Krueg
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Mar 6, 2012
- Messages
- 1,279
- Reaction score
- 131
- Age
- 36
Hey DJ's, I been noticing some guys at my gym not benching the correct way. You may think; "Well, how much is there to benching other than pressing the bar up off your chest?" The answer may be more than you thought... The Bench Press is really a full body movement, if done correctly it also uses your legs and lats besides your chest, triceps and front deltoids. So, what are some ways to bench properly?
(Not particularly in order)
1. Pinch your shoulder blades back - This keeps your shoulders from rolling forward and puts less stress on your deltoids. Also creates a better foundation for support.
2. Raise your chest up and create a small arch.
3. Keep your a$$ on the bench.
4. Keep your feet flat on the floor - Keeping your feet flat on the floor will improve your stability and help with leg drive. Keep your feet in a neutral position, not too far infront or too far under you. You may have to play with foot positioning to find what works best for you.
5. Lower the bar just below your nipples.
6. Squeeze your lats as your lowering the bar.
7. Keep your arms at a 45 degree angle, don't let your arms flare out.
8. Breathe into your stomache, not the chest.
9. Keep wrists in-line with your forearms.
I know this isn't a very descriptive list or well put together post, but I wanted to point the main "techniques" you should be doing. For a more in-depth look I'd recommend looking up Mark Ripptoes bench tutorial on YouTube or searching under Google Videos. Its like a 30min. video but pretty informative.
Safety Tips:
Never use a thumbless grip, always wrap your thumb around the bar. I saw a power lifter try to bench 400lbs when his grip slipped, the bar smashed his chest. He died later that day of a heart concussion.
Benching by yourself - If your benching alone and going heavy, do it in a power rack and put in the safety pins. So, if you get stuck, theres no worries. Or bench without the bar clamps so you can dump the weights if something goes wrong.
(Not particularly in order)
1. Pinch your shoulder blades back - This keeps your shoulders from rolling forward and puts less stress on your deltoids. Also creates a better foundation for support.
2. Raise your chest up and create a small arch.
3. Keep your a$$ on the bench.
4. Keep your feet flat on the floor - Keeping your feet flat on the floor will improve your stability and help with leg drive. Keep your feet in a neutral position, not too far infront or too far under you. You may have to play with foot positioning to find what works best for you.
5. Lower the bar just below your nipples.
6. Squeeze your lats as your lowering the bar.
7. Keep your arms at a 45 degree angle, don't let your arms flare out.
8. Breathe into your stomache, not the chest.
9. Keep wrists in-line with your forearms.
I know this isn't a very descriptive list or well put together post, but I wanted to point the main "techniques" you should be doing. For a more in-depth look I'd recommend looking up Mark Ripptoes bench tutorial on YouTube or searching under Google Videos. Its like a 30min. video but pretty informative.
Safety Tips:
Never use a thumbless grip, always wrap your thumb around the bar. I saw a power lifter try to bench 400lbs when his grip slipped, the bar smashed his chest. He died later that day of a heart concussion.
Benching by yourself - If your benching alone and going heavy, do it in a power rack and put in the safety pins. So, if you get stuck, theres no worries. Or bench without the bar clamps so you can dump the weights if something goes wrong.