- Joined
- May 27, 2008
- Messages
- 820
- Reaction score
- 0
now i get it...girls with pizza
now i get it...girls with pizza
![]()
now i get it...girls with pizza
![]()
Pizza AND red wine... my kind of lady.
When did this turn into my log
The pull stops during the racking phase. "Stops" means that the muscular force generated during the pull ceases being applied to the ground. As soon as the feet shift position out of the pulling stance and begin the stomp, you have stopped pushing the floor. If you hadn't, your feet could not move. When force stops being applied to the bar, it stops accelerating, and Mean Old Mr. Gravity causes its velocity to drop to zero and start back down almost instantly. It is during this reversal in acceleration that the racking position is assumed. The movement is a shrug of the shoulders instantly followed by jamming the elbows up and forward to catch the bar on the deltoids. The movement is fast, as it must be if the bar is to be caught before it falls too far.
why not simply switch to hook grip instead of forcing the double overhand?
Do you think I should just go for hook grip regardless?
yup!
not only will the ROM be a bit shorter, but you won't experience any problems you might with the over-under grip... (one side developing differently than the other one)
(just to be clear, you might never have problems with that sort of thing, but some people do, so better be safe than sorry...)
You've sold me on the shorter ROM. I will practice the hook grip more, and work it to my deadlifting more agressively.
Nice progress man. You're getting a lot stronger, despite the fact that your job prevents you from having an ideal training consistency. I agree with STTD about hook grip. I started hook gripping a few weeks ago and it honestly didn't even hurt much at all. I definitely prefer it.