How I Coach the Hip Hinge for Rowers

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  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2024
  • rowingstronger...
    The hip hinge is a fundamental athletic movement, and rowing, erging, and sculling is no exception. For length on the recovery and power on the drive, master this movement on land first, learn to apply this skill when rowing, and strength train to improve performance.

Komentáře • 15

  • @Kaiza989
    @Kaiza989 Před rokem +7

    Finally! A video that actually explains the mechanic in detail, I’ve been trying to learn from other CZcams videos for awhile but none of them go into the same detail as you.
    Those other channels can learn a thing or two from this video alone!

    • @RowingStronger
      @RowingStronger  Před rokem

      Cheers, Jay! I'm glad it's helpful for you. Happy hinging.

  • @user-qh5rm4hi4k
    @user-qh5rm4hi4k Před 9 měsíci +2

    watched several of these vids - this helps / makes most sense to me

  • @Jonas_Fox
    @Jonas_Fox Před 2 lety +6

    Excellent instruction and great content for "beginners." And I say "beginners because most rowers I see, even pros, are sacrificing their health and power by not getting their fundamental movement patterns down. Thanks brutha.

  • @peterwmiller8486
    @peterwmiller8486 Před rokem +2

    Another terrific video. Thanks

  • @nickjohnson1017
    @nickjohnson1017 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Zero bs, great video!

  • @skakodker
    @skakodker Před rokem +1

    Thank you!

  • @KwangSKim-ke1vb
    @KwangSKim-ke1vb Před 9 měsíci +1

    This is a very helpful video. Thank you!

  • @wellth-healthandwellnessse3421

    Excellent details and helpful progressions! In the context of rowing on a concept2 erg specifically, what is the problem with opening up with the back too quickly? I’ve noticed when my hamstrings are smoked I’ll open up with back too quickly myself. 1:33

    • @RowingStronger
      @RowingStronger  Před rokem +1

      Hi -- Early opening reduces effective stroke length, shortening your stroke and decreasing performance. It also loads the back/upper body more, which can increase risk of overuse injury and just makes the problem worse: The upper body keeps getting stronger (more stroke attention), the lower body keeps getting weaker (less stroke attention). For improving performance and reducing risk of injury, we want longer effective stroke length that distributes force over many muscles, not shorter strokes that reduce emphasis to just a few muscles.

    • @wellth-healthandwellnessse3421
      @wellth-healthandwellnessse3421 Před rokem

      @@RowingStronger thanks so much. Makes complete sense! Appreciate the thoughtful reply

  • @Davyfb75
    @Davyfb75 Před rokem +4

    Probably been doing it wrong for 70 years must try to do better before it is too late.

  • @jamessher6956
    @jamessher6956 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Learn a correct kettlebell swing and you got it made.

    • @RowingStronger
      @RowingStronger  Před 6 měsíci

      For sure. I find most success with teaching the coordination (PVC pipe/unloaded movement), then the strength (RDL variations), then adding that dynamic/speed component with the KB swing.