Swing to Win – Kettlebell Swings Better Than Olympic Lifts?

Olympic weightlifting derivatives have long been celebrated as top exercises for strength training in strength and condition. There is evidence now that is probably wrong. For most people, a simple kettlebell swing is usually a better power move than any Olympic lift derivative.

Sport happens with full hip extension

The sprinting, hitting, throwing and swinging of a racket or racket is driven by your hips with full, powerful hip extension. The full hip extension is the part of the movements of the lower body in which you stand up fully and approach and reach fully stretched.

You have to catch the bar in Olympic lifts. Beginners and advanced users almost never achieve a full hip extension because they are already preparing to dive back in to catch the pole. With a kettlebell swing, it's easy for even beginners to get a full, snappy, and powerful expansion.

If you look at the end position of each repetition in the video, you will see that the body position also mimics the drive phase of a clean wood or stone load in Strongman, in which you vigorously drive your pelvis forward under the device.

In the swing you "catch" the weight with your hamstrings

One of the biggest risk of injury in sports is tearing an Achilles tendon. Recent research has shown that developing stronger and longer hamstrings is one way to minimize this risk of injury. 1

In the swing video above you can see the kettlebell coming back and I brake it, which ends the catching phase in a position where the hamstrings are on a stretch.

This strains the Achilles tendon when it is stretched, while strengthening and lengthening the muscle, just what has been shown to reduce the risk of hamstring rupture. It is also a movement that strengthens the inner Achilles tendon more than the outer hamstring2, which could also reduce the risk of hamstring. 3

No Olympic lift derivative has this weighted advantage of hamstring stretching. Therefore, no Olympic lifting variant helps to reduce the risk of hamstring injuries and at the same time train strength like the kettlebell swing.

Horizontal work

Swings have an obvious horizontal drive aspect that Olympic lifts don't. In a swing you drive the kettlebell forward powerfully, away from you, as you cannot with the pole in Oly lifts. If you did, you would not be able to catch the bar and exit the elevator.

This horizontal aspect is important for sports because the hips work the same way when sprinting, hitting, swinging, throwing, etc. There is evidence that training horizontal strength movements rather than vertical strength movements is more effective to improve sprinting. 4

This study compared barbell engines to barbell squats and the engines were more effective. It was suspected that the horizontal nature and the larger hip extension area of ​​the engines could be the reasons why the engine was more effective.

The effect of the kettlebell swing, unlike the Olympic lifts, is that kettlebell swings have these horizontal and larger hip extension features in an explosive lift, suggesting that they are more applicable to sprint and horizontal sport movements than a vertical power lift like the Olympic lifts.

Kettlebells are easier to learn

Anyone who has ever tried to teach beginners the Olympic lifts can tell you how difficult it is. Those of us who have tried Olympic lifting can all testify to how technically demanding it is.

This can be very fun and rewarding as a separate sport, but unfortunately it massively reduces the value of the Olympic lifts for strength and fitness. A kettlebell swing is fairly simple and easy to learn until you unlock the benefits.

When compared directly in a study with participants with more than a year of lifting experience, kettlebell swings performed well compared to power cleaning and high pulling forces. 5

Although the kettlebell group used much lighter loads, their vertical jump and power clean improved at the end of the study, as did the group that trained the power clean!

Not only that, the barbell group squatted and the chalice of the kettlebell group squatted, so that the barbell group became stronger through a stronger force movement.

This raises the question of whether the barbell group squatted heavier and became stronger, but the kettlebell group still improved in vertical jumping and power clean, although it was weaker and did not practice power clean. How much more effective was the kettlebell for power development? Swing as the Power Clean and the High Pull ?! The Kettlebell group has more power from less power, so that's relatively more power!

I think the relatively greater performance advantages of the kettlebell group were due to how much easier it is to learn and train the kettlebell swing to achieve physiological benefits while the barbell group was still trying the technical aspects of the Oly-Lift – Master derivatives.

The overall conclusion from the study is that a heavy barbell movement in combination with a kettlebell movement could be the optimal combination for strength and conditioning purposes.

The reduced risk of injury

When you prepare yourself or a team to perform better in a sport, it is your focus and not the tools you use for strength and conditioning. Nobody cares how well you clean and jerk off when you're a boxer who gets knocked out in every fight.

A major disadvantage of Olympic lifts is the risk of injury that they themselves have. Even the simpler fluctuations in performance disturb the wrists of many athletes, if nothing else.

Sometimes the risk of injury that we have from working in the gym is intentionally risked to protect the athlete from injury in sports. Unfortunately, some of the risks of Olympic lifting don't go over to much else, so they only affect their value as a strength and conditioning tool.

Kettlebell swings have no such problems. As mentioned earlier, the stretched strain they create from the hamstrings is beneficial for most sports and they don't put a lot of strain on your wrists.

A lower risk of injury from the lifts themselves, a higher injury potential and a higher return through less time invested make it child's play to choose kettlebell turns as strength and fitness training.

Program kettlebells

When it comes to integrating the kettlebell swing into your workout, I have a few preferred options. Explosive exercises can have a PAP effect 6, which means that they “wake up” your nervous system and facilitate the recruitment of muscle fibers.

This makes kettlebell swings a good choice to switch between general warm-up exercises and your first main lift. If you do, go to low volume. Work through the weights with sets of 5 or 6 reps as quickly and snappily as possible. When you get to a weight that slows you down and no longer feels snappy, stop there and ride your primary lift for the day.

The other way I particularly like is to take a kettlebell with you wherever you take your primary lower body lift. Whether it's squats, deadlifts, engines, or trap bar lifts, once your set is ready, hit a series of kettlebell swings without a break.

The weight does not have to be massively heavy as long as it is heavy enough that you feel like you have to work to move it quickly. Then rest as usual before the next sentence. This is contrast training.

However, if you incorporate kettlebell swings, this combination of research should clearly show that they are not a fad. A simple and effective movement that can help your hard-earned strength to transform into powerful sports movements cannot be ignored. Swing to win!

References

1. Short bicep femoral fascicles and weakness in the eccentric knee flexor increase the risk of thigh injury in elite football: a prospective cohort study

2. Kettlebell Swing Targets Semitendinosus and Supine Leg Curl Targets Biceps Femoris: An EMG study with effects on rehabilitation

3. Biceps femoris and semitendinosus – teammates or competitors? New insights into mechanisms of thigh injury in male soccer players: a muscle-functional MRI study

4. Effects of a 7-week hip push compared to squat resistance training on youth football performance

5. Effects of weight lifting vs. Kettlebell training on vertical jump, strength and body composition

6. Ballistic exercise as a stimulus before activation: An overview of the literature and practical applications

Swing to Win – Kettlebell Swings Better Than Olympic Lifts?

Olympic weightlifting derivatives have long been celebrated as top exercises for strength training in strength and condition. There is evidence now that is probably wrong. For most people, a simple kettlebell swing is usually a better power move than any Olympic lift derivative.

Sport happens with full hip extension

The sprinting, hitting, throwing and swinging of a racket or racket is driven by your hips with full, powerful hip extension. The full hip extension is the part of the movements of the lower body in which you stand up fully and approach and reach fully stretched.

You have to catch the bar in Olympic lifts. Beginners and advanced users almost never achieve a full hip extension because they are already preparing to dive back in to catch the pole. With a kettlebell swing, it's easy for even beginners to get a full, snappy, and powerful expansion.

If you look at the end position of each repetition in the video, you can see that the body position also mimics the drive phase of a clean wood or stone load in Strongman, in which you powerfully drive your pelvis forward under the device.

In the swing you "catch" the weight with your hamstrings

One of the biggest risk of injury in sports is tearing an Achilles tendon. Recent research has shown that developing stronger and longer hamstrings is one way to minimize this risk of injury.1

In the swing video above you can see the kettlebell coming back and I brake it, which ends the catching phase in a position where the hamstrings are on a stretch. This strains the Achilles tendon when it is stretched while strengthening and lengthening the muscle, just what has been shown to reduce the risk of hamstring rupture. It is also a movement that strengthens the inner hamstring more than the outer hamstring2, which could also reduce the risk of hamstring. 3

No Olympic lift derivative has this weighted advantage for hamstring stretching. Therefore, no Olympic lifting variant helps to reduce the risk of hamstring injuries and at the same time train strength such as the kettlebell swing.

Horizontal work

Swings have an obvious horizontal drive aspect that Olympic lifts don't. In a swing you drive the kettlebell forward powerfully, away from you, as you cannot with the pole in Oly lifts. If you did, you would not be able to catch the bar and end the lift.

This horizontal aspect is important for sports because the hips work the same way when sprinting, hitting, swinging, throwing, etc. There is evidence that training horizontal strength movements rather than vertical strength movements is more effective to improve sprinting. 4

This study compared barbell engines to barbell squats and the engines were more effective. It was suspected that the horizontal nature and the larger hip extension area of ​​the engines could be the reasons why the engine was more effective.

The impact of the kettlebell swing, unlike the Olympic lifts, is that kettlebell swings have these horizontal and larger hip extension features in an explosive lift, suggesting that they can be better translated to sprint and horizontal sport movements than a vertical power lift like the Olympic lifts.

Kettlebells are easier to learn

Anyone who has ever tried to teach beginners the Olympic lifts can tell you how difficult it is. Those of us who have tried Olympic lifting can all testify to how technically demanding it is. This can be very fun and rewarding as a separate sport, but unfortunately it massively reduces the value of the Olympic lifts for strength and fitness. A kettlebell swing is fairly simple and easy to learn until you unlock the benefits.

When compared directly in a study with participants with more than a year of lifting experience, kettlebell turns performed well compared to power cleaning and high traction.5 Although the kettlebell group used much lighter loads, their vertical jump and power cleaning improved at the end of the study as much as the group that trains the strength cleanly! Not only that, the barbell group squatted and the cup of the kettlebell group squatted, so that the barbell group became stronger through a stronger force movement.

This raises the question of whether the barbell group squatted heavier and became stronger, but the kettlebell group still improved in vertical jumping and power clean, although it was weaker and did not practice power clean. How much more effective was the kettlebell for power development? Swing as the Power Clean and the High Pull ?! The Kettlebell group has more power from less power, so that's relatively more power!

I think the relatively greater performance advantages of the kettlebell group were due to how much easier it is to learn and train the kettlebell swing to achieve physiological benefits while the barbell group was still trying the technical aspects of the Oly-Lift – Master derivatives.

The overall conclusion from the study is that a heavy barbell movement in combination with a kettlebell movement could be the optimal combination for strength and conditioning purposes.

The reduced risk of injury

When you prepare yourself or a team to perform better in a sport, it is your focus and not the tools you use for strength and conditioning. Nobody cares how well you clean and jerk off when you're a boxer who gets knocked out in every fight.

A major disadvantage of Olympic lifts is the risk of injury that they themselves have. Even the simpler fluctuations in performance disrupt the wrists of many athletes, if nothing else. Sometimes the risk of injury that we have from working in the gym is intentionally risked to protect the athlete from injury in sports. Unfortunately, some of the risks of Olympic lifting don't go over to much else, so they only affect their value as a strength and conditioning tool.

Kettlebell swings have no such problems. As mentioned earlier, the stretched strain they create from the hamstrings is beneficial for most sports and they do not strain the wrists very much.

A lower risk of injury from the lifts themselves, a higher injury potential and a higher return through less time invested make it child's play to choose kettlebell turns as strength and fitness training.

Program kettlebells

When it comes to integrating the kettlebell swing into your workout, I have a few preferred options. Explosive exercises can have a PAP effect 6, which means that they “wake up” your nervous system and facilitate the recruitment of muscle fibers. This makes kettlebell swings a good choice to switch between general warm-up exercises and your first main lift. If you do, go to low volume. Work through the sets with sets of 5 or 6 repetitions as quickly and snappily as possible. When you get to a weight that slows you down and no longer feels snappy, stop there and ride your primary lift for the day.

The other way I particularly like is to take a kettlebell with you wherever you take your primary lower body lift. Whether it's squats, deadlifts, engines, or trap bar lifts, once your set is ready, knock out a series of kettlebell swings without a break. The weight does not have to be massively heavy as long as it is heavy enough that you feel like you have to work to move it quickly. Then rest as usual before the next sentence. This is contrast training.

However, if you incorporate kettlebell swings, this combination of research should clearly show that they are not a fad. A simple and effective movement that can help your hard-earned strength to transform into powerful sports movements cannot be ignored. Swing to win!

All Lifts Are Technical So Learn to Do Them Right

Most people don't know how to pick up a heavy box from the floor without straining their backs. Why do most people understand the nuances of barbell, kettlebell, and even barbell movements? And of all the people you see lifting in gyms around the world, most are self-taught. The vast majority of people who lift do not learn to lift, but are self-taught or accompany group groups in which there is limited supervision or support.

Sound alarmist? Do the math. There are nearly 40,000 gyms and nearly 65 million members in the United States. Keep in mind that a place like Planet Fitness can have 1,400 outlets and 10 million members, and you can have 5,000 CrossFit gyms with less than a million members in total. The point is that, in the larger scheme, out of the 65 million athletes, maybe 1.5 million receive the best barbell and kettlebell instruction and some level of personal attention. Out of 100 people you see in a gym, maybe 3 really know what they're doing.

The YouTube and Instagram Fitness Revolution

You kind of know it all yourself. You can see it on social media. All these videos and posts about the right and wrong way of doing things. ? can't you miss it. Some can be sad and no one has to give another lecture on knees toes in squats.

Unfortunately, we stick to it for two reasons: Qualified coaching and training are expensive and not accessible to the vast majority of trainees, and anyone can become a trainer, which means that there is no quality control in the fitness industry. Another fold is that celebrities are a currency and celebrity trainers on YouTube and Instagram have a very large audience.

On a positive note, the explosion of fitness content on social media has opened people up to Olympic weightlifting, powerlifting, fitness, strongman, and many other strength exercises that are usually considered very specialized. A few years ago, you wouldn't see anyone deadlifting in a crunch gym.

On the negative side, Olympic weightlifting, powerlifting, fitness, strongman, and many other strength exercises are all very, very technical. It takes a lot of time to learn and understand the correct form and safe practices. They are also not for everyone. You cannot be an occasional strong man or Olympic lifter.

Lifting heavy stuff takes reason

If you want to learn how to clean and jerk properly, raise your deadlift without increasing your health insurance, swing a kettlebell, or just find out why your arms don't go over your shoulders when you lift the dumbbell to the side, you need some intellectual curiosity or mindful movement . A lack of curiosity or interest in learning the mechanics of an elevator is a failure, as is a lack of understanding of how your body actually responds and works in a particular movement.

For untrained people, the feeling of limited mobility and tightness in the body can simply be due to the fact that the body is not adequately supported, the tension is not properly distributed, or the body feels unbalanced when the focus drops to a crouch.

The secret of your first squat is that you feel great when you do it

If you really have ambitions in Olympic weightlifting, powerlifting or strongman, you will find the people who do it right. These are tough, esoteric sports that are great to look at and that can make you feel very strong, but they're not for everyone. They are sports. Most of the best coaches don't know what to do with casual practitioners if the main goal of any discipline is to win in competitions.

It's not that you choose a partner and play a game of tennis. Sure, you can judge your own performance over time by looking at how far you are pushing your own records, but that's not the culture. It is also a high-tech sport that you are likely to injure yourself without proper guidance or coaching support. If you are the only person who has learned how to detach yourself from YouTube and reach 100 kg, you are the exception and I should see the proof of your progress without external support.

  • The best lifters in the country have trainers.
  • The richest CEOs in the country have coaches.
  • The best coaches in the country have coaches.

7 steps to find the best coach for you

Fitness sports like CrossFit are an incredibly mixed collection of disciplines that run at speed. They are not easy to look at for traditionalists, but they do have a following. If you want to, you should have a trainer who is proven in every discipline, or some of them who have expertise in specific aspects.

Do you think indoor rowing is easy? Maybe it's on the surface, but it's very technical. Granted, you can do it casually, but if you want to make the most of it, you need to understand the mechanics of the form and be able to pass on that knowledge.

I taught myself how to type when I was in college. I put my fingers a button over my left hand, but it didn't matter because I had practiced enough to be able to type my work very quickly. So I decided to see how fast I could type and tried to relearn typing to improve my speed.

It turned out to be the hardest thing I could do based on what I did myself. That types. You know what that would mean if you were to sit with your left foot at an angle that is not optimal for 20 years. You wake up at 40 and find that squatting hurts and someone who is smarter than you points out a simple adjustment that could save you pain for half a lifetime. We are not always the best judge of us.

This is a contribution by Coach Daniel Bell. He should make it a maxim – drive a hundred miles, 2-4 times a month if you have to, but make it to this coaching session.

View this post on Instagram

You don't have to hammer in your garage alone – at least not all the time. And you can talk to your trainer face to face. When you're ready to level up, send an email to Rubbercityweightlifting@gmail.com

A contribution by Daniel Bell (@rubbercityweightlifting) on ​​March 4, 2020 at 2:01 p.m. PST

All lifts are technical.

All Lifts Are Technical So Learn to Do Them Right

Most people don't know how to pick up a heavy box from the floor without straining their backs. Why do most people understand the nuances of barbell, kettlebell, and even barbell movements? And of all the people you see lifting in gyms around the world, most are self-taught. The vast majority of people who lift do not learn to lift, but are self-taught or accompany group groups in which there is limited supervision or support.

Sound alarmist? Do the math. There are nearly 40,000 gyms and nearly 65 million members in the United States. Keep in mind that a place like Planet Fitness can have 1,400 outlets and 10 million members, and you can have 5,000 CrossFit gyms with less than a million members in total. The point is that, in the larger scheme, out of the 65 million athletes, maybe 1.5 million receive the best barbell and kettlebell instruction and some level of personal attention. Out of 100 people you see in a gym, maybe 3 really know what they're doing.

The YouTube and Instagram Fitness Revolution

You kind of know it all yourself. You can see it on social media. All these videos and posts about the right and wrong way of doing things. ✅or ❌, you can't miss it. Some can be sad and no one has to give another lecture on knees toes in squats.

Unfortunately, we stick to it for two reasons: Qualified coaching and training are expensive and not accessible to the vast majority of trainees, and anyone can become a trainer, which means that there is no quality control in the fitness industry. Another fold is that celebrities are a currency and celebrity trainers on YouTube and Instagram have a very large audience.

On a positive note, the explosion of fitness content on social media has opened people up to Olympic weightlifting, powerlifting, fitness, strongman, and many other strength exercises that are usually considered very specialized. A few years ago, you wouldn't see anyone deadlifting in a crunch gym.

On the negative side, Olympic weightlifting, powerlifting, fitness, strongman and many other strength exercises are all very, very technical. It takes a lot of time to learn and understand the correct form and safe practices. They are also not for everyone. You cannot be an occasional strong man or Olympic lifter.

Lifting heavy stuff takes reason

If you want to learn how to clean and jerk properly, raise your deadlift without increasing your health insurance, swing a kettlebell, or just find out why your arms don't go over your shoulders when you lift the dumbbell to the side, you need some intellectual curiosity or mindful movement . A lack of curiosity or interest in learning the mechanics of an elevator is a failure, as is a lack of understanding of how your body actually responds and works in a particular movement.

For untrained people feelings of Mobility restrictions and tightness in the body it can simply be because the body is not adequately supported, the tension is not distributed correctly or the body feels unbalanced if the focus falls into a crouch.

The secret of your first squat is that you feel great when you do it

If you really have ambitions in Olympic weightlifting, powerlifting or strongman, you will find the people who do it right. These are tough, esoteric sports that are great to look at and that can make you feel very strong, but they're not for everyone. They are sports. Most of the best coaches don't know what to do with casual practitioners if the main goal of any discipline is to win in competitions. It's not that you choose a partner and play a game of tennis. Sure, you can judge your own performance over time by looking at how far you are pushing your own records, but that's not the culture. It is also a high-tech sport that you are likely to injure yourself without proper guidance or coaching support. If you are the only person who has learned how to detach yourself from YouTube and reach 100 kg, you are the exception and I should see the proof of your progress without external support.

Fitness sports like CrossFit are an incredibly mixed collection of disciplines that run at speed. They are not easy to look at for traditionalists, but they do have a following. If you want to, you should have a trainer who is proven in every discipline, or some of them who have expertise in specific aspects. Do you think indoor rowing is easy? Maybe it's on the surface, but it's very technical. Granted, you can do it casually, but if you want to make the most of it, you need to understand the mechanics of the form and be able to pass on that knowledge.

I taught myself how to type when I was in college. I put my fingers a button over my left hand, but it didn't matter because I had practiced enough to be able to type my work very quickly. So I decided to see how fast I could type and tried to relearn typing to improve my speed. It turned out to be the hardest thing I could do based on what I did myself. That types. You know what that would mean if you were to sit with your left foot at an angle that is not optimal for 20 years. You wake up at 40 and find that squatting hurts and someone who is smarter than you points out a simple adjustment that could save you pain for half a lifetime. We are not always the best judge of us.

This is a contribution by Coach Daniel Bell. He should make it a maxim – drive a hundred miles, 2-4 times a month if you have to, but make it to this coaching session.

All lifts are technical.