then most front squats dont have the knees that far forward. 

My question is why do you want to back squat like that?
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LBSS

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Re: analyse my squat bar path
« Reply #20 on: September 11, 2013, 09:14:31 pm »
+1


My question is why do you want to back squat like that?

he is crazy.
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

- Avishek

https://www.savannahstate.edu/cost/nrotc/documents/Inform2010-thearmstrongworkout_Enclosure15_5-2-10.pdf

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entropy

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Re: analyse my squat bar path
« Reply #21 on: September 12, 2013, 02:53:25 am »
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Quote
The first back squat image is almost impossible to attain UNLESS you are front squatting.  Of course the pic is a back squat and a drawing so the laws of physics don't apply (you could rest the bar on the neck).  This squatting style will build quads and some glutes (a traditional front squat will have quad and more glute plus be easier on the knees).  It will place more stress on the knees and requires a ton of ankle mobility.  Also be sure to drive the knees outward.  That will clear space in the hips AND the ankles.  Knees should travel WAY outside the foot.  If you wanna squat like this then goblet squat and front squat. 

There is a good reason for preferring our backsquat form to resemble FS as much as possible. The reason is that it's much easier to train the BS than the FS. Easier to do more volume. More reps, more sets. Easier to use more weight. This is because the FS depends on rack strength as much as it does leg strength and drive. If your build means you're leaning over, you need even more rack strength than leg strength. FS is not the solution.

Also knees out will force hips back and take you away from the olympic position. That's one reason why you don't want to do that in olympic squats.

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-V9MvP1nxOs" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-V9MvP1nxOs</a>

Quote
Getting into the position will be easier.  IME Olympic lifters don't really front squat in that position.  That crazy position mostly comes from the catch phase in heavy cleans.  Their back squats and front squats are more traditional.

You're probably familar with and looking at how US weightlifters squat. They're not very good at doing olympic style squats, for one reason or another, they end up adopting a very PC dominant style even with their 'olympic squats'.

Knees are not unsafe in a very forward style as illustrated in the first picture. The reason you might think that though, is because you haven't learnt to do the olympic squat properly :) If you go from a PL style squat with vertical shins to an olympic squat, yes it will hurt your knees, even with the empty bar. The PL style doesn't depend on using the muscles directly around the knee and below of the lower leg. This is because you haven't taught your body the correct way to do an olympic squat which is very safe for the knees. PL style squat dont teach you to recruit the muscles of the lower leg to stabilise the knee at the bottom of a deep olympic squat.  If you use your calves and hamstrings and quads (near the knee) and contract them while going into the hole, the knee is supported very well by these muscles. You just have to try this out yourself. Think of the muscles around your knee activating to absorb your descent into the hole and you'll find the stress on knees is reduced. The video above goes into this a bit too.

You'll notice one thing about these squats, there is a very tiny angle btw hips crease and the knees, the knees are almost horizontal as are quads. This means the quads are in a better position to act out of the bottom of a hole. If someone does a 'deep squat' like KingFisher or my front squats, this means the quads are not able to act immediately out of the hole since they are over stretched. That's bad. Instead in that case it's the glutes and hamstrings which bounce you out, and then the about halfway up quads kick in. This isn't a quad dominant olympic squat. That's why I was going on about depth being misunderstood, because for the purposes of an olympic squat, it's more about the depth of the knee rather than the ass vs the knee.

Quote
The second image is more balanced.  You will get quad and glute work (although lesser) and hamstring strength.  All 3 are needed for athletes who run so this is the more common approach.  It also allows more weight so ou see it is more similar to a power lifter squat.  Starting strength is a classic example  of this style.

Depends on the person! My HBBS are so hamstring dominant, hell even my FS are so hamstring and glute dominant that my attempts at olympic squats end up resembling the 2nd pic. It's a fault. Because in my case the weight is not directly over midfoot, it's ahead, sometimes even further than my toes. This leads to good morning squats. Not enough training for my legs. Not enough quad development.
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Joe

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Re: analyse my squat bar path
« Reply #22 on: September 12, 2013, 06:52:16 am »
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<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iQnFe6jP46M" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iQnFe6jP46M</a>

Have you actually watched that guy squat? Looks nothing like that... So much hamstrings. The bottom position he actually takes is more like yours than the ideal one he describes.
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entropy

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Re: analyse my squat bar path
« Reply #23 on: September 12, 2013, 07:16:03 am »
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<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iQnFe6jP46M" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iQnFe6jP46M</a>

Have you actually watched that guy squat? Looks nothing like that... So much hamstrings. The bottom position he actually takes is more like yours than the ideal one he describes.

Yes! I agree completely. I would like to ask him the same thing lol.

Could be one or more of the following :-

1. I know he got Romaleos recently (~0.75" heel)  when he used to wear old classic Dowins which had a 1.25" heel (that he may have modified by a cobbler to be even higher?) . A bigger heel allows you to get more knee forward. Try it by getting on your toes (emulating a big heel) and pushing your hips forward until they're directly above your ankles while sitting down into the first position in the poster. Some people will need a bigger heel than others to get to this position. He may need a bigger one to get into the ideal position than that provided by the Nikes.

2. He's not able to do the idea squat style with heavy weights, the vids of him show him doing a 2xbw squat for 5x5, he's not able to use the ideal form with his heaviest sets

3. He hasn't made the change yet from his old style, old habits are hard to break.

Would be interesting to see him show a video of a lifter he has coached into that technique using heavier weights.
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Joe

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Re: analyse my squat bar path
« Reply #24 on: September 12, 2013, 07:24:42 am »
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His coach has pretty nice form

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=coSTR_fAMpQ" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=coSTR_fAMpQ</a>
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entropy

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Re: analyse my squat bar path
« Reply #25 on: September 12, 2013, 08:11:48 am »
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Yup. Here is coach wu teaching his technique

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BdFSzleg6vM" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BdFSzleg6vM</a>
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Raptor

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Re: analyse my squat bar path
« Reply #26 on: September 12, 2013, 10:14:30 am »
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I wonder what entropy thinks about my form on these ones:

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iL_91zoX3jc" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iL_91zoX3jc</a>

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IYVXYSncHHE" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IYVXYSncHHE</a>

AlexV

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Re: analyse my squat bar path
« Reply #27 on: September 12, 2013, 08:52:40 pm »
+2
I guess the most important question about this was why do you want to squat like that?

From your response it sounds like you want to be an olympic lifter.  That is one technique that you can use to be a better olympic lifter.  I have never seen anyone actually train their back squat n the positions shown in the picture (the vids showed theory but lacked in their technique when under a bar).  I am not saying they are wrong.  For Olympic lifting they may very well be correct.

IMO it borders on the point of diminishing returns for an athlete.  The further one goes down the rabbit hole of sport specific training for olympic lifting or powerlifting the further they stray from their goals as an athlete.
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entropy

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Re: analyse my squat bar path
« Reply #28 on: September 13, 2013, 03:45:43 am »
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I guess the most important question about this was why do you want to squat like that?

For strengthening legs. That's it. I want an exercise which best trains my legs. Currently my squatting form emphasises glutes and hamstrings more than quads. In the BS case, it also heavily tasks lower back which sucks because it can ruin a whole week's workout if my lower back is too torched to squat normally in the coming workouts. I don't mind having a strong posterior chain, it's awesome to have that too. Atm I can work on my PC just by squatting, no need to do anything else. Whereas i'd prefer the case where my squat was training mainly my legs. I can do assistance exercises for my posterior chain.

If my squat form was olympic like, I could train harder and make better progress growing my leg strength because lower back fatigue would not detract from my squat sessions. Right now my squat progress is a zizgag of doing a heavy enough goodmorning with my squat, accidentally strengthening my back enough (once recovery has occured lol) to progress my backsquat a bit longer before again hitting a wall due to lower back deficit. It's a nightmare.

Quote
From your response it sounds like you want to be an olympic lifter.  That is one technique that you can use to be a better olympic lifter.  I have never seen anyone actually train their back squat n the positions shown in the picture (the vids showed theory but lacked in their technique when under a bar).  I am not saying they are wrong.  For Olympic lifting they may very well be correct.

Nope, basketball is my sport. Olympic lifters need strong legs. That's the purpose for which they use the squat as an assistance. They already work their posterior chain thru their main lifts as well as assistance pulling exercises. They achieve a good balance between leg strength and posterior strength. I am not an olympic lifter but I also need that same balance. No the LBBS will not give me balance. If my HBBS resembles the 2nd squat, then an intentional LBBS for me resembles a pure good morning - it's no longer a leg exercise it's a pure posterior chain one. This is another point i'd like to make, the LBBS isn't for everyone. For someone with my build it's exactly the wrong type of squat!

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SM2ZAQ_jFJs" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SM2ZAQ_jFJs</a>

These athletes are squatting with knee positions as illustrated (except for the big kid).

Quote
IMO it borders on the point of diminishing returns for an athlete.  The further one goes down the rabbit hole of sport specific training for olympic lifting or powerlifting the further they stray from their goals as an athlete.

There is an argument to be made that the olympic squat is /the/ squat exercise for athletes and general strength.  I get that in some sense the LBBS is a jack-of-all-trades squats to some. Not very good at building leg strength but it's good for putting a lot of weight on the bar, for some, because it makes for a deadlift-like squat rather than a squat-like one. And since weight on the bar is very important to a lot of people, it's the natural choice. But weight on the bar is not everything, if the downside is we're turning the squat into an exercise which resembles the deadlift, then what exactly are we achieving if legs are no longer being strengthened like in the olympic squat? It's a trade off i'm not willing to entertain when strong legs are so important in sport, which is the main reason we are squatting in the first place! Guys are moving 400-500 in the LBBS and only front squatting 300! I can front squat 300 and my backsquat is around there too. What does it say about the leg training effect of the LBBS when these so-called strong squatters have such low front squats? It says their not training their legs very hard.
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Joe

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Re: analyse my squat bar path
« Reply #29 on: September 13, 2013, 07:22:42 am »
+1
Why don't you just make front squat your primary exercise? It seems close enough to your back squat at the moment that your rack strength isn't an issue.
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