Coach Chris
WKR
Especially for really high reps as fast as possible or fasterDeadlift with poor form has become very popular.....
Especially for really high reps as fast as possible or fasterDeadlift with poor form has become very popular.....
Especially for really high reps as fast as possible or faster
Especially for really high reps as fast as possible or faster
YesHey Coach wouldn't you say any lifting done as fast as possible (or faster) has a greater opportunity for injury? But that wouldn't be the fault of the exercise but the manner in which it is excecuted.
Mr Rippetoe has a way with words
Why the Trap Bar is Completely Useless | Mark Rippetoe
Mark Rippetoe talks about why the trap bar is a poor and unsafe substitute for the barbell for pulling off the floor.startingstrength.com
I have no opinion. Never used a trap bar.
If you’ve got lower back issues but still want to pick up heavy stuff, go with what works. Sumo is good. Trap bar is good to. Focus a little on technique. As others rightly point out you can get more quad activation and less posterior chain from a trap bar, but that can happen on a barbell too.
There seems to be a good number of studies that suggest heavy lifting with load bearing skeletal muscles is a great way to boost longevity as well as strength and fitness. Don’t let someone else’s dogmatic views about bars and equipment keep you from doing what works for you. Much better to do what you can than not lift heavy. Bottom line is, if it is medically advisable given your limitations, finding some version that works for you is the right answer.
BTW - read a study about the new Army fitness test, which now includes trap bar deadlift, that said they found trap bar was less prone to injury and a better indicator of overall strength. So there is that.
I am currently on active duty and I will say that the study is garbage. Soldiers are still injuring themselves and the trap bar isn't helping to change that. There's a myriad of reasons for this but at the end of the day, I am not a believer in the trap bar. It is not safer and does not make one less prone to injury than a conventional barbell deadlift. I am bearing witness to the injuries that are occurring and I fully believe that a barbell would be a safer option for us. There isn't a single point in time that a modern Soldier will not need a stronger posterior chain.
i think you missed nearly every point of my response. Maybe go back and read the OPs post and the posts that I was responding to which indicated that if someone with a medical limitation could not do straight bar deadlifts then they were wasting there time with any other alternative.
For your benefit, Let me summarize and I will use small words. Do what works. Something is better than nothing.
oh yeah, surprise, surprise army people are hurting themselves doing intense, heavy, technique dependent lifting After they roll out the new pt test format with probably limited training and phase in periods. Imagine that. Something tells me trap bars or straight bars would be producing a similar result. I recall writing an incident report on a private that impaled himself on a picket doing grass drills and another that knocked himself out slipping off the bar doing Kipping pull ups. It doesn’t surprise me that PT injuries are still occurring with regularity.