Dynamic Dialogue with Danny Matranga - 236: The 10 Exercises You *NEED* In Your Program
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Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome in everybody to another episode of the Dynamic Dialogue podcast. In today's episode,
I'm going to be sharing with you 10 exercises or lifts that I think can help accelerate your gains,
your fitness, your hypertrophy, and your strength. I think these are lifts that will
generally be easy to insert directly into your
programming once a week, twice a week. Perhaps you substitute an existing movement pattern with one
of these movement patterns. These are exercises that I have found to be very valuable for helping
to develop the structures of the body. That'd be the, of course, musculature and all of the various
intermuscular coordination
things required to be athletic and strong, getting muscles to work together. They're good for
athletes, good for bodybuilders, good for people just looking to improve their fitness. And I think,
like I said, you can just inject these into your existing programming. These are lifts that I've
been doing with clients in the gym for years, And we program these things all the time for our online coaching clients at Core Coaching Method, as well as in our app-based
training communities, both of which you can find in the show notes below if you want to put your
fitness on autopilot and have the best training experience and results possible. So without further ado, getting into the 10 lifts that I believe will accelerate your
gains, strength, mobility, and athletic potential, I'd be remiss if I didn't lead off with a personal
favorite of mine, the walking lunge. Now, walking lunges are challenging because they do require
a significant amount of stability. If you are a
complete novice, this will be a challenging exercise. You can use external stability in the
form of wooden dowels or a railing, or you can regress to something like a reverse lunge or a
standard split squat. Not a Bulgarian split squat, but a standard split squat. But the reason that I
love walking lunges are multifactorial. Actually,
there's a number of reasons. The first is that it really gets our glutes into a lengthened position.
A lot of the most popular glute training exercises, like hip thrusts, low back extensions,
challenge the glutes the most when they're in the shortened position, which I think is generally an
okay way to train the glutes. However, when we talk about
optimizing for muscle growth, you need to train muscles in both their shortened and lengthened
position. And the walking lunge will allow you to do this quite well. It also requires a good
amount of ankle mobility. And when you do movements that require good hip mobility
and ankle mobility, you have the ability to expand your movement capacity by reinforcing greater
mobility at different joint angles. And so what the walking lunge will do in addition to challenging
the quads and the glutes in unique positions, it will reinforce hip and ankle mobility.
Another thing I love about this
lift, if you're stable enough to do it, you don't need weights. You can do a body weight for
distance. You can do it with dumbbells. You can do it with kettlebells. You can do it with a
barbell. You can do it with a weighted vest. It's an exercise that's very easy to load.
And it's an exercise that has a lot of different loading opportunities. Meaning if you're at home
training without a ton of equipment, or you're at the gym and it's super crowded, you can adjust and pivot how you do these walking
lunges. One of the ways we like to have clients do these is to complete a rep count number,
meaning like, hey, finish your workout with 100 unbroken walking lunges. This acts as both a good
conditioning and mobility exercise, getting the client to train in a lengthened position that's challenging and deep hip flexion with a lot of dorsiflexion.
It's also a great exercise for getting a metabolic output where you get a big pump.
Now, additionally, you can load these up with a barbell or a dumbbell and train them in that more
typical 8 to 12 repetition range that we often see consistent with most programming schemes.
But the walking lunge is a phenomenal exercise, and it is one that I attribute a tremendous amount
of glute growth for both myself and my clients. I think it is one of, if not the single biggest
and most underrated exercise for developing the glutes. Moving on to number two, and this,
I promise, is not a reductionist oversimplification,
but this might not be one of the exercises you expected to hear on this list,
but it's actually the pushup. And I know what many of you are thinking, pushups are
easy. They're body weight. They're for beginners. Why don't I just bench press or use dumbbell
pressing? Well, the beautiful thing about pushups is it does what I like to call free the scapula. So the scapula are the shoulder blades or the bones on the back side of the rib cage that translate front to back, or they go around from the back of the rib cage out towards the sides. They go up and down. They rotate. There's a lot of different ways in which that scapula can move.
that scapula can move. Now, when you're bench pressing or dumbbell pressing, typically those scapula are going to have their mobility limited by the pad on the bench. So you're laying flat
on a bench. So the scapula can only come together so much. They can only provide or perform so much
rotation. And when you do a pushup, there's nothing on the scapula. There's nothing inhibiting
its ability to move freely. So you get a tremendous amount of shoulder extension where the elbow moves back behind the body. You get great range of motion out of the shoulder. You get phenomenal stretch through the pecs, shoulders, and triceps. can be as well. One beautiful thing about the pushup too is for female lifters, it tends to
have a pretty challenging progression curve for a much longer time. Well-trained men who can bench
press a good amount of weight or dumbbell press a good amount of weight usually need to do a
substantially higher number of pushups or even loaded pushups or pushups where you are
accentuating the eccentric, extending the range of motion, all good tactics, all things that make this a very versatile lift for it to be challenging. But for a lot of female
lifters, 10 strict pushups will always be challenging due to the kind of discrepancy
in upper body strength and power between men and women. So getting really good at pushups can
oftentimes substitute entirely for dumbbell and
barbell pressing. And it gives you a tremendous amount of opportunity to allow that scapula to
move freely, reinforce mobility. And again, like I said, once you get better, you can do more,
you can expand the range of motion, you can load them. And what I love about these is they can be
scaled to any fitness level. I have 80 to 90-year-old clients at the studio who
do these elevated on a push-up or on a barbell or on a bench so as to minimize the actual angle of
the torso. When you do a push-up, typically your torso and body are going to be parallel with the
floor. But if you put their hands on a barbell and move a barbell or Smith machine incrementally up
the rack, you increase that angle. And the greater
the angle, the greater the decrease in torque required pressure put on the body weight that
you're actually lifting. And so it can be scaled to almost any fitness level. And it's a phenomenal
pushing pattern that still allows for free movement of the scapula. The third lift on this list is actually a tandem of lifts, and it is two single
leg variations that I see done less commonly than their bilateral versions. And this would be single
leg bridges and single leg presses. So I love hip thrusts and I love glute bridges for training the
glutes in the shortened position. And I really like leg presses as a way to challenge the glutes in the shortened position. And I really like leg presses as a way to challenge the glutes and the quads with a tremendous amount of stability. But what I like a lot about
bilateral training modalities, like the fact that you can load them up, the fact that they tend to
be more stable, doesn't mean we don't want to occasionally dip into the unilateral versions
that can enhance dynamic stability, promote a greater stretch. These can oftentimes be used as great
preparatory work to get you warmed up and ready to go. So single leg bridges I love as a way to
provide and promote pelvic stability, to get the glutes going prior to a squat or lunge session,
to work on hip mobility. Again, any exercise that trains through a full range of motion
can be good for enhancing mobility. And then single leg that trains through a full range of motion can be good for
enhancing mobility. And then single leg presses I really like because if you can create pelvic
stability by pulling down into the leg press itself, you get a tremendous stretch at the
bottom position, more so when doing it unilaterally than bilaterally, especially if you have a leg
press that allows you to do one side at a time. Now, I know that these are rare, but when we program these, it's usually on occasion.
We inject single leg bridges oftentimes into our warmup and single leg presses as an accessory
exercise for lower body work. We see this a lot with our more advanced female clients who want
to develop their glutes, their quads, et cetera. And I program this quite a bit in our elite physique app-based group, but single leg presses and single leg bridges are a great
addition to your lower body exercise repertoire, especially if you're like most people and you do
a substantial amount of lower body training, and you're really looking to expand the number of
quote unquote arrows in your quiver. If you're somebody who's
looking for new lower body exercises to incorporate into your routine, but you want to make sure
you're making good selections, a lot of times it can be tempting to just go, ah, let me just grab
something I saw some influencer doing on the internet. I'm going to pick an exercise that
looks cool, that's new,
that I've never done before. And this can backfire more often, unfortunately, than we'd like. And we
end up optimizing or selecting for exercises that are imperfect. But I think taking exercises that
we know are already really effective and doing the quote unquote variations, or in this case, just the unilateral
version is a very, very great way to inject some novelty and variety without getting too off track
from what's actually going to be productive training. So the fourth movement we've got here
is chin-ups and pull-ups. And what I like about this is not dissimilar to what I like about
push-ups, but it has more to do with its strength carryover than its ability to create back and
upper back hypertrophy. When it comes to developing the lats and upper backs, give me upper backs.
When it comes to developing the lats and upper back, give me a pull-down, a high row, a plate
loaded row, a face pull, a cable row over a pull up any day of the
week. The crappy part about the pull up is it tends to be really, really hard depending on
your strength level. And many people can't do one. So trying to use it as a highly targeted
exercise for hypertrophy is challenging because there's so many limiting factors like the grip
and ability to stabilize the core. But that's actually why I like including this as a strength exercise.
So I will often include pull-ups to failure or assisted pull-ups to failure as a strength
exercise for most of our clients.
Because what I've noticed is it's a phenomenal exercise for creating dynamic grip strength.
This would be like actually holding onto something that carries over extremely
well to other lifts. It helps promote anti-extension because you can't let your hips get too high.
And it also helps create core stability. You can't go swinging like crazy. You have to keep
your core tight and get yourself up and over that bar. So as a core stability exercise and as a grip
strength exercise, pull-ups are phenomenal. And if you
do them to failure, I think they have phenomenal carryover for all of your pulling strength and
for your upper body strength exercises. So in the same way that many times when we think of
great exercises for developing upper body strength, we think of the bench press and
maybe the pendlay row, which are good options. And we'll talk about some alternatives as we
get through this list. I think pull-ups for certain populations certainly qualify as an
awesome strength training exercise. And if you can't do a pull-up and you get to a point where
you can do three or four, watch what happens to your ability to do cable rows, lat pull-downs,
all of the various different exercises that we tend to see when it comes to this different stuff that
we do throughout our training, especially stuff that is contingent on the upper body work,
our upper body strength, grip strength, etc. So all of this stuff really, really, really matters.
And I think it's super, super important to pay close attention to your ability to develop
strength in conjunction with developing your muscles. What's going on, guys? Coach Danny here,
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Back to the action.
Moving on to another strength exercise.
This is number five that I love.
It's actually overhead pressing, and it'll be standing overhead pressing.
So I like standing overhead presses with dumbbells and with barbells for a variety of different
reasons.
The primary, of course, is that so much of our pressing takes place in a horizontal plane.
These would be chest presses, flat dumbbell presses,
inclined dumbbell presses, barbell presses, machine presses, presses that tend to bias the chest,
which are great for developing the shoulders and the triceps too, but there's a particular need to
develop strength overhead, especially if you want to develop your shoulders and your lats,
you need to have good overhead stability and strength. And one of the things we see with overhead presses is a ton of carryover to upper body strength, just like with chin-ups.
In fact, I would go so far as to say that I think we see more growth potential or more strength
potential for the athletes we work with when progressing them on heavy overhead pressing than we do with
heavy horizontal pressing. And there's a reason that we do about 50% overhead and 50% horizontal
pressing in most of our programming, but that number has gone closer to 60-40 unless a client
explicitly communicates that they would like us to have a substantial amount of chest volume, in which case we're
going to do some unique and different stuff. But in most cases, we're going to actually buy us
overhead work over horizontal pressing, because I think you get that unique component of overhead stability,
which has a lot of good carryover for most athletes and for most people.
Moving on to my sixth favorite lift, and this is a list, this would be replacing
the majority of the volume you're doing for the triceps and the delts and the biceps with barbells and dumbbells to
doing more with cables. So we still program a lot of hammer curls, dumbbell curls, incline curls,
lateral raises with dumbbells, skull crushers, et cetera. But over the years, more of the
programmed volume for the triceps, biceps, and shoulders has gone towards things
that we can perform on cables and with dual cables. So for triceps, we like cross body extensions,
rope extensions, straight bar extensions, overhead extensions, single arm extensions,
katana extensions. For biceps, we like curls where we do reverse grip curls, easy bar cable curls,
rope curls, facing the dual cable curls, facing
away from the dual cable curls. For shoulders, things like face pulls, lateral raises, behind
the back laterals, Y raises. There's a huge, huge number of exercises that you can really add into
your arsenal that are effective and don't suck for arms and shoulders when you start incorporating
usage of the cable. So I think a lot of times people want variety, they want novelty,
they want to find a way to add more, have a greater selection of exercises, to put it simply.
And they go on Instagram or Facebook or YouTube and they find stuff that looks new and exciting.
And something we've done a lot is just taking those conventional dumbbell movements, curls,
extensions, raises, and incorporating more volume on the cable because of that really
consistent resistance profile.
It's the same weight at the bottom as it is on the top because of the leverage provided
by the cable versus a dumbbell where we do oftentimes have a strength curve and a resistance profile that are asymmetric, meaning
like I'm strongest on the way up, but that's where the dumbbell feels the lightest or I'm
weakest at the bottom, which is where the dumbbell feels the heaviest. You can bypass a lot of that
with a greater percentage of your volume coming from cable work. And I have found that doing this
for those isolation exercises for small upper body muscles more frequently than not is really
valuable. So do we still do the dumbbell work? Absolutely. But adding these arrows to your
quiver can make a huge, huge difference. Number seven on the list is the side plank.
And when we think about the side plank
I think a lot of people rightfully think okay
This is about the obliques which it is and this is about core stability
Which it is both of those are really important if the side plank was beneficial for nothing else just those things
I'd still want you to do it
But one of the things I really like about it is the shoulder stability component, because think about the position that your shoulders in when you do a side plank, one shoulder
is promoting or creating a ton of stability compared to a traditional plank where you
are essentially stabilizing with both shoulders simultaneously.
And then additionally, with the side plank, you can level it up into a Copenhagen plank,
which creates pelvic stability and challenges the adductors.
Or you can incorporate
not adduction, but abduction or abduction, where you lift the top leg and train the gluteus medius.
So the side plank as a position, as a movement, is a really, really effective core training tool
that allows you to promote stability and strength in the shoulders and the hips.
So a nice little bang for your buck movement. Again,
think about those single leg bridges that I recommended. You throw some single leg bridges
into your warmup, some side lunges, side lunges with abduction, Copenhagen planks.
That's going to help level up your training, your potential, your strength. It's going to help
bulletproof you or create more resiliency in some of those small semi-vulnerable tissues
like the groin, like the
adductor, like the outer hip. A lot of people tend to have shoulder issues from a lack of stability.
And yes, we want our core stability and the SidePlank is awesome for that, but it has a
tremendous amount of carryover to other really valuable things. The eighth exercise on this list
is the hex bar deadlift. This isn't an indictment on the conventional deadlift
and on the sumo deadlift. We still program these pretty frequently. I think they're good lifts. I
think they're really good lifts for developing strength. And most gyms have a barbell. Not all
gyms have a hex bar. But if your gym does have a hex bar, I really, really like this exercise for
developing lower body strength. I think about the hex bar deadlift
as existing at the middle of a continuum with on one end, you have like a front squat that's
almost exclusively quads. And on the other end, you have like an RDL that's almost exclusively
a hinge. And then let's say you have this spectrum. And so on one side of the spectrum over
here, you have the RDL. And on the other side, you have the front squat, almost all hips, almost all knees. And then you take one shot in, and then maybe you've
got like the sumo deadlift over here. So you go from front squats to sumos, knee dominant. And
then you go from RDLs to conventional deadlifts, hip dominant. And then right in the middle is that
hex bar deadlift, an exercise that incorporates a good amount of hip and knee flexion and extension.
So this gets quads,
this gets glutes, it gets a little bit of hamstrings. And what I love about this exercise
is, and I've said this before, if you took somebody off the street who'd never lifted a
weight before and you had to have them lift the absolute heaviest amount possible in any lift,
I'd probably throw them on the hex bar, any free weight lift anyway, because it's very intuitive.
Reach down, grab it,
stand up. And for a lot of people, the technicality around various different lifts, specifically the
barbell deadlifts, there's so many pieces to the puzzle to do them safely, effectively,
and progressively. And the hex bar just seems to be that much more accessible. It feels a little
more natural. It feels a little bit more intuitive. And for novice lifters, this is actually the first deadlift we teach
at the studio with clients. I find that this is a phenomenal introduction to eventually getting
somebody to a barbell deadlift or even to getting them to a barbell squat. Starting with the hex
bar tends to be a really, really good place. And you can build a shit ton of strength with this exercise without a ton of technical overload that will overwhelm a
new and inexperienced lifter. Number nine on the lift is the cable face pull. I think that this
has become more popular recently, but emphasizing the posterior aspect of the shoulder tends to be a really good way to keep
your shoulders happy. Over the years, I've noticed that people who have knee pain and shoulder pain
tend to be sensitive to pressing and extending. So shoulder presses and squatting and lunging can
agitate shoulders and knees that are cranky. But in the same way that glute work and hip biased
work that charge like RDLs and lying
leg curls can make the knees feel better, I found that face pulls and upper back work
can make the shoulders feel better.
You know, when you're doing a face pull, you're training elements of the rotator cuff, the
rear delt, the lower traps, these really important muscles in your back that play a really valuable
role in keeping that super mobile shoulder joint in a good
position by maintaining symmetry between the front and anterior aspects of the torso, like the chest,
be it the clavicular portion of the chest or the sternal portion of the chest, obviously the front
deltoid, things that we hammer with all of our pressing, but we don't always hit those muscles
on the backside. Typically, you'll see people train a lot of lats, but we don't always hit those muscles on the backside. We typically,
you'll see people train a lot of lats. And it's important to remember that while the lats are on
the back, they do actually function to internally rotate the shoulder. So if all of your shoulder
work is, if you're doing all this chest work, doing a bunch of chest pressing where I train my
pecs, and then I do obviously some front delt with that. And then I do a bunch
of lat work thinking that that's the back work that's going to offset it. Well, remember,
the lats are an internal rotator. The pecs are a medial or internal rotator. So if you don't hit
anything for external rotation, you're going to be hammering your tissue with a lot of internal
rotation. And the face pull is an awesome exercise for promoting external
rotation and strengthening those muscles. And I'll give it a little bit of additional kudos for its
hypertrophic potential. Just when you see those mid traps in those rear delts developed, man,
does it make a difference on your physique? And the last lift or type of lift today that we'll discuss is incorporating transverse
plane and frontal plane exercises. So these would be exercises that take place not in the sagittal
plane front to back, but side to side and rotationally. So things like wood chops,
that would be in the transverse plane. Things like rotational med ball slams or throws would
be in the transverse plane. And then that frontal plane,ams or throws would be in the transverse plane.
And then that frontal plane, you think of something like a Cossack squat or a side lunge.
And so much of our training, I'd say 90 to 95% takes place in the sagittal plane. And if you
want to create more tissue resilience, better mobility, better athleticism, without feeling
like you're adding in all of these advanced tactics, train a couple of frontal and transverse plane movements each week. Like I said, I really like
rotational work with cables and with med balls. I think that has a ton of carryover. Remember,
power is plane specific. So if you're a rotational athlete, you need to do that rotational power work.
But if you're not, and you never train in those planes, you won't develop much strength and power in those planes from your sagittal plane
work. And you'll just generally have holes in how your body moves in the sense that you'll be very
well developed in that sagittal plane, but you'll probably be missing a little bit of oomph and
strength in the frontal and transverse plane. So there you have it, guys, 10 exercises and
movement types that can level up your training. I hope you enjoyed this plane. So there you have it, guys, 10 exercises and movement types
that can level up your training. I hope you enjoyed this episode. I hope you find it helpful.
If you did, share it with somebody, text it to somebody. The best way to help a podcast grow
is by word of mouth and leaving five-star rating and reviews on Apple Podcasts on Spotify. If you
could do one of those two things for me today, it would make a massive difference. And as always,
thanks for tuning in,
and I will catch you on the next one.