bignate73 said:alot of lower back in there. his legs are strong, it might be a good idea to slow the pace down a bit until that back can stay up with the legs. the last couple damn near looked like good mornings at the end of the rep.
just what i noticed.![]()
b fold the truth said:Hope you get that 500 on deads for a bunch of reps!!!
B True
BigAndy69 said:Humm, I think I know the guy in the background
2Thick said:Great lifts, but the back was moving a bit. It is normal, but watch out if you go too heavy. This is just some advice from my powerlifting background.
louden_swain said:Some of you guys are way to critical in terms of evaluating his form. I have been lifting for nearly 8 years and I think he has excellent form. This is a great example of a deep squat.
When you squat past parallel, a lot of stress goes to the back. Needsize does a great job of keeping the movement solid and I see no problems with his squat at all. I see no signicant rounding or hunching while he performs the movement.
Remember, this is nearly 450lbs ass to the floor squat.
Many people can barely shift 225lbs. For those who provide criticism. . .think about the weights you are using. You may need to make some significant improvements yourself.
Again, great work Needsize!!
CoolColJ said:well if your wearing olympic weightlifting shoes you can keep pretty upright, raised heel allows for that.
using a wider stance as well allows for a more upright stance.
There is really very little correlation.hugecalves said:Wondering if there is a strength correlation between squats and leg presses? I work out by myself when I get off work at 3:00am so heavy squats are not an option. I can leg press around 1500 for 4 reps but have never been able to squat very heavy due to lack of a squat rack. Wondering how much I might be able to squat?
hugecalves said:Wondering if there is a strength correlation between squats and leg presses? I work out by myself when I get off work at 3:00am so heavy squats are not an option. I can leg press around 1500 for 4 reps but have never been able to squat very heavy due to lack of a squat rack. Wondering how much I might be able to squat?
thriller said:nice squat bro!!
CoolColJ said:NeedSize what sort of shoes you wearing?
Seems like your feet a wobbling a lot, which is the same problem I have when squatting in sports shoes. I have some Olympic lifting shoes on order, these have a raised heel are solid with a reinforced heel.
see here
http://www.safe-usa.com/olympiclifting1.htm
BFold has the top one.
needsize said:That's a solid workout bro, and some good weights too. I'm on my way to deadlift now, I just hope i can find someone to tape the damn thing for me
needsize said:
Just a pair of Nike cross trainers that are about 2 years old. Normally my feet dont do that, but i went so heavy that it was hard to focus on the little things. Too be honest, I hit 8 reps on 405 after that first set, and I think my form was much more on
CoolColJ said:
I don't think that's a good idea. A bit dangerous too.
I'm only squatting in the 250s now, and my shoes compress a lot. Ie the heel goes down and that makes you lean forward to compensate. You also lose power. You could probbaly squat more with a solid set of olympic weightlifting shoes.
louden_swain said:
I also wear Nike cross-trainers. I don't seem to have any problems. If you elevate your heels, you are placing extra stress on the knee.
CoolColJ said:
well you don't want the heels to compress either
I mean I can squish my shoes's heel with my fingers - not good
Deadz said:You did a GREAT job keeping your back as straight as possible. I think your form is a good example of smart training.
Did you purposely slow the reps when you felt your hips leading and not your shoulders?
Where are your knees going? I can't see because the weights block them, but it looks like they go past your toes once you really break parellel.. possible?
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