Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1315: The 8 Best Exercises You Are Not Doing
Episode Date: June 15, 2020In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin list eight highly effective but mostly-ignored exercises and how to add them to your routine. The trends in exercise. (2:41) The 8 Best Exercises You are NOT Doing... and HOW to program them into your current workout. (8:10) #1 – Turkish Get-Up. (10:56) #2 – The Windmill. (16:20) #3 – The Farmer Walk. (20:01) #4 – Bulgarian Split-Squat. (24:12) #5 – The Z Press. (29:32) #6 – The Zercher Squat. (33:05) #7 – Snatch Grip Deadlift. (37:01) #8 – Single-Leg Deadlift. (40:21) Related Links/Products Mentioned June Promotion: MAPS HIIT ½ off! **Promo code “HIIT50” at checkout** Visit PRx Performance for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** 3 Turkish Get-Up Variations - Tutorial with Kettlebell Master of Sport – Mind Pump TV MAPS Prime Webinar Add Windmills to Your Workout to Increase Your Deadlift Strength – Mind Pump TV COUNTRY STRONG?? Increase YOUR Work Capacity (2 EXERCISES) | MIND PUMP TV The Only Way You Should Be Doing Bulgarian Split Squats! (BUTT GROWTH) - Mind Pump TV Z Press to take Your Shoulder Development to the Next Level – Mind Pump TV Build Your Legs with the Zercher Squat – Mind Pump TV How To Do A Snatch Grip Deadlift With Eugene Teo – Mind Pump TV The Best Deadlift Variation You're NOT Doing!! (2 of 3) | MIND PUMP TV GROW Your GLUTES with a SINGLE LEG DEADLIFT! - Mind Pump TV MAPS Fitness Performance - Mind Pump Media Mind Pump Podcast - YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Dorian Yates (@thedorianyates) Instagram Dr. Jordan Shallow D.C (@the_muscle_doc) Instagram Robert Oberst (@robertoberst) Instagram
Transcript
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pumped the World's Top Fitness Health and Entertainment Podcast,
we talk all about the eight best exercises that you're probably not doing.
Now, before I get into what this episode's about,
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maps prime program. Alright, let's get into the episode. So we start out by talking about
some of the best exercises you're not doing. And the exercises that we picked are the
ones that build the most muscle and burn the most body fat.
You won't want to miss this episode.
Listen to the very end,
because at the end, we kind of talk about
how to program these into your current workout
and how to use them to get those great results.
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You know what I find really interesting about,
like the fitness space or whatever?
That there are trends in exercise.
This takes a while to figure out like if you work out long enough, they know something cool.
You never seen.
Well you start to realize that exercises come in and out of favor and what really determines this
oftentimes is who, like are the cool people doing these exercises. So I didn't really determines this often times is who, like, are the cool people doing these exercises.
So I didn't really realize this fully until,
it took me, it was like,
I've got 10 or 12 years into me working out.
And the first time I noticed it was when Dorene Yates
was winning all the Mr. Olympias.
Now for the people who don't know, who don't care,
I'm gonna explain why.
I'm all those guys.
Dorene Yates was,
Dore and Yates was a professional bodybuilder
and he was the, he ushered in the era of the mass monsters.
So he gets a lot of credit for taking the level
of bodybuilders from what they look like in the 80s
and early 90s to all of a sudden they were just
incredible, incredibly massive, okay?
And one thing he was really known for was his back.
Now Dorian Yates did this exercise.
A lot of people didn't do.
And he got it from Mike Menser.
He learned this movement from Mike Menser.
But it wasn't like a special movement.
People had done it before.
It just wasn't super popular.
It was the supinated grip, Barbel Roe.
And he would film him doing it
or pictures of him in magazines doing it.
And because he had such a massive back
because he was the, you know,
however many time Mr. Olympia,
all of a sudden everybody started doing an exercise
that nobody did really, I saw nobody really doing before.
You mean to tell me you can turn your hands like this?
Yes. Yeah, so everybody started your hands like this? Yes.
Yeah, so everybody started doing it, right?
Yeah.
Then I saw it again when Ronnie Coleman was Mr. Olympia
as many times as he was, and he was,
I mean, a lot of people call him the greatest of all time,
just almost impossible to beat.
Ronnie Coleman did an exercise that used to be one
that guys considered a girl exercise.
They used to think this particular exercise was,
oh that's for walking lunches.
That's for girls, yeah.
Remember that?
They filmed him or they.
He'd walk outside.
That's funny, they used to think that was a girl.
Yeah, so he was in Texas and in the Arlington heat
or whatever and at the end of his leg workout,
he'd put a 245s on a barbell and I mean,
his legs were crazy looking, right? He'd wearbell, and I mean, he's legs were like crazy
looking, right?
He'd wear these spandex pants, you can see the veins through him or whatever.
And he'd do walking lunges in the parking lot, and after that, everybody started doing walking
lunges.
Now, it's very interesting to me, but one of the problems with this mentality of like
trends, exercises that are trend centers, is we tend to, when we
find some exercises that are popular, we forget other ones, and a lot of times we forget
really effective exercises. They're just not popular, but they're super effective.
Well, I think we tend to over glorify some of those, too, because of that, because who
did it or who made it popular for the rest of the masses to start doing this.
Right. Well, I mean, look at the popularity
of barbell deadlifts and squats, especially deadlifts.
Yeah.
Nope, I tell you what right now, the first half
of my career as a trainer, nobody did barbell squats.
I'm not exaggerating.
Nobody did barbell squats.
Ever. If you worked out legs, you were doing other stuff.
Yeah. And when I would do squats, as a trainer or even as a manager, I would get members that
would come up to me and tell me, what are you doing? You're going to hurt yourself. And nobody
did them. Now all of a sudden squats are like the best exercise ever for building your butt,
women do them, everybody does them. And they are a phenomenal exercise. But I do find it interesting.
your butt, women do them everybody does them, and they are a phenomenal exercise. But I do find it interesting.
So one thing that I did when I realized this, when I started to piece this together, much
later in my career, is I would buy old muscle building books and magazines from like the
40s and 50s and 60s.
And even before, I have some books actually from the early 1900s.
I actually posted a picture of them on my Instagram the other day.
And the goal was to look up exercises that they loved,
that we don't even do anymore,
and I would find some, start doing them,
and get blown away.
I did the same thing.
I mean, I think it's because when I started training,
I trained with like whatever team I was on,
and we had like a real regimented schedule of, you know know what we would all try to do is all barbell based and so for me it was like I wanted to look at the past and see
What was effective and what people were using to gain even more strength that was maybe unconventional
Maybe you know you don't see it anymore in the gyms. I just got fascinated with that
So I went down the same kind of a rabbit hole, but mainly more for specific things
that would help to enhance movement and performance as well.
Yes, now a lot of exercises lose favor
because what got popular with exercise became
body part specific exercises.
So a lot of very effective exercises
that don't necessarily work a specific body part
fell out of favor, you know what I mean?
People are like, well I just want an exercise for my shoulders or my chest or my back or my legs.
This movement, what is it isolating?
It looks like it's doing a lot of different thing.
Where do I throw that in my workout?
If you have a body part split routine, where do you throw some of these exercises?
That's one of the other reasons why some of these...
That's a really good point. I mean I I love the idea like right, you send a message
over to us this morning. So let's do let's do a list that we can put together of the
actually the best exercises that you're not doing. And so everybody started to
collaborate and throw out what they think are great moves or exercises that
people aren't doing. And I think that's probably one of the most common things
that I when I look at the list that we, that we put together, what I see is that I see that very few of
them are, you know, a specific exercise for one, one small muscle. That's all we're trying
to focus on. And I think that's it. It got so popular to bodybuild and do isolation type
movements and exercises that some of these great big lifts just fell out of favor. Yeah, and I think there's another kind of interesting
counterpoint to this where a lot of strength coaches
and lots of like modalities kind of popped up adjacent
to what was going on with like, you know,
your regular gyms and it was real exclusive clubs
and it became, they almost became elitists
in their methodology and you had to pay a lot of money to learn these techniques
like in terms of kettlebell type of movements
and the whole philosophy and modality behind that
and like all these other directions,
like they didn't want you to know this information
or perform it, they would like vehemently talk shit
about you doing these movements
if you weren't already training,
had the cert behind you.
The other thing too that I see,
and I'm guilty of this, is, you know,
they're the hard ones.
Yeah, you know?
Totally.
And I remember being this kid, you know what I'm saying?
Like I, I didn't like doing the really, really hard exercises.
And at silly, because when you think about it,
most the really difficult or high skill leveled exercises have the biggest bang
Have the greatest benefit. So I think that was that's part of the reason too is we tend to avoid the things that are that are difficult
I want the machines that just go like this. Well, you want the pump, but you don't want the pain
You know, I mean you want to feel the muscle. But is it yeah, but you don't want to be exhausted or you don't want to feel like you have to really challenge yourself.
And unfortunately, the connection between difficulty and results
is quite strong.
The more difficult movements tend to be,
the more upswing that there tends to be.
It's not always true, but it's usually true.
So that's kind of a rule of thumb to consider.
And in fact, if you look at all of our maps programs,
what you find are typically very few easy,
easy-ish exercises, and typically these tend to be machine
movements, and much more of an emphasis
on the more difficult skill ones.
And here's the bottom line.
We all train people for decades,
and I clearly saw a benefit on regular everyday,
I'm not even talking about hardcore athletes
or bodybuilders, talking about everyday people. I clearly saw a benefit with my clients when I'm not even talking about hardcore athletes or bodybuilders, talking about everyday people.
I clearly saw a benefit with my clients
when I'd have them do the more practice,
the more challenging stuff versus doing,
even doing more volume of the easy stuff
didn't seem to equate the same results.
So the first one that I picked that I felt
I wanted to talk about is one that there's a lot
of controversy around, especially in the strength community. In fact, I have good buddies that are very, very intelligent, great lifters,
very, very strong, and tend to mock this exercise. But I think for me personally, not just for
helping myself progress, but also clients and what I saw as far as the overall carryover.
And that was the Turkish get up. And the Turkish get up, I feel like doesn't get enough love.
And I think it gets made fun of it. If you're in the strength community and you're a big squat dead
lift guy and you care about those numbers and getting that up all time, you look at a Turkish get
up and you're like, okay, I'm going to spend all this time on this Turkish get up. Is it going to make
my squad?
That's not really about just lifting heavyweight, which is what power lifters tend to love
the most.
But I mean, it's a bit of a dance move.
Let's be honest, it's multifaceted.
There's lots of components to it, but that's what I love about it.
I love the fact that it takes you through all the different planes of movement, and it
has to be performed precisely for you to get the benefit of it.
A Turkish get up is one of those rare exercises.
And I say rare and I mean it because not many exercises do what a Turkish get-up does.
It's one of those rare exercises that makes all your other exercises more effective.
Okay, so a Turkish get-up doesn't work a specific body part.
It's not a shoulder exercise, not a leg exercise, specifically.
It's not a core movement, you know, specifically or arm or chest.
It works a lot of different things.
So it's not going to you're not going to do a bunch of Turkish get ups and get a
crazy bicep pump or chest pump or build your legs like crazy like you would
with a barbell squat, but what it will do if you do them right and if you put
them in your program correctly,
which I think we'll get to,
is you'll feel more connected to all the other
very effective exercises.
Getting good at Turkish get ups makes you better
at overhead presses, squats, dead lifts,
pret at rows, and makes you better at all those other movements,
which is why it's such a valuable movement.
And now here's why I would like to do these.
Where would you put a Turkish get up?
In my opinion, there's a lot of value either at the beginning
or end of your workout.
I think that's the best days in between.
Or the days in between.
It's a great movement to do when you're not doing
your normal traditional workout
and you're like, I wanna do some mobility movement.
I wanna keep this muscle building signal loud.
I want my bodies to be connected. I wanna facilitate better recovery. That's when you do some mobility movement. I want to keep this muscle building signal loud. I want my bodies to be connected.
I want to facilitate better recovery.
That's when you do it in between.
Yeah, I can't think of a better exercise
that helps to promote mastery and control over your body.
And the mechanics that you need to be able to summon
perfectly to be able to pull this off.
Like we talk about anti-rotation.
We talk about a few things like that,
about stabilizing your body and pivotal moments of lifts.
And so, these are the components get highlighted more.
So, in this exercise specifically than any other,
and that's really what you're working on.
You're not necessarily working on,
like getting to an end of the rep.
It's about like how organized you can get and how controlled you can be in this movement.
Well, Justin, you recently just did the prime webinar and in our maps prime program, we
break the body up in three zones.
And as coaches, we agreed like these are the most common areas where we see breakdown
in movement.
And what I love about the Turkish get up is,
I can't think of a single movement
that exposes all three of those areas that well.
Oh yeah.
Like if you have breakdown in zone one,
if you have breakdown in zone two,
you have breakdown in zone three,
the Turkish get up will expose that
more than almost any other move.
And to that point, if you get good at it,
you're gonna see some of the greatest improvement in all three of those zones that we had to talk about.
Right. So you do it at the beginning of a workout. It primes and wakes up and connects the whole
body. Okay. You do it at the end of a workout. And it works the entire body in unison after
you've probably broken it up into into segments. You do it on the days in between phenomenal full body mobility, full body muscle
activation. You're going to send a good recovery and muscle building signal or at least maintain
the one that you sent the day before with your heavy and hard traditional workout. So Turkish
get ups definitely belong on this list. By the way, they were highly prized by Turkish
wrestlers who dominated the scene for a long time, back in the day.
And one thing you need to look at with exercises,
is look at the history of them,
look at why they're prized and who prized them,
because oftentimes people, especially in those days,
they did what worked.
So like this is making me better,
I'm gonna keep doing it,
and that's how it got popular.
It was prized in the strength community too.
They used to have, like in order to get in an
apprenticeship underneath like a a famous or a popular
strongman back then they used to have like a test.
And it was you have to be able to do a Turkish get up
with a hundred pound dumbbell kettlebell above your head.
That was like that was your way of even getting into a
apprenticeship with a you know advanced lifter.
So that was like a I did not know that.
Yeah. Yeah.
That was like one of the tests that you had to get to before I would even take if I was a bad ass strongman or advanced lifter. So that was like a... I did not know that. Yeah, that was like one of the tests that you had to get to
before I would even take,
if I was a bad-ass strongman or lifter back then,
before I would even take you underneath my wing,
you first have to get to a point where you can do 100 pound
Turkish get up before I would even mess with it.
I don't know that, that's interesting.
All right, the next movement was one that I discovered
relatively recently.
It's the windmill.
Now, the windmill involves rotation with resistance
and you also need some good shoulder
and upper back thoracic stability.
Now, the windmill, like the Turkish get up,
doesn't train a specific body part.
I mean, you could put this in the category of core
if I had to absolutely pick.
You know, you're getting a lot of quadratus lumborum, you're getting a lot of the lower
back and the hips and ball.
Which I think is probably the highest value because I think tell me another exercise that
really highlights the QL.
Right.
Yeah.
So there's just so much value in that.
Meaning, like this is something that you you need as an active stabilizer in dead
lifts, in all these like major other lifts that really supports your back in your spot.
Now the windmill got me more stable and stronger with my deadlift.
It's one of those rare exercises just like the Turkish get up where it made me better
at other movements which then have a lot of potential benefit.
So the windmill for sure, and I, with the first time I tried a windmill,
I couldn't even get in the position.
This is after years of working out.
Years of very calming.
I just couldn't get in the position.
I didn't have the ability to move that way.
And I remember the first time I tried it,
I was like, this feels impossible.
Why am I not able to do this?
So I practiced and practiced,
eventually getting that position,
then add resistance, and again,
so much carryover to my deadlift in particular.
I also had a little bit of carryover into my overhead press because the QL is so involved
in stabilizing, and then the arm, maintaining that top position throughout that whole movement
helps a lot.
This was something that I had actually never done until I was lifting with Justin. So Justin introduced the windmill in my routine.
So it was never an exercise that I even messed with
until he taught me.
And I'll never forget similar to you, Sal.
It just felt so awkward and weird the very first time.
And I thought, oh my God, I can barely do this with any weight.
You know, I want to see if I can get up there
to where I'm lifting some pretty good weight while I do it.
And of all the exercises that we're gonna talk about today,
this is up there with one of the ones that I love the way
I feel right after I do it.
So you talk about where to place it.
This is another one of those ones I love
at the beginning of a workout
because it just sets up the rest of my workout really well.
And I don't think there's a lot of emphasis
that's put on rotational strength like that
and shoulder stability together.
And those are both common areas where people have breakdown.
They have breakdown and having good rotational control
and strength, they have a lot of breakdown
and shoulder stability and strength.
And so it really highlights that with combining it
with hip hinging, which
is so important in so many movements that we always address.
Yeah, well, consider this.
You have three very experienced and successful trainers.
You know, Adam, Justin and myself, we've been training people for a very, very long time.
We started doing the windmill later on in our careers, just in probably much earlier than
Adam and I, than Adam and I,
but Adam and I much later,
it impressed us so much that we actually made it
an assessment in one of our most popular programs.
That's how valuable this exercise is,
so don't take it for granted,
try it out, put it in your routine,
and see what happens.
It's really that exercise you didn't know you needed.
And that was my experience too
I just I felt like a complete difference when I went back to do my other lifts
How much more stable I was and how much better performance I had any pressing or pulling move
You know from there on out like rotation such a vital component
Now the next one is one that I have fallen totally in love with and I've gotten some
pretty unexpected results from.
This is the farmer walk.
Now our farmer walk is literally your holding heavy weight in each hand.
You can do this with dumbbells or you can do this with a trap bar which is my preferred
way of doing it.
And you're deadlift the weight up and then you walk really straight tall and
Stable you're not running we're not racing. It's not a strong man competition You're just walking as stable and straight as you possibly can now you would at first glance
You look at the exercise like what's going on like you're just holding something heavy and walking
What are you working you're working everything and I tell you what do this movement and try and find a part of your body that you
Don't notice has just been worked from doing this heavy exercise.
I love about it too, is if you ever taught any of your clients the anatomical position,
like there's a way to kind of stack your spine and get everything in good alignment.
And that's where you first start.
And this is an exercise that you can now load and reinforce that position that your body thrives in.
And so to be able to kind of
isometrically contract and maintain this position
while you're moving now, you got local motion.
I'm moving with this weight,
but not to stabilize this weight simultaneously.
And the weights are gonna pull you left,
they're gonna pull you right.
It's gonna get your core to really like set off on fire.
There's a lot of things working to be able to maintain
this position going forward.
Well, when I think of this movement,
I think about what Sal has said on this podcast
so many times when he's given the analogy
of the, you know, your central nervous system
being like an amplifier to your speakers or your muscles.
And so we've made the case in the point of the role
that the CNS plays and why that's so important
and it's so overlooked.
And when I think of farmer walks,
I can't think of a better movement
that primes the CNS.
I mean, you are from your fingertips hanging on
to the dumbbells or the trap bar,
all the way to your feet being grounded
and holding up that hundred, two hundred, three hundred pounds, whatever it is that you're walking with.
I mean, it just, it lights the entire body up like a Christmas tree. So if you do that first before
you go anything else, I feel like it's one of those few movements that kind of gets me ready for
everything. So it doesn't matter what I'm going to go do after that. I don't care if I'm going to go
do shoulder workout, that a chest workout, a leg workout. So it doesn't matter what I'm gonna go do after that. I don't care if I'm gonna go do shoulder workout
to that, a chest workout, a leg workout.
If I do some heavy farmer carries for a couple sets
before I go do that, my whole body
just feels connected and prised.
Now, there's multiple variations of carries.
We're talking about farmer carries,
which is, you know, your balanced load.
You can unbalance it and you can have just one side.
And we do a suitcase carry just, you know,
as effective, but now we do a suitcase carry just, you know, as effective,
but now we're a little bit more focused
on our core stabilization,
on our obliques getting a little bit more involved
to be able to keep everything straight and aligned.
There's also overhead carries where I'm holding
a weight over my head,
but now I'm, you know,
keeping my shoulder in position
where I'm reinforcing the fact
that I'm stable with something over my head.
That's so important. Getting back into just an overhead press, my shoulder in position where I'm reinforcing the fact that I'm stable with something over my head.
That's so important.
Getting back into just an overhead press.
Think about how much more power and effort you'll be able to control when you have a stable
eye joint.
Holding away and then having to do the most fundamental human, I can't even think of a
more fundamental human movement than walking.
You're going to train, functionally, you're going to train
your body in ways that are extremely effective. One of the side effects that I did not expect from
farmer walk was my arms got bigger. You know, it's not, I mean, I'm not curling, I'm not doing a
press down. And yet when I do farmer walks, my arms grow better than when I hold and have you
wait. It's crazy. And that tends to be one of the limiting factors for people
in getting a stronger deadlift,
getting a stronger bench press, curling more weight,
pulling your body weight up.
So if you get to a place where you can hang on
to some really good weight and farmer carries,
you tend to notice all those other big lifts start to go up
because many people, the limiting factor,
are, is there
grip strength?
Fatigue.
Yeah, you're extending your ability to hold on to something longer.
Absolutely.
Now, the next exercise has an interesting history, right?
If you go back to the Soviet Union existed, you had the Soviet Union and you had America
and they would compete in many, many different ways, obviously, but especially in the Olympics, when the Olympics came around, it was like, who's gonna win?
It was a great way to compete without, you know, shooting each other or whatever.
And one plate, one area that the Soviets just crushed was weightlifting.
They were incredibly good at weightlifting and the Bulgarians in particular were dominating the weightlifting
scene.
And there was, you know, we called it the iron curtain at the time because they would hide
a lot of their methods and training.
Nothing was shared.
Obviously it was a massive communist country that wanted to share their success.
They wanted to keep it for themselves.
And so nobody knew, you know, what was going on, what kind of drugs they were taking, what
was their training like, what happened?
Well, when the Soviet Union fell, when the Iron Curtain came down, a
lot of those coaches came to America and taught us some of their training techniques and taught
us why some of their athletes were so dominant. We learned so much about weightlifting after
that happened. Well, one exercise that the Bulgarians did, that a lot of weightlifters in
the world didn't even know about
Was the Bulgarian split stance squat now you look at weightlifting lifts
Oftentimes when they're bringing a weight up to to arms length they get into a split position
To press themselves up and they did a Bulgarian split stance squat on its own to make that stronger
Well the weightlifters in America started doing it and they also started to notice tremendous success
So that exercise has a interesting history now Now today, not a lot of people do it.
It looks kind of like a lunge, but it's not a lunge. It requires more balance and it's probably the
best lower body split stance type exercise I can think about. I consider it even better than lunges.
It develops legs muscles like absolute crazy. Single best movement I ever did,
like for building my lower half.
Like it was, and being completely honest
for well over a decade of lifting for me,
I avoided it, and I avoided it because it was fucking hard.
It's real hard.
I remember being embarrassed of like,
it would be hard for me to hold on to a pair
of 20 pound dumbbells and do them.
Like it was hard.
I lacked the ankle mobility. I lacked the hip mobility.
So that definitely was a part of the reason why this was so challenging.
And I was just weak like that.
And 20 pound dumbbells would just destroy me.
It was so hard.
I'd be, I'd be breathing heavy.
My legs would be on fire.
Meanwhile, I'm not even moving very much weight.
And so for many years, I completely avoided it.
And it didn't become something really popular for me.
And so I remember hanging out with our good friend,
Jordan Schallow, and I remember him really kind of beating
it into my head, like how important of a movement it was
and if I would just stick with it, what would it end up
happening?
And so I went on a kick for a while where I just like
stopped squatting
and all I was doing was Bulgarian split squats.
And I remember, I'll never forget,
like not squatting for a long period of time,
coming back to squatting, feeling so strong
and so stable in the squat
because of all the Bulgarian split squats.
Such a great move.
It's one of those exercises I always come back to as a checkup,
like, especially if I have any kind of a hitch in my squat.
Like if there's something where like I feel like I'm getting
a little bit of a knee issue, I'm, you know,
maybe I'm feeling my hips are like super tight all the time
and like I'm, they're over responsive.
Whatever it is, like I'm gonna now take that time
and put it into a unilateral type training. and this is one of the first exercises I go to because
it's so exposing. It gives you so much feedback and it provides that much
needed stability and support that you're probably not getting.
Totally and it's an easy one to program. You literally put it in your leg
workout. It's a leg exercise. It's also one of the best butt building exercises
you could do.
It works the entire leg, quad, hamstring, and butt,
but when you do these, if you've never done them before,
you're gonna feel these in your glute.
Like crazy, if your goal is to build your butt,
I'd say definitely do this.
If your goal is to get a really good squat,
I'd say definitely do these.
I've also used this like a primer too,
so it's just body weight. So I love it as a standalone exercise because it can be an incredible
Strength building muscle building exercise by itself. So it is easy to program like if you're just wondering like you said
So it could replace squats, you know, it could put replace lunges, especially leg press. Thank you extension
It replaces a movement like that because it's so good standalone by itself
But let's say I'm keeping squats in my routine right now and I just want to be better at squatting.
Sometimes I'll go do bulgarian split squat just body weight and I'll do like five reps on each
side for two or three rounds to really just prime, open up my hips and get me ready for a good squat
too. So it can be utilized like that. In fact, that's how Jordan was originally introduced to me
as like a primer to get better at my squat.
And I saw so much in the one time that I prime
before my squat from doing that.
I thought, shit, I'm gonna get a lot of value of this thing
if I just actually started to get better at this.
I love it's, cause too, like you think about
how tight your hip flexor is all the time, too.
And so like in this movement,
provides that nice like needed stretch a lot of times
in the hip flex or simultaneously working the glutes and stability. So there's just a
lot of pieces to that that are really valuable. Now the next movement I judged wrongly for
a long time. I thought it looked silly. I saw zero. This is an experienced trainer. I'd
see it every once in a while in the old school muscle building books. And to me it looked like it was because they didn't have a bench to sit on.
It looks like, oh, they didn't have a chair bent.
So they just sat on the floor.
Poor body.
Yeah, I just, they're just sitting on the floor.
I saw zero value until I tried this movement.
And this is the Z press.
Now, the Z press looks silly.
Why are you sitting on the floor with your legs out?
Sit in the bench, sit on a chair.
Now you can do your overhead presses
and that's so much better.
It's not and here's why.
One of the weaknesses, the common weaknesses
in overhead press is full extension.
And it's really easy to cheat your way out of it,
whether you're standing and especially when you're seated.
Now you sit down on the floor with your legs out
in front of you, you have no choice but to work on that full extension.
And let me tell you that little bit of extra extension at the top of the
lift really works the deltoids in incredible ways.
The Z-Press was a game changer.
It was one of those, it's now a movement that has made its regular rotation in my
shoulder workouts.
It's one of those exercises now that I can't work out without.
It's an exercise that I wish I found earlier,
not only selfishly for my own routine,
but also for clients.
So I saw such huge improvement in my overhead press
by incorporating Z-Press that I started to teach other people how to do it.
And what I loved about it to Salis Point,
when you do a standing or a seated overhead press,
there's a lot of ways that you can cheat to get it up.
And a lot of people arch in their lower, I did that.
Like that was part of why I didn't like overhead pressing
for so long is I tend, I have this arch in my low back
that's a little excessive, I would press over this arch in my low back that's a little
excessive, I would press over my head and my low back as soon as I were to get even decent
weight on the bar, my low back would always catch on fire.
So I wouldn't do it.
I would avoid it.
I'd go to a seated bench instead with a shortened range of motion and poor mechanics and
I didn't address it.
It wasn't until I started to get into the Z press that I really started to improve my mechanics on my overhead press because you can't cheat it. It wasn't until I started to get into the Z press that I really started to improve my
mechanics on my overhead press because you can't cheat it. Impossible. That's what's so beautiful
about them. And this is why I like exercises, especially from a coach's perspective for teaching
purposes. Yeah. You get somebody really good at a Z press. Sure, you're never going to Z press
what a body builder can do in a seated overhead press. He's gonna do more weight, right?
And that's why we tend to do stuff like that
because we think it looks cooler to be able to live more weight.
But you get that same guy or girl, really good
at Z-pressing first and then bring them back
and watch how much strength they have then built.
If I were to go back in time,
that would be one of my standards for even,
you know, you have to be able to prove
that you can do a Z-Press and under control
and have everything stabilizing probably
before I even allow you to do a standard-
One-I-Over-A-Press.
So, you know, that's one of the things
smart coaches out there definitely, you know,
like look into it and get, you know, vested into it
because I think that would be a valuable tool for you.
Now, this one's easy to plug into.
It's a shoulder exercise.
So, some of your workouts just replace your overhead presses,
whatever one you're doing with a Z-Press.
Watch what happens.
You literally cannot cheat, because if you cheat,
it fall over.
So the way you use is I'm gonna warn you right now.
I mean, I can overhead press standing, you know,
135 pounds, I rarely go over 100 pounds with a Z-Press.
And that's me going heavy on the Z-Press.
Now the next movement, I did not do because it hurts a lot.
Yeah, this one is a struggle for me.
It hurts and again, it looks weird.
You look at it and you're like, why would you lift anything that way, that I don't lift
anything ever that way, I use my hands, I don't use the crook of my elbow, what's the purpose
of this?
This is the zurcher squat.
Now zurcher squats were valued in old time,
strong man and strength athlete routines.
They did them all the time.
And again, judging it, looking at it,
and thinking I'm experienced, I think,
well, that's silly, they did that for no reason.
Then when I went back and said, okay, hold on a second,
there's a reason why this was present in all of the routines.
Let me give this a shot.
And when I did it, I'm not going to lie, it took
me weeks to get used to. At first, you're just getting used to how it feels. It doesn't
feel comfortable in the crook of your elbow. You're not quite sure how to do it. But then
I started incorporating, and what I noticed is because, you know, when you're doing a dead
lift or you're holding something in front of you, typically the lever is your whole arm.
Well, what if we shorten the lever a little bit, but didn't put it on your shoulders like
a front squat or didn't put it on your back like a barbell squat?
What if we just put it in your elbow, how is that going to change the feel?
Totally different, totally different exercise, and it puts the weight where you would be carrying
things anyway.
And maybe not in the crook of your elbow, but if you hug something and lift it like a
wrestler or anything else that you're gonna hold in front of you,
the zircher squat is more like that than anything else.
I came across this, I mean, if you know anything about personal training,
it's like detective work, right?
There's things that people come in with that there's limitations,
there's, you know, things in the way that like, you don't want to,
you don't want to cause more harm than good.
And so, this is one of, I had athletes I was working with
that had wrist issues that had shoulder mobility issues
and things like that.
And the front squat is very valuable for athletes.
This is just one of those staples
that I want to make sure and incorporate in their programming.
And so I just do in research and seeing
this is one of those old methods
that has lots of value
and keeps it in the anterior portion.
I could still have them squat and I could still have them stabilize and get all the benefits
of it.
But now it's a little bit more centric.
It's a little bit more in the middle of their body and they're able to perform it with
up when all that stress on their wrists. This is one of those moves that I thought was silly and ridiculous the first time
that I really came across it and I just dismissed it.
I just dismissed it like why I do that.
I just front squat and set our back squat.
And I wish I remember who I was talking to or what really where the epiphany came from.
But I remember and this is, you know, we are talking about, you know, functional training
and things that are most functional. And when I think of things that are most
functional, it's the things that carry over into your most obvious daily activities. And
when I think about, when I pick up a bag of dog food or I pick up a cement bag of concrete
or whatever like that, or I do something that's, you know, heavy, hundred pounds or more
for me, how do I grab that and how do I pick it up?
And when you think about that,
I go, well, I'll never take anything
and I loaded on my back and do a back squat with it.
I don't front rack it like a front squat.
I was real blows up.
Yeah, like this one time.
I've never carried anything in my life like that.
But when I think about when I've carried a heavy bucket
of something or like I said dog food, I hold it like a zertra squat. You kind of bare hug it. You have this kind of rounded
back, you know, and you're holding your bare hugging it. And then you're having to bend over,
rotate or do stuff with it. And I think that's when the light ball went off from me of like,
wow, the value of this movement is far greater than what most people are talking about. Because
when you think about it, you don't. You don't back squat anything in your normal day.
You would grab it, you'd bear hug it and hold it
and you'd pick it up.
So that was when I think it finally went off for me
and I started to include it.
And like you saw, very uncomfortable, hard at first,
but once you get good at it,
you do start to see the carryover and everything else.
Totally.
Now the next movement, I didn't do it all
until we created Maps Strong. When we created maps strong when we created maps strong
We wrote that program with a top-level
Strongman competitor our good friend Robert Obers and he wanted these in there and I thought you know
Snatch grip deadlifts were for weightlifters like that's really only the value is for a weightlifter
But you know anytime we create a program
I always test out some of the stuff that I'm not used to
just to see what the value is
because it helps me communicate it on the podcast.
So I started doing Snatch Grip Deadlifts.
Now I love deadlifting.
I love traditional conventional deadlifts.
I even love Sumo deadlifts.
Never had I ever done a Snatch Grip Deadlift.
And I didn't know what to expect.
I really didn't.
I looked at it and I thought,
we're am I gonna feel this
and that's kind of a weird position. Here's what I expect. I really didn't. I looked at it and I thought, where am I gonna feel this? And that's kind of a weird position.
Here's what I felt.
I felt my lats.
I felt my back light up
like I was doing almost like a different exercise.
It really blew me away at a lot of its value.
It also helped me with my traditional deadlift
because a snatch grip deadlift,
shortened, it makes it so that you have to go lower
in the deadlift.
I have to squat down more in my deadlift.
So I get some of the benefits from SnatchGrip deadlifts
that I would get with what's called a deficit deadlift,
where maybe using smaller plates
are you standing on a step.
I add a great carryover to my traditional deadlift
from the SnatchGrip.
So I remember when this went off for me,
it was actually when I was competing.
So, and this has a lot to do with when we first met Sal and one of the
first critiques that you said to me when you were looking at my back, you said, how much
do you deadlift? And I said, I'm not very often, I rarely deadlift. I incorporate here
and there. And you're like, you should really put a lot of focus on deadlift and see what
it does. And I'll never forget the picture I had, my back before I really was deadlifting a lot,
and then when deadlifting became a regular thing,
and it just, nothing had blown my back up more than deadlifting
at that moment.
And at that moment, I hadn't really realized
what a great back exercise it was,
which is also why I get annoyed by the people
on social media that try and,
oh, it's not a back exercise, bullshit.
You know, if you don't deadlift,
because you think it's not a back exercise, at deadlifting want to, if you don't deadlift, because you think it's not a back exercise,
add deadlifting period.
But that's what sent me down the rabbit hole of deadlift.
And so then I started looking up
all these different variations of the deadlift
and trying, you know, I've been,
now I've been conventionally deadlifting
for quite some time.
It already been a couple of years at this point.
And that's when I started playing around
with the snatch grip deadlift.
And boy, you know, it was already,
deadlifting was already an excellent exercise for my back.
Now when I went into this really wide grip,
I really felt my back.
I felt like it took a little bit out of my hips
and the power coming from there
and it really took a lot to hold that really wide grip
and stabilize with both my upper back, my traps,
and my lats.
I mean, I just felt that whole thing light up,
and I saw a huge difference.
I saw my lats blow up from that.
So if this is a movement that you don't do
and you want to have an impressive back,
both obviously conventional deadlifting in there,
but also snatch grip and stuff.
It's all encompassing.
I totally felt the same thing.
It was like a different exercise completely,
which is weird, because you're still doing like a very
similar type of a movement with it, but with your arms
like nice and wide out, but like South said, you get really
low, and so it basically provides that deficit.
Now you're also like incorporating more components of
the back, it's just, it's a completely different animal.
You have to stabilize everything.
Now the next movement I loved for my clients never did it for myself.
And this is common, by the way, for trainers.
I know if you're a trainer, you're listening
and you know exactly what I'm talking about.
There's movements, you're like, oh, I love this.
Help so many of my clients never do it.
You're actually doing it yourself.
But later on, I started doing these
and I saw tremendous benefits.
And these are single-leg deadlifts.
Single-leg deadlifts are phenomenal.
In fact, when I was teaching, when I was teaching
clients that I do a traditional deadlift, I'd get them good at the single leg deadlift
type movements, whether it be a body weight one only, or as they got better with, by holding
weight. Now, you would be surprised at how strong you are with a traditional deadlift
and how weak you are with a single leg deadlift if you've never done them. I mean, I could
pull 500 pounds off the floor
at the point when the first time I tried these,
but I could not pull 100 pounds one leg it.
It just couldn't do it off the floor,
and that was an eye opener for me.
Well, what was an eye opener for me is that,
you know, you realize as people perform these,
how much rotation happens in the hips.
And so this is a great, another great asset and tool,
in your toolbox as a coach, to pull these out
and you can really see where the compensations happen
and how you can get them to understand,
how to stabilize and correct that,
which then places an all new emphasis into a regular
loaded situation where I'm doing a deadlift,
how much more stabilization and how much more force output
I can provide.
Well, this is what Bulgarian split squat is to squatting.
This is what single leg deadlifting is to deadlift.
Yes.
So, and I had the same exact experience.
It was like, Sal, I taught clients forever to do this,
but to be honest, my attitude about it
was kind of a girly exercise
because I was doing it with my older clients
that I knew that I needed that hip stability and control.
I wasn't doing it really heavy or loading.
It was normally more about stability with them
and protecting their hips
and their low back area by getting strong
and single deadlifting.
So I was never really using it like a strength exercise until I decided to see like, okay, what can I do on a single idea? If I can deadlift
X amount of pounds, what happens when I go unilateral and I can balance and see where I'm at?
And I was extremely weak. And so then I went on this kick of, okay, let's see how high I can,
and if you go far enough back in my Instagram, you can see that I was on a kick for a while there
where I was sharing myself
getting stronger and stronger and stronger.
And I remember when I first started it,
I think it was like 30 or 40 pound dumbbells
about all I could handle in the single leg deadlift.
And I started to work my way up to where I was holding
on to 100 pound dumbbells doing that.
But boy, after I got really strong doing that,
going back to deadlift, the bar came up so different.
I felt so stable and in control and strong from doing the single deadlift.
So if you're somebody listening and you're like, I want to get better at my squad or I
want to get better at my deadlift, those two movements, I think, are exercises that complement
that more than anything else.
You focus on the split stance squat.
You focus on the single leg deadlift for a while and your routine, watch what happens to those big lifts.
Totally.
Now, single leg deadlift, the way I would typically program it
is a little bit differently than a traditional deadlift.
So like a traditional deadlift,
I would put it in my back portion of my workout.
Single leg deadlift, I believe belongs,
if you were to categorize it,
would put it in the leg category
where you're working glute in hamstring.
So if you're wondering where to plug that in,
I would plug that into the leg portion of your workout.
But there it is.
Eight exercises that belong in the top movements
that will give you the best results
that will build good muscle.
And then simultaneously help you burn body fat.
Try plugging them into your routine, try adding them.
Here's the key though, don't do them just once,
just like other exercises, you don't get much benefit
until you start to get good at them.
So plug them in and practice them for at least five to six weeks
and then report back, let us know what happened.
You know, the irony of this too is I feel like
is every one of these, now that I'm looking at these,
I didn't even do this on purpose,
but is every one of those in performance?
In master performance?
Yeah, I think so.
Probably, not all of them.
Except Snatchgrip Deadlift, but yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's an aesthetic, right?
We've put that in aesthetic and in control.
Yeah, well, you're gonna find all these exercises
in at least one or multiple programs
because we found them to be so valuable.
A lot of people don't do them, and I don't know,
listen, I don't know about you guys,
but I used to love doing exercises like this in the gym
just to see the looks that we get.
People try and figure out what the hell I'm doing.
Yeah.
And then I do them and get good at them.
And then, this is me question.
This is what made Maps Performance
one of the more underrated programs that we have.
It tends to be the one that people in less state,
because it says performance,
so people just automatically connected,
oh, if I'm not an athlete, it's not for me.
But many of these movements are in there.
And so we always get people that do it,
because it's like, oh, I've done every other program.
Let me try this performance one now,
and they end up getting the best benefits for it,
because there's so many of these unconventional lifts
inside that program.
Perfect.
Now look, if you like listening to the podcast,
but you'd also like to watch it,
we film the podcast.
You can actually go to YouTube,
Mind Pump Podcast, and check us out,
Listen and Watch.
Also, if you want to find us on social media,
you can find us on Instagram.
Now you can find Doug at Mind Pump Doug.
He's a producer, so you see a lot of the behind the scenes stuff
on that, on his page.
Justin is at Mind Pump Justin.
Adam is at Mind Pump Adam,
and you can find me at mind pump self
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