[quote]g’em wrote:
DominicanDL wrote:
First off, great pulling. The secret to your weak point is plain as day on your video. Look at the point where you fail…your butt is shooting out and your back is almost parallel to the floor.
As soon as your butt shoots out you’ve taken your hips out of the lift and are left to struggle with a modified stiff leg deadlift. Try to keep your head and butt as close to the same plane as possible. A conventional deadlift should begin like a strong leg press…keep that back straight and upright! Your a month away from your meet, don’t kill yourself pulling to failure 3 weeks before the meet. work on technique at 80% 1RM till the meet. You’re not dropping the bar so I won’t comment on grip but the closer you hold the bar the less distance it has to travel.
yeah, getting that ass down is seriously something I need to work on. It’s the one thing I have trouble with. For some reason when I try to keep my bum lower down though my head seems to somehow lose “contact” with my legs and I can’t drive as hard with them. That probably makes no sense I know but as it’s what I’ve always done I guess I’ve tried to adapt around it and this is the result? I have great hip drive (very heavy pull throughs are no bother to me and my oly lifts are pretty good weight-wise) but there’s just something stopping me from fully implementing that strength on the DL.
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Well, you’ve gotten a good bit of advice from everyone here so far. I can’t access the videos from my work right now, but I’m guessing by some of your comments that you are a relatively long limbed lifter/short torso. People of this style (I’m one) typically tend to try and use their backs more in a DL because typically the back is the strongest portion of their body (due to body leverage).
I think maybe the big thing is to avoid hiking up your hips first. In the squat the first thing that should move up out of the hole is your head/chest, instead of bringing your hips up and turning it into a good morning. Similarly in the DL, you don’t want your hips to move first, or fastest. Getting your hips closer to the bar is one way to do help this. Of course, you don’t have to “squat up” your DL, per se. It’s a dl, not a squat after all.