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  • It's time to take a trip to the iron graveyard and pay our respects to 5 exercises that belong

  • there.

  • And at the same time bow our heads in a moment of silence to all those that got hurt doing

  • them.

  • Today, guys, it's time to change all of that once and for all.

  • What's up, guys? Jeff Cavaliere, ATHLEANX.COM.

  • Come take a trip with me today to the Iron Graveyard. We're going to dig up 5 of the

  • worst exercises that you can be doing.

  • Now, why do I call them worst? Well, first of all, guys, we have to qualify.

  • As a Physical Therapist and professional Strength Coach, I have to judge the merits of an exercise

  • on its risk-to-benefit ratio.

  • When I talk about that, I mean, if I have overhead-throwing athletes, pitchers, quarterbacks,

  • a heavy, overhead snatch is not the best exercise choice for me,

  • especially when I know I have better options, right? One bad rep can end a career. Realizing

  • that I don't have all professional athletes watching my channel,

  • I still have to be able to provide you reasons why I feel that these may not be the best

  • options for you,

  • even if you're after just aesthetic growth, even if you're after just the purposes of

  • looking better, ok.

  • So, what I want to do is break down the 5 of them, and give you my reasons of why I

  • don't feel they're the best options, and then let you decide, ok.

  • No discussion of the worst exercises starts without bringing up the Flys. Now, the controversy

  • can get started right away.

  • Guys, you know how I feel about this exercise. We know that a lot of people make the argument

  • that doing Chest Flys increases the stretch on the chest, right?

  • Simply not true because we know that the origin insertion of the chest prevents that from

  • happening.

  • We know that with the chest we can actually feel where it goes. If you put your hand across

  • your upper chest, you can feel where it inserts over here onto your upper arm.

  • Basically, when we're here, or we're here, once we get to the bottom of what would be

  • a Bench Press,

  • this is the maximum amount of stretch we get on the chest. So, if we open our arm up even

  • further, that doesn't do anything.

  • That doesn't add any extra stretch. There's no more excursion here of this muscle.

  • What we are feeling is a stretch on the coracobrachialis which actually comes from here, down into

  • here.

  • Now, we can see if the arm were to go further back that that increases the stretch here

  • on that muscle.

  • But what are we doing here? Chest Flys or Coracobrachialis Flys? We're not.

  • I mean, if we open up the arm, and we increase the load that's out here and increase the

  • length of the lever arm,

  • that could potentially cause one bad rep, one bad overload, and cause us to have a torn

  • pec.

  • Again, if you're doing it for the abduction that we get from a Chest Fly, which is a great

  • reason to do it, there are better options.

  • As a matter of fact, why don't we get on our feet like we try to with ATHLEANX, and do

  • something more like the 3D Cable Crossover.

  • But that's number 1. Now let's go onto the shoulders.

  • Number 2 are Behind the Neck Shoulder Press. We all know that there are a lot of ways that

  • we can push a bar up overhead.

  • I'm telling you that there's a better way, especially when we're looking at the health

  • of our shoulders and the risk-to-benefit ratio.

  • We know that any way we can get that bar up overhead is going to overload those shoulders,

  • but

  • the plane that we're doing it in can make all the difference.

  • So, when we talk about a Behind the Neck Shoulder Press, my issue with this, guys, is that

  • we're pushing in an abnormal plane of motion when we look at the orientation of our shoulders

  • in the joint.

  • The glenohumeral joint is our shoulder joint, the ball and socket. They will angle forward

  • at a slight degree forward like this.

  • So, basically, if the ball and socket moves inside that, the natural plane of motion is

  • to be slightly ahead of us, ok

  • slightly out in this direction that way. If we go straight out to the side, not only are

  • we causing the rolling of the ball and the socket to be abnormal,

  • but we're also causing an increase in the likelihood for impingement.

  • The reason for that is right here where I can show you. Basically we have our ball and

  • socket like this, ok.

  • If we take the ball in there and we go to move it up in the forward, the correct plane,

  • you can see that it rolls inside that socket with plenty of room to come all the way up

  • to the top, ok.

  • If we have our arm way out to the side over here, ok, it's going to be hard to show. But

  • basically, the arm's going to be going up this way.

  • If we have it there, because the socket is rounded here, we start to hit the lateral

  • portion of the socket right away, ok, as it goes up.

  • That causes impingement. Secondly, when we're able to get our arms in front of us, and push

  • straight up,

  • we're able to activate a nice balance between the upper traps and the serratus anterior.

  • What that does is it causes the upper traps to pull this way, the serratus to pull down

  • and around this way so that our shoulderblade actually tips.

  • By tipping here, we increase, again, the amount of space that we get in here for the glenohumeral

  • head.

  • So, lots of reasons why we don't really want to be pressing way back here. And it's just

  • as good to get our elbows in front of us and press up.

  • Next up, Upright Rows. Sticking with the shoulder, and sticking with a concept that I've covered

  • in depth in another video.

  • The Upright Row is one of THE worst exercises I feel you can do for shoulders, especially

  • again because we have so many better options.

  • And small tweaks can lead to big and positive changes.

  • The problem I have with the Upright Row is the nature of the exercise itself puts us

  • into an impingement position.

  • Again, as a Physical Therapist, if you were to come into my clinic, and I was going to

  • test you for shoulder impingement,

  • I would put your arms in this position. Literally, like this, and push down. Ok, push down right

  • here.

  • That is exactly the position of an Upright Row, and I don't care how wide you grab the

  • bar.

  • If you're going to grab the bar, the weight is pulling your hands down, and you're trying

  • to raise your elbows up.

  • That is an Impingement-Provocative Test. We don't want to be doing Provocative Tests,

  • Clinical Provocative Tests on a rep-by-rep basis.

  • All you're asking for, guys, is to develop an impingement if you already don't have one.

  • And you might argue you've been doing the Upright Row for years and years and years

  • and it's a great shoulder exercise.

  • And you never had problems. Just because you've never had problems, doesn't mean that you

  • won't have problems

  • even on a given, particular day or one single rep. It's that kind of thing, guys, where

  • overuse and overload in a consistent way

  • can lead to a breakdown, eventually of those structures inside your shoulders. So, number

  • 3, and one I firmly believe belongs in that iron graveyard.

  • Number 4. Good Mornings. This might be an exercise that you think was already in the

  • Iron Graveyard a long time ago because you don't see many people doing them any more.

  • The reason why? Probably, too many people have gotten hurt doing them that they've abandoned

  • them.

  • Here's the ironic thing about this exercise. I actually think it's a good exercise in terms

  • of the movement pattern that it's requiring you to do.

  • However, I find that so many people lack the thoracic extension necessary to do this exercise

  • properly.

  • As you can see as I'm demonstrating here, I have a proper hip hinge which puts me in

  • a safer position.

  • It's not a hinge straight forward at the waist that could really compromise my low back.

  • I'm actually allowing my hips to absorb most of that energy, and do this thing properly.

  • The problem is that thoracic extension is an absolute requirement here. And one of the

  • areas that we are so limited on.

  • As guys who tend to work sitting at a desk, or just guys who tend to do all of our work

  • in front of us, thoracic extension becomes a problem.

  • When you cannot have that proper thoracic extension, all of that force gets driven down

  • above and below the area that's affected.

  • Mostly in this case down below to the lumbar spine, and you have issues.

  • So, there are, again, a lot of different ways to strengthen our paraspinal in our lumbar

  • area

  • without having to subject ourselves to an exercise that most of us are just not mechanically

  • built to do.

  • Lastly, Number 5. Leg Extensions. Or, Leg Extinctions, as I like to call them. Guys,

  • these belong in the Iron Graveyard.

  • There are so many better ways. There are so many more functional ways to strengthen our

  • quads and legs than these guys.

  • So many reasons why. We have a shearing force that gets placed on our knees.

  • We have constant tension on our ACL Ligament. Not a good idea.

  • We have an imbalance of the activation between our VMO and our rectus femoris.

  • That's a situation that leads to patellar tendon issues almost all the time. And this

  • only contributes because it favors more rectus activation than VMO.

  • It also has no co-contraction from the hamstrings, alright. At least not as much as anything

  • that we do closed chain with our foot on the ground.

  • So, for so many reasons, guys, these should be replaced, right. We don't want to be doing

  • anything that causes an obvious breakdown over time.

  • Even, as I said, if it's not causing you a problem right now, why do you want to risk

  • it when you have better options?

  • And that's the thing, guys. We outlined the ATHLEANX Training Program.

  • So many ways to do things, as I feel, better than what these things are allowing us to

  • do.

  • I wouldn't just tell you to get rid of these things,and then not replace them with something

  • that was more

  • effective and certainly more beneficial on that risk-to-benefit ratio, right, low risk-high

  • reward. That's what it is.

  • And that's what I bring to my program as a Physical Therapist. And I think that's what

  • I bring as a Strength Coach to you guys who watch my channel all the time.

  • We bring another level to this. It's not just showing cool exercises to do. It's about putting

  • that science back in strength.

  • And I think that is the strength of our channel. So, guys, if you haven't already,and you want

  • to start training smarter and harder.

  • because I'm certainly going to work the hell out of ya, you gotta make sure that you head

  • over to ATHLEANX.COM

  • right now and get our 90-Day Training Program, and see what it's like to train like an athlete,

  • ok.

  • Even if you're not getting paid to be one, you need to be as functionally strong and

  • transferable as you can when it comes to

  • taking that strength and bringing it out to whatever it is that you want to do with it,

  • whether it's playing sports or just playing the game of life.

  • So, head to ATHLEANX.COM right now.

  • Let me know if you found this exercise helpful, I mean, this video helpful, and of course,

  • let me know of some of the other exercises that you've had bad experiences with and see

  • if we can throw them in the Iron Graveyard as well. Alright.

  • Thanks, guys. I'll be back here again soon with another video.

It's time to take a trip to the iron graveyard and pay our respects to 5 exercises that belong

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