REVERSE LUNGE: FRONT LOADED BARBELL

REVERSE LUNGE: FRONT LOADED BARBELL
LOWER BODY MOVEMENTS
In our Strength Training System, most exercises that are being considered for a specific program will be placed into one of three general movement categories. Lower Body Movements involve the following movements: knee extension, hip extension, and plantar flexion. Lower Body Movements are those that will help increase strength in the lower back, quadriceps, hamstrings, gluteus muscle group, hip extensors, flexors, adductors, abductors, and the muscles of the lower leg (calf and ankle). Bilateral Movements are prominent within the program, but we also utilize a lot of unilateral variations which are more sports specific and help reduce stress placed on the body during training.
REVERSE LUNGE EXERCISES
Reverse Lunges are a unilateral lower body movement variation important in teaching and strengthening proper load mechanics for deceleration. This is more of a hip dominant movement pattern.
Reverse Lunge: Front Loaded Barbell
- Address the bar from the rack position
- Next grab the bar with the same grip you would use to bench, thumbs a finger width to smooth.
- Have the bar rest on your shoulders, just below your throat.
- From this Catch Position, your elbows need to be pointing straight ahead. The bottom of your arm should remain parallel to the floor throughout the entire movement. This will require some wrist and triceps flexibility which you will acquire with time
- Under control, walk the weight out of the rack slowly, one step at a time
- Prior, make sure your bar clamps are secure
- Begin from a standing athletic position, feet hip width apart facing forward.
- Lunge backward at a distance that produces 90° joint angles at the hip, knee and ankle when the back knee touches the floor.
- Do not allow the forward knee to lean in. Your thigh, knee, foot and ankle should all remain inline, pointing straight ahead.
- From the bottom position, push hard with the mid foot to return to the starting position.
- Maintain a spine neutral upright torso throughout the movement pattern.
- Notice your torso is leaning slightly forward and at the same angle with the rear thigh and front shin. I like to see the front knee slightly forward of the ankle because it matches proper skating mechanics
- Alternate legs for number of reps prescribed