Please Scroll Down to See Forums Below
How to install the app on iOS

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.

Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.

napsgear
genezapharmateuticals
domestic-supply
puritysourcelabs
Research Chemical SciencesUGFREAKeudomestic
napsgeargenezapharmateuticals domestic-supplypuritysourcelabsResearch Chemical SciencesUGFREAKeudomestic

Scraping up shins during deadlifts

I used to tear my shins up in DL's and any form of lift from the ground (ex. power clean, power snatch). But its just something i got used to.

Wounds Heal, Chicks Dig Scars, Glory Lasts Forever.
 
xblitz44x said:
Also, I don't know if maybe I'm not working hard enough but I hear people saying how 'taxing' deadlifting is. For some reason I feel perfectly fine the day after deadlifting. Maybe a little weak in the hamstrings but certainly not as taxed as I am after a heavy squat.

Strange, I'm in the same boat. I fucking fear squats, yet deads don't seem to kill me like they do others.
 
Squats are my favorite regular exercise. Next would be OHPs and chinups.

The olylifts are in a league of their own though. So much mastery involved there.

But deadlifts tax the CNS more than anything for most people, because of the sheer amount of strain posed on the body with very heavy deadlifts. It's why WSB doesn't train it directly - it's just an incredibly demanding lift. Not always something you feel. Try squatting 3x a week. Now do it with deadlifting. Most people find that deadlifting too often burns them out FAST.
 
I have scars on my shins, more on the right shin though.

I also don't feel that sore after deadlift. I can feel it a little in my lower back the next day, but that's about it. It is tiring while doing it, but it doesn't seem to take that much out of me. And oddly enough my deadlift is way out of porportion with the rest of my lifts.
 
Anthrax Invasion said:
But deadlifts tax the CNS more than anything for most people, because of the sheer amount of strain posed on the body with very heavy deadlifts. It's why WSB doesn't train it directly - it's just an incredibly demanding lift. Not always something you feel. Try squatting 3x a week. Now do it with deadlifting. Most people find that deadlifting too often burns them out FAST.

I'll have to try that, since I only do deads 1x a week. Probably not enough volume on my part.

Anthrax, you mentioned earlier that you lift specifically for MMA, and are working on your VJ. Would you mind posting up your workout?
 
Since I started pulling with a hook grip, my shins are never scraped up.....a lot of guys use baby powder on the shins and the bar slides right up them.

As for being an overtaxing life, I find that it is easy to burn out with DL's...I am never 'sore' from them, but when done heavy and frequently, I tend to get total body burnout and my lifts all suffer.
 
MikeMartial said:
I'll have to try that, since I only do deads 1x a week. Probably not enough volume on my part.

Anthrax, you mentioned earlier that you lift specifically for MMA, and are working on your VJ. Would you mind posting up your workout?

Right now I'm cutting, so there's no specific work for VJing or MMA right now. I train fullbody four times a week. Depletion workouts Monday and Tuesday (2-3x15), tension workouts Thursday (2-3x6-12), and power workouts Saturday (3x5 per exercise, 2 exercises per bodypart). So far it's working well - all I have is a bit of lower ab fat to get rid of.

Normally though, I lift to increase my strength in core exercises, throwing in a bit of higher-repped isolation for my vanity bodyparts (namely arms). My squat is working back up to where I want it to be (where it was before I got ihjured) to maximize sprinting and VJ ability.

After that, I'll be doing something similar to CCJ, though tailored to my own needs (i.e., reactive or explosive work).

All the while practicing grappling with friends or cousins who know their ground game, and sparring with some friends who box, kickbox, or know Muay Thai. I get in as much training as I can when I have a caloric surplus. Otherwise, I tend to cut back, 'cause I do enough volume already that it'll bury me.

I guess my workouts are a hodgepodge of stuff. You'll always find some underlying routine (5x5, HST, Lyle's, some generic olylifting split) with some vanity work (arm isos), olylifts (rarely full 'cause I'm not actually competing, so hang snatches and cleans work better), and depending on my current sparring partner's availabilities and my routine, energy work and higher-repped circuits so my muscles don't fatigue as much during bouts.

So far though, I've had little problem with muscular endurance, so that's usually not a huge focus of my training. Just figured I'd add that some times, I will add in stuff like that, to be sure I'm at my peak when I fight.
 
asdfzxcv said:
Thanks for all the feedback guys,it is much appreciated.I might give the sumo style deads a try as seems to place more emphasis on the glutes/hamstrings,which are weak point of mine.

Good to hear you aren't giving up on them, just moving from a conventional form to Sumo. I've tried both and can't figure out which worked better for me. I am pretty sure the textbook form brings the bar up the shins, but other folks just seem to have found a way around it or its just the way they are built that keeps their shins less bloody. Most of the big DL's I have seen have pretty torn up shins.

I hope the sumo works for you. There are a lot of other exercises you can perform too to bring up the areas of weakness, but wasn't sure if already mentioned. Good luck.
 
on the bars I use there is knurling in the very middle, two smooth spaces one on each side, then more knurling. I place my shins right on the smooth parts and place my hands just inside the "power rings". When I pull, "if" the bar scrapes my legs the smooth part is what is scraping, therfore no damage.

Doing it this way may be a little too close of a stance for some but I find it comfortable. I am 6'1" and also have long legs.
 
Top Bottom