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low bar squat issues
#1

low bar squat issues

I am having some serious issues with gripping the bar on a low bar squat. Depending on how I grip it, I either experience pain in my shoulder or in my wrists.

I think I may have some mobility issues. Does anyone else have problems when they low bar squat? Anyone have any suggestions for how to handle it?

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#2

low bar squat issues

How long have you been doing the low bar style? It took me some time to build up the flexibility to be comfortable with it.

If only you knew how bad things really are.
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#3

low bar squat issues

Literally just started about a week ago. I had lots of lower mobility (ankle) issues and could not even get proper squat depth until I got my Romaleos. Now I can get low enough to break parallel without falling over but now I am having trouble with the barbell grip.

I have to grip really wide. Sometime I try just plopping my hands so my wrists rest on top of the barbell (so I am not even actually gripping it). This hurts my shoulders. When I try gripping the bar itself, I still have to go wide but then I cant straighten out my wrists so the barbell is resting on a bent back wrist.

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#4

low bar squat issues

OK that's actually fairly normal. I felt like a trussed chicken for the first month. You can keep your hands out wider on the bar if it helps keep the wrist straight. Over time you'll be able to move them in closer. When there is less tissue under the bar you're more prone to this, but as you build up some size it will diminish. As you get more flexible you can squeeze your back together tighter and create a thicker "shelf" for the bar.

If only you knew how bad things really are.
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#5

low bar squat issues

1) Try to keep your elbows tucked in closer to your body.

2) Keep your thumb on the same side of the bar as your fingers when you squat.

[size=8pt]"For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us.”[/size] [size=7pt] - Romans 8:18[/size]
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#6

low bar squat issues

Wrist wraps and not wrapping the pinky around the bar. It feels weird at first. That's how I squatted for a long time with poor mobility.

Obviously fix the mobility problem though.
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#7

low bar squat issues

I too used to have pain in arms after squatting anything above 225 pounds. It stoppeded when I corrected arms to a narrower posture elbows raised up.

I do daily shoulder dislocations for 50 reps and this helps to maintain flexibility needed.

Fingers must not wrap around bar. Thumb on the same side as other fingers. The bar must be fixated between palms and your back.
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#8

low bar squat issues

Why are you doing low bar?
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#9

low bar squat issues

Quote: (09-01-2014 06:01 PM)Little Dark Wrote:  

Why are you doing low bar?

why not?

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#10

low bar squat issues

Improving thoracic mobility

+

bigger lats and rear delts

will solve your problem.
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#11

low bar squat issues

Quote: (09-01-2014 06:11 PM)objectivist tree Wrote:  

Quote: (09-01-2014 06:01 PM)Little Dark Wrote:  

Why are you doing low bar?

why not?

High bar is better in my opinion.

These issue you're having can be avoided with a high bar placement. You get a longer ROM(assuming stance is close) which activates more muscle mass. Flexibility improves too if you're going ass to grass.

It is harder on the knees tho.
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#12

low bar squat issues

I personally prefer the high bar squat too.

This thread on the high bar vs. low bar back squat is interesting reading, with some excellent posts from Greg Everett (who comes up as a guest for some reason) and Glen Pendlay: http://board.crossfit.com/showthread.php?t=33028

This post from Glenn Pendlay is particularly interesting: http://board.crossfit.com/showpost.php?p...stcount=93

"So much has been said here, but I have a couple of observations that (I think) havnt been made...

1) There is the assumption that high bar squats, done very deep, do not work the posterior chain. I would propose that they do, and the difference between high bar and low bar and the posterior chain is not as large as some would assume it is.

When I converted from PL to OL, I converted from low bar, powerlifting type squats (medium stance) to closer stance high bar squats with a fairly upright torso, although I dont think my torso was ever as upright as some coaches would prefer. I remember my lower back and glutes being very sore over the first couple of workouts, these workouts were with weights around 365lbs to 405lbs. For comparison, my last heavy low bar back squat set done before this was 730lbs for a set of 3, to be fair this was with suit and wraps. I still remember that set, done in the left hand squat rack in the back of Rip's old gym, because it was supposed to be a set of 5, and I lost my balance and dumped it on the pins on the 4th rep.

My observations at the time were that the longer lever arm created by putting the bar higher on the back was overriding the decreased angle of the back, and making it even harder for my lumbar muscles to maintan a tight back and for my hip extensors to extend the hip. I am not trying to say that HB squats work the posterior chain more than LB squats, I do not personally believe this, I am just making the point that the differences are not as clear cut as some are making them.

2) As I see it, the heart of this argument is really about the carry-over of LB and HB squats to other things, specifically OL. Here are a few general observations about carry-over.

When I was a good LB squatter, that strength did not carry over well to HB or front squats, as evidenced by some of the numbers above. When later in my lifting career, I became a decent HB squatter, it directly and immedietly carried over to being able to do very respectable numbers in the LB squat. My front squat of 550lbX5reps and HB back squat of 606lbsX10 reps, both done without a belt, these sets done about a month apart, allowed me to do several very, very respectable LB squats, and LB box squats with no practice or training on either the LB squat or the LB box squat. My feeling was that strength gained from HB squatting was just more "transferable" to other things than strength gained from LB squatting. Through many conversations with others, and a fair bit of experience coaching ex-powerlifters in the Olympic lifts, I have found that this seems to be quite universal. HB, Olympic style squatting will make you strong at the LB squat, LB squatting with a more bent over stance and less depth will NOT carry over well to the HB, Olympic style squat. I think the carry over from one to another bears considering, because what what we are really talking about here is the carry over from one type of squat or another to a completely different exercise.


Fred Hatfield, AKA "Dr. Squat" who is a respected authority on strength training, has written a couple of very good books on the subject, and who competed at a fairly high level in both gymnastics and OL before achieving a 1008lb squat at 44 years of age and I believe around 255lbs, has argued extensively that not only should the HB squat be used EXCLUSIVELY for the training of athletes, but its qualities of carry over are such that even POWERLIFTERS who are actually competing with a low bar, bent over, only to parallel and sometimes wide stance squat, should in fact do HB, Olympic style squats for much of the off season. In a rough quote of his words, HB squats build strength, LB squats demonstrate it.

3) Positions become habit, and I have not seen much about this in the specific arguments over Olympic lifters doing one type of squat or another. I remember when I was first starting the Olympic lifts, the hardest thing in the world for me was to catch a heavy clean with a torso upright enough to hold the bar on the shoulders, and not let it roll off. The second hardest was to stand up with it without sticking the but immedietly out, and raising the hips first, and dumping the bar off the shoulders, even though had I been magically able to glue the bar in place, I had plenty of strength to stand up with it. I believe that at least part of this was very simply that I was used to this position from doing so many squats this way, and whenever anything was heavy, I , without thinking, reverted back to it. It was a hard, hard habit to break, one I really never completely broke. I would propose that for Olympic lifters, it is better, as a rule, to have the torso and hips in the approximate position that they need to be in when you are going to be in that hole in competition every time you are in that hole in training.

4) A bit has been said about relative strength, and the weak hamstrings of Olers... or more specifically the relative strength of OLers hamstrings and thighs leaving them quite quad dominant. I would propose that OLers SHOULD be more quad dominant given the demands of the sport, and that given a solid diet of nothing but the competitive lifts only, with no assistance exercises, you would develop a quad dominant athlete. A quad dominant athlete will be much more likely, when the weights get heavy, catch a clean with an upright torso and stand without kicking the hips way out, and to dip and drive straight on the jerk. With maximal weights, the body has a way of getting into its strongest positions naturally, and for a quad dominant lifter, the strongest positions are the right ones for the sport, and the ones that will allow successful lifts with the greatest weight. I think that part of my problem successfully catching cleans early in my OL career was due to the "bad habit" of being leaned over too far in the bottom of a squat, but another factor was that I was, at the time, quite hamstring/posterior chain dominant. The wrong recipe for success in OL.

5) The last thing, one that I havnt seen touched on, is ease of coaching. A high bar position is pretty natural. Its where most people will put the bar without being coached. Its also pretty comfortable for the vast, vast majority of people. No undue strain on the back, neck, shoulders, or wrists. On the other hand, a low bar squat usually has to be coached, to get the wrist and hands and bar all in the right position, it often has to be coached extensively. It is not unusual for it to cause shoulder pain, or wrist pain if the shoulders/arms are too tight to keep the hands and wrist in the right position. In my experience it is, at the least, initially uncomfortable.

I remember all kinds of shoulder pain when I was squatting low bar as a powerlifter. Literal cramps in the shoulder muscles during sets of 5, shoulder pain the next day, etc. And I remember that it was bad enough that it interfered with my bench press training at times. This is an experience shared by many, many powerlifters. One thing that was great when I switched to HB squats was that the shoulders no longer hurt! It was great to be able to do a hard squat workout, and not have my shoulders and/or wrists hurting as bad as my legs!

Carrying heavy weights in that low bar position is just plain hard and fatiguing on the sholders. For many people, if you dont NEED to do it that way, I am not sure why you would.

To be fair, I think squats done the way Rip coaches them are great. A great exercise. The guy certainly knows how to teach people to squat, hes proven that many times, and someone squatting with form acceptable to him is squatting in a more productive and safe manner than the vast majority of those squatting. I also think the HB vs LB controversy has less meaning than has been assigned to it... for example, one certainly can squat with the bar in a low position and still do a pretty upright, deep squat, that as far as body position would satisfy any Olympic lifting coach. One can also do a HB squat and get quite bent over, I have personally proven that many times! Simply changing the position of the bar on the back doesnt magically change a good exercise to a bad one, or vice versa.

But, Olympic lifting is a sport, and it is pretty universally agreed by those with extensive experience as athletes and coaches in that sport that there is an advantage in that sport to be gained from squatting in a certain way, and that way is a high bar, upright squat. I do agree with this.

I am not so sure that I agree with Fred Hatfields view that HB, Olympic style squats are so superior and have such a superior strength transfer to other activities that not only all athletes should be doing it that way, but even competitive powerlifters who compete with a low bar squat should do much of their training with the HB squat. I am inclined to think in this direction, but it is certainly not as clear cut an issue as the one pertaining to OLers. Fred's accomplishments and achievements do lend some credibility to his views though.

glenn"

I'd be interested to hear Mongo's thoughts and which he favours with his athletes too.
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#13

low bar squat issues

Quote: (08-30-2014 02:23 AM)Mage Wrote:  

I too used to have pain in arms after squatting anything above 225 pounds. It stoppeded when I corrected arms to a narrower posture elbows raised up.

I do daily shoulder dislocations for 50 reps and this helps to maintain flexibility needed.

Fingers must not wrap around bar. Thumb on the same side as other fingers. The bar must be fixated between palms and your back.

I had this problem also, I had to get my elbows up much higher than I thought. I like lowbar because of the snap crackle pop sounds my knees make on highbar.

I would mix in some light highbar stuff though as I felt like I was missing some of the muscles just doing lowbar...and I tell you a set of light highbar squats after lowbar was all I needed.

Why do the heathen rage and the people imagine a vain thing? Psalm 2:1 KJV
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