Home   |   Contact   |   Help   |   Mobile
olympic weightlifting, weightlifting, snatch, clean, jerk
The Superhero Complex: Stretch & Activate Easily For Squats
Greg Everett | April 9 2012

Send to Kindle


The Superhero Complex: Stretch & Activate Easily For Squats, Greg Everett,
Easily the most common problem people bring up with regard to squatting is an inability to maintain the arch in their backs as they sit into the bottom position. This is not a complex problem, but that doesn’t mean it’s easy to fix. Improving flexibility can be a long and tedious process, but the sooner you commit to it, the sooner you’ll get some traction and see progress.

Because stretching and the like is so odious for most people, I’m always looking for ways to make it quicker, simpler and more efficient. Those who put in a lot of training hours already or who have limited training time are generally resistant to the idea of adding even a single minute of stretching after their workouts.

Something I use when appropriate I call the superhero complex: a static spiderman lunge followed by a superman hold (or spiderperson lunge and superperson hold for those of you who find the gender bias of the English language offensive). Generally the spiderman lunge is held for 20-30 seconds per leg, immediately followed by a superman hold for 5-10 seconds.

This complex can be done between squat sets both to make your training more efficient, and to continue improving your position in the squat as you go. Do at least 1-2 sets of it before your first set, then do 1 set between each set of squats.

You can increase or reduce the intensity of the superman hold by changing the position of your hands and arms from your sides (easiest) to hands on your head (moderate) to outstretched in front of you (hardest), and by keeping the legs on the floor (easier) or lifting them up (harder). This should not be a maximal, sweating, gritting your teeth effort—the point is not to exhaust your erectors to the point of being unable to support your back arch in your next set of squats, but to train the ability to generate a forceful extension and to let yourself feel what your back should be doing as you squat down.

With the spiderman lunge, keep the front shin vertical and the front foot pointed straight ahead. Push your hips down as far toward the floor as possible rather than just leaning over with the chest. Keep getting lower over the duration of the stretch.

Give it a shot during your next squat workout and let me know how it works for you.
Print Friendly and PDF
Greg Everett is the owner of Catalyst Athletics, publisher of The Performance Menu and author of Olympic Weightlifting: A Complete Guide for Athletes & Coaches and The Portable Greg Everett. Follow him on Facebook here.
More from Greg Everett Blog Posts   Free Articles   Buy Performance Menu Articles
Get Our Newsletter
Sign up for our free newsletter to get training tips and stay up to date on Catalyst Athletics, and get a FREE issue of the Performance Menu journal.



Books, weightlifting, fitness, nutrition, strength, conditioning

The Coach's Strength Training Playbook
The Coach's Strength Training Playbook
Bones of Iron: Collected Articles on the Life of the Strength Athlete
Bones of Iron: Collected Articles on the Life of the Strength Athlete
Cooking for Health & Performance Volume 2 E-Book
Cooking for Health & Performance Volume 2 E-Book
Catalyst Athletics Book of Programs (E-book)
Catalyst Athletics Book of Programs (E-book)

5 Comments
Ash 1 | 2012-04-09
Good stuff! But, what's a superman hold?
Greg Everett 2 | 2012-04-09
Lie on your stomach and arch your back to lift your legs and chest off the floor.
Ash 3 | 2012-04-09
Thank you sir! Would you recommend a lunge stretch in this mix for tight hip flexors (even if it doesn't keep with the superhero theme)?
Mike Haytack 4 | 2012-04-09
For us gangly folks it's a must!
sam aguirre 5 | 2012-04-20
I do this between my squat sets and my low back feels fresh when I step up to the bar. Thanks!
Leave a Comment

Name
Comment
Verify
 

Get Our Newsletter

Sign up for our free newsletter to get training tips and stay up to date on Catalyst Athletics AND get a free issue of the Performance Menu journal.






Advertise With Us
Search Blog

Browse Blog

Show All Posts
Blog Home
Blog Categories

Weightlifting
General
Ask Greg
Quick Tips
Sort Posts by Author

Sort Posts by Date




Advertise With Us
Subscribe to the Performance Menu Magazine
Subscribe to our Newsletter

Get training tips and Catalyst news AND get a free issue of the Performance Menu journal.



Submit your question to be answered by Greg or Aimee Everett in the Performance Menu or on the website

Submit Your Question
Olympic Weightlifting Team

Catalyst Athletics is a USA Weightlifting team of competitive Olympic-style weightlifters. We are currently recruting new lifters and offer sponsorship opportunities.

Read More
Olympic Weightlifting For Sports Book
Catalyst Athletics
Contact Us
About
Help
Newsletter
Products & Services
Gym
Store
Events
Weightlifting Team
Performance Menu
Magazine Home
Subscriber Login
Issues
Articles
Workouts
About the Program
Workout Archives
Exercise Demos
Text Only
Instructional Content
Exercise Demos
Video Gallery
Free Articles
Free Recipes
Resources
Recommended Books & DVDs
Olympic Weightlifting Guide
Discussion Forum
Weight Conversion Calculator