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Squatting past parallel?

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nbafo View Drop Down
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    Posted: 1/31/06 at 6:06am
is it better to squat past parallel with light weight, or heavy it up and only get to parallel?

I've had patella femoral problems in the past so I've been going slow with my 41 year old knees.

I can't seem to squat past parallel with dumbbells or the bar in back. I *can* squat further, but there is a sort of "failure" in between parallel and full squat and I'm afraid for my knees. I do seem to be able to front squat deeper than parallel, but not with any weight on the bar. I've tried my feet in different positions and the best seems to be slightly wider than shoulder width and slightly pointing out.

thanks for any pointers and are there any other good quad/glute workouts besides squats?

Nancy



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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Roy Bogue Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 1/31/06 at 6:32am

Originally posted by nbafo nbafo wrote:


thanks for any pointers and are there any other good quad/glute workouts besides squats?

Nancy



Nancy,  Lunges will destroy the glutes.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Terri J Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 1/31/06 at 6:36am
how about box squats...hey Nancy Terri here box squats work till wherever you set the box(above/parallel/below parallel)just do a search-for box squats..important thing to remember you lower to the bench.. sit on the box..relax hip flewors then explode up....don't just drop onto bench and bounce off....good luck see ya in May
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Wayne Hill Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 1/31/06 at 6:39am
Your knees are younger than mine, kiddo.

It turns out that full squats are better for your knees than parallel squats:  stopping at parallel maximizes the shear your knee is subjected to, so stopping lower is better.  It's also a little-known fact that you don't necessarily have to go lighter to squat deeper (unless you're flexibility-limited):  nobody fails at rock-bottom, so experienced squatters use the momentum they get coming off the bottom to get through the sticking point near parallel.

Women are usually more comfortable with a wider (sometimes quite a bit wider) and toes-out stance.  I'll get your stance and motion straightened out, once we manage to schedule it.

The other main good general strengthening exercises for quads/hammies/glutes are step-ups and SLDL (stiff-legged deadlift) or RDL (Romanian deadlift).  I'm basically not in favor of leg press and leg curls, and am just plain against knee extensions (other than in a rehab setting).

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Greg Bell Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 1/31/06 at 6:41am

My advice;

 

If you really want to squat, try back squatting with 50% of your max to a box below parallel (sets of triples). As a rule of thumb, squatting to a box will generally force you to sit back further and take stress off your patellas. Make sure to pause at the bottom of the rep for about 1sec. This is a great way to develop starting and explosive strength; this is also a great way to get use to parallel or below. Keep experimenting with foot position. Generally you want your feet out further than shoulders, with your toes pointed slightly out. Try to imagine that you are “splitting the ground” with your feet as you drive your hips foreword…the weight will just pop up if it is done correctly.

 

Also, Heavy good mornings and Romanian (stiff-leg) deads are great for the glute-hamstring-low back chain.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Richard Doria Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 1/31/06 at 8:43am

You are 41 and already have knee problems.  You have no business at all doing deep squats with any substantial weight.  There is plenty of challenge in taking just 25# plates on a smith bar, rack, and with as perfect form as you can and under control, squat to parallel, hold for one second and under smooth control come back up, hold for a second and repeat.  Try twelve and then walk away.  You'll feel it the next day or two for sure.  If you want to build "thigh" strength, then do partial squats going down a quarter or a third of the way and that is all.   No bebopping up and down.  Control.  Get rid of the boxes.  Don't use a bench to bounce your arse off, unless you might enjoy a broken tailbone.  Your goal is to train using weights.  Anything else is just weight lifting.  Squating 500 pounds does not equal distance.  It only means you can squat 500 pounds.

And wrap your knees! 

That's my two-bits worth of sound advice.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Wayne Hill Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 1/31/06 at 10:56am
With all due respect, I seriously think you're wrong on essentially all points.

-Wayne
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote nbafo Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 1/31/06 at 1:16pm
Roy--I assume "destroy" the glutes is a good thing? I do have lunges in my rotation--and I agree most heartily!

Terri--great to see you online! From what Dan has said it looks to be an amazing season for you--are you going to Inverness?

I searched box squats and after reading a few sites headed down to the basement to try some--just onto my bench to get the motion--I think if i find something a little lower, this will work

hi Wayne. I know. I need to come have a training session... I've being doing some stiff legged deads with dumbells and just now finding the step ups--those should help with explosiveness...

Greg thanks for further clarification on the box squats--I'll look into the good mornings--I'm finding that I don't know a lot of the lifting "lingo"--having spent my years as a suburban gym mom on the machine circuit...

Richard--I think I need to clarify here--at this point in my training, by "heavy" I'm only talking 50 lbs ...I wouldn't want to lift 500 even if I could! I am trying to get my form down correctly, and I 've read conflicting things...I wanted to ask here for maximum benefit in throwing. My patella problem thing was back 10 years ago when I was an out of shape mom hauling a 30lb toddler around--I had PT and been fine since. I did have some twinges a few weeks ago after jogging intervals on the treadmill set at max incline--too much stress on knees not used to jogging. All of the new evidence I've read about patella femoral syndrome says strengthen the quads...(as opposed to what I was told 10 yrs ago about my "outer quads" being stronger and pulling my knee cap out of alignment so we worked on lots of stretching)

I'm just looking to train smart and sometimes that's hard...look at the "most important" thread lots of different opinions...
Nancy Baker Fowler

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote G-man Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 1/31/06 at 2:07pm

PAST parallel with light weight.......then add when you are ready....life begins past parallel!

I have never had a serious knee injury, I have been deep squatting since I was 14, I'm 34 now. I had several contact injuries that the spectator thought would have blown a knee out.  When I was a 400 hurdler in collage I would have competitions with the hammer throwers twice my size.

1) Most people that say they go to parallel DON"T know what parrallel is. You’re a$$ will be lower than you knees when you are parallel. Paralell is measured by the top of your quads not the bottom.

2) one of the points of the box squat is control, you don't put all your weight on the bench/box, you don’t go down hard


I have the kid doing box squats on a stack of carpet squares, he is about 3 inches above parallel each day I remove a square(he has no idea).

The stuff below is from Louie....you can read it here

Safety is always important. In powerlifting as in all other sports, injuries occur. I suffered a complete rupture of the patella tendon in 1991. At that time my best squat was 821 at 242. Rehabbing myself, I gained full range of motion and came back to squat 900 in two meets at 52 years old. I have never used knee wraps in training. I have used bands and bar weight combined at the top to equal over a grand with the weight on the box around 800 with no knee problems at all. How? I sit back for enough on the box where there is no pressure on my patella tendons.

Box squatting has made it possible for me to make a Top 10 total in 1972 without gear and to be no. 3 in 2001 in the open division at 242.



Edited by G-man
http://cghighlander.blogspot.com/
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Richard Doria Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 1/31/06 at 3:47pm

I understand all that.  Good job for you.  You've been doing it.  The questioner is getting back into shape and has a history.  His smart moved to lighten the weight and be more concerned with proper, and safe form long before he should consider adding100, 200, 300, pounds on his back and  knees.  I believe that one needs to  understand the range of motion that a highland games athlete needs to concern themself with, and one will find that 1/4 to 1/3 is about as low as most need to go.  No one explodes from a deep squat.  No one.  If it were true, basketball players would be dropping into a deep squat and slamming from midcourt.  Just my opinion based on years of training, coaching, playing.  Okay, I retired. So I will shut up from now on.  But I retired in one piece and no surgeries.  I think that is pretty darn good after seventeen years.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Coach Mac Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 1/31/06 at 6:18pm
Rich..."he" is a SHE... ...I'll try to make his as concise as I
can.

I'll preface this with the high school kids use to accuse me of
claiming that squats were the cure for the common cold...

First off WHAT are we trying to accomplish (aka the GOOD)..."if"
you can exhibit 2 too 2.5 times bodyweight...you will reach the
top-end of speed and vertical jump reversibility....we try to get
our athletes to this GOAL asap without any injuries....so the "I
WISH I could squat 875 -lbs." is realistic if you weigh 400-lbs/
PLUS...!

HOW: we mix fronts ---step ups (two kinds) ---lunges forwards
and backwards---and SAFETY Squats as well as (barefoot )
STEEP hills in sand in our leg work.

Percents: the best percents (based on training age of 3-years)
for POWER: 2-inches BELOW parrallel (activates the
hamstrings AND hip flexors if you use the CORRECT squatting
technique- EMG Studies) 48 too 58% of max on the
BOTTOM....85% off max at 135-degree's...you get the 85%
using rubber band tension that can be used in 3-week blocks
as they STRESS the nervous system (we use to the TENDO
unit to measure recovery)...we go STRENGTH ( week TWO out
of three wwek training block with a week of rest (week-4) in
season mixed with two weeks (week -one and three )POWER
or SPEED week...there are a ton of ways to manipulate this and
the more variety the better for older trainee's.

We will go up to 97% of max and have used un-loading hooks
to go as high as 120% of max on the way down and it's not as
HARD as it sounds to RAMP up the strength components;

Other thoughts:
One legged Step Ups : have been around for over a100-years.
(Sargent Step test) this essentially cuts the LOAD in 1/2...it's
uni-lateral (like throwing)

On our heavy weeks we use two foam pads to stand on...step
up to a foam pad on a bench in socks....we prefer dumbbells as
you can DROP them if you ge in trouble...oterwize... IN a
power rack.

1.     Begin with one set of 8-10 reps with no weight, and
2.     Proceed to 45 pounds for six reps (45x6), 110x3. I32x3,
150x3, l60x3 for three sets, 135 x6 for three sets and sets of
115x3 to failure.

SPEED WEEK 's: we step up to a bench that allows the knee
to be 2-inches above the thigh/hip area....EMG studies on the
hamstring activation.

HEAVY WEEK: just go too 90-degree's

The Bulgarian team uses the pulse rate as a gauge to let them
know how far to take the sets. They believe that each of the
moderate to heavy sets should produce a pulse rate of 162-180
beats per minute. The lifter doesn’t begin his next set until his
pulse has dropped to between 102 and 108.

I have used this PULSE rate quide and it WORKS...!


I've spent a TREMENDOUS amout of time re-searching this
subject and have un-covered some intresting FACTS !!!

Good luck ...train SMART !
Have a GREAT Day !
Rob " Coach Mac " Mac Kay
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Trainerterry Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 2/01/06 at 4:11am

those crafty Bulagarians...i have used heart rate also...I use it once in a while to make sure I am getting enough rest between sets...or most of the time not getting too much...

Coach do you ever add the lifters size into the equation...

If two lifters of equal maxes in the squat were working out...the more top heavy athlete will still be doing a higher percentage intensity of work....I have a few athletes (besides myself) that fit this profile.

Other wise in a well thought out plan an athlete will do a squatting movement at all range of motion parameters....with good technique anyone can squat full range...if not you have some muscle missuse problems....the squat often gets blamed when in reality it just points out problems an athlete has like poor VMO, poor glute activation, poor internal and external rotators of the hips, abs...the list goes on and on...

I just know that a good squatting workout helps my sheaf!

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Borges Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 2/01/06 at 4:23am

Originally posted by Coach Mac Coach Mac wrote:

I'll preface this with the high school kids use to accuse me of
claiming that squats were the cure for the common cold...  

Deep squats are the basis for life in the universe as we know it.

My opinion - variety is the spice of life. That said, MOST of your squats should be below parallel. Box squatting is the single best way to get variety since you can vary the height of the box. It also allows you to break the eccentric-concentric chain (by pausing on the box) which is a good thing to do at least some of the time.

Cheers,

Carlos



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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Trainerterry Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 2/01/06 at 4:35am

I love box squats...especially with novices as it aids in teaching technique...there are 100's of ways to squat...use them all.

So before anyone discusses compression on the disks...bouncing off the box etc...remember any exercise done wrong can be harmful.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Silverback Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 2/03/06 at 1:16am
Did Coach Mac say, "go heavy" again in 6 paragraphs?
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote G-man Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 2/03/06 at 1:44am
I think he said  "go heavy" and "go deep"
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote jluidl Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 2/07/06 at 11:38am
Go to www.drsquat.com and read his articles.  Especially "What you Kneed to Know About Squats".  It's all very much simpler than you think.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Silverback Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 2/08/06 at 1:48am
Thanks G Cat, I missed deep I was so jacked we did not go into the chicks world thing again.  I think Jluidl is right also, most people talk more about the squat than do it.  It is progressive resistance.  In other words do more, more reps or more weight, but do more.  And why not do a full stroke for the bread and butter.  You might frost it with some partials, but not the main course.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Louis Cypher Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 2/13/06 at 9:16am
Watch out for spinal compression when doing box squats, under any load. Your better off using a rack and setting that to the appropriate height.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tim Pinkerton Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 2/14/06 at 1:42am

I think people are worried about this spinal compression a little too much.  Granted, while at college, I saw some real retards attemp box squats and they came crashing down on to the box.  Here, I think a warning is warrented.  In most cases though, read; with most of us, there is enough training knowledge to know not to do that...I would hope.

Most people can not box squat near the weight that they can regular squat or deadlift.  Add to that that many people do partial rack pulls with a ton of weight.  Spinal compression is always an issue. Anytime you put any heavy weight across your back or in your hands your going to have spinal compression.  I we lift smart, box squats should be no more dangerous than anything else.

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boxes put you in the sweet spot
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Louis Cypher Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 2/14/06 at 4:28am

Nancy says she has bad knee's and she goes slow when she squats. Obviously she is worried about them. So I would seek out a warm water tHerapy style pool and do jump squats and lunges in the pool. The faster you go the harder the resistance. Plus your knees will feel better and your legs will get stronger. Then I would progress to machinery like leg press hip sled and then on to front squats. Just an Idea. I just don't want you to hurt anymore than you have to.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote kiltedrussian66 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 2/14/06 at 4:59am
All I can say is that when I squat in any manner as long as the form is strict my knees feel better then before I squtted..Build up of the supporting muscles..
"Never walk away from home ahead of your axe and sword.You can't feel a battle in your bones or foresee a fight."-Viking saying
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote old plaid Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 2/14/06 at 5:14am

i am 61

still squatting deep

i mean dead rock bottom deep (355 x 5)

you cannot get a volume of erotic poetry between my ass and the floor

use wraps, yes, and icyhot; any 12 year old scotch is a good warmup

otherwise its just down and up, down and up

the knee is made to go all the way, so let it

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Fat Elvis Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 2/14/06 at 5:18am

old plaid

Last night was richly lived

wish you could've been there

fronts, deads, then boxes

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the company was stellar as well

Myles AND Kearney

lots of laughs - lots of weight - lots of fun

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote nbafo Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 2/14/06 at 8:01am
thanks for continuing this discussion, guys! The more info I have the better.

I was able to get to Art McDermott's training session which was quite helpful to pinpoint my relative weaknesses. Boy does he have some fun toys at his gym!

I've been doing box squats--working mainly on my form and think I have it down--a wider stance is also definitely helping--I'm feeling it in my hips as I drive up and not worrying about my knees so much...

Nancy
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote K-Monster Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 2/14/06 at 8:34pm
Originally posted by old plaid old plaid wrote:

i am 61

still squatting deep

i mean dead rock bottom deep (355 x 5)

you cannot get a volume of erotic poetry between my ass and the floor

use wraps, yes, and icyhot; any 12 year old scotch is a good warmup

otherwise its just down and up, down and up

the knee is made to go all the way, so let it

That was beautifully said, from a leader in our sport. I'm actually misting up a bit. I'd be honored to join you in a lifting session; I'll bring the scotch.

Plaid, I showed my high school group a deep squat, and I was amazed that many of them couldn't sit on their heels. It's like a right of passage to be able to do that.

"I train in the sand pit in McDonald's. I do a few laps. I go through the tunnel a few times. The kids don't mind if I smoke. Plus, when I'm done, lunch is right there."- DLR 2003
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote kiltedrussianjr Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 2/15/06 at 2:17am

 my dad says that it is easier on the legs and n\knees if you go past parrelllel

 

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote kiltedrussian66 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 2/15/06 at 3:47am
Yeah and my son tells me that his gym teacher;whom by the way has said he never squats, that parallel squats are danerous...Anything is potentially dangerous if strict form is not followed...
"Never walk away from home ahead of your axe and sword.You can't feel a battle in your bones or foresee a fight."-Viking saying
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