For a long time ago, I acidentally did that but have never replicated that again. I always believe there might be a magical cue that can solve all problems and be a central drive for squat. I was about to sleep then your video popped up, i got up and did your cue with some air squats. Damn, it worked like charm. It felt so stable and much powerful out of the hole and during the squat.
I would still say there is no such thing as a magical cue that solves all problems, but I do think this cue has pretty wide application, and great to hear it clicked with you!
Steve aint even pregnant but always delivers. Jokes aside been 2 months in pwl now subscription now. My coaching’s been going up since Ive seen your videos because in my country most of the coaches always use the % system, no rpe and make it a excel file then send it to clients. Your programming series was the best series for me in my coaching career.
@@PRsPerformance dude, the bottom of my squat literally felt like a leggpress. I had a 170kg single @7 today but it moved and felt like a 5-6 xD, thx alot man
Thank you so much for that Steve! My coach sent me the IG story in question the day you posted it, and I didn’t understand what was this cue. This video is a great visual for that and it’s very beneficial!!
Steve I’ve got a question 🙋🏻♂️ How do you adjust cueing for extreme cases of squat patterns. I, for example, squat with a very narrow stance due to my narrow hip anatomy as well as highbar (as up on my traps as possible) with an ATG depth utilizing my stretch reflex while wearing heels. I’ve tried implementing your previous cue of chest lean with knees forward but any slight chest deviation made me lose balance and tip forward as I am very upright during my squat. My hip movement is no where near as much as how much I drive my knees forward. The reason I use this movement pattern is quite honestly 1) I enjoy highbar 2) might not be the most optimal but it for sure feels the strongest 3) I like this extreme ROM for the added hypertrophic stimulus My question is, considering my extreme condition, does this apply for me as well ?
I’d have to see your squat to answer that, but I have a whole post on Instagram about how I cue high bar and low bar very, very similarly. To me though it sounds like you are doing more of an Olympic squat than “powerlifting”.
Fantastic video dude! Thank you for all the content you put out. Quick question, would you use this cue for someone who squats high bar upright atg style (oly lifter style) or would you use a different directional cue? Thanks again!
Thanks for the great demonstration, Steve! How would you cue this for long-femur short-torso lifters? Would you cue a pre-hinge because the torso lean can be quite substantial for us, which in turn makes the path of the belt somewhat erratic. It doesn't quite have a vertical translation up-down with the pelvis as would be the case with rotund or stockier lifters.
That is very dependent and I'd have to see someone's individual technique to answer this correctly. But I very rarely even cue a pre-hinge for long femur'd lifters, and this cue would be applied the same way. You'd really need to be on the far end of the spectrum to need to overly change things. And I never said in the video it would have a vertical translation solely for anyone. Even short femur'd lifters, the belt will translate down and back.
@@PRsPerformance "Even short femur'd lifters, the belt will translate down and back." You did and demonstrated it quite well, at that. My bad! Thanks for the help. I suppose I am on the far-end of the short-torso long-femur spectrum here, but it's also why I tend to observe elite female lifters a bit more. That body-type seems more common there. Layne Norton and Panagiotis Tarindis are probably the exceptions among popular IPF lifters.
I really wouldn't even consider Layne and Pana that far on the end of the spectrum. Pana does the French low bar, so thats more so what requires more torso lean and hinge from him, otherwise he has a pretty "normal" looking squat. And Layne's squat has a lot to do with just how he decides he wants to squat and works best for him. Neither of those lifters are highly disadvantaged for squat or on the far end of the spectrum for leverages IMO.
@@PRsPerformance I'll keep that in mind, thanks again. I'd heard Layne always chalk up his chair-folding squat down to his legs (and why he had to work hard to get them big, but that's besides the point). Fair comment about Pana. Again, what I know is quite limited but I'd thought that the hips rising first is typically seen as less than ideal in squats. Nuckols has written at length about it. You're the expert here though and I'm sure an IPF champ knows what they're doing. Which lifters would you say fit the mould of these kind of leverages, then?
Do you do online coaching? I competed this year at IPF Bench worlds for Australia. I am a coach myself but looking at the possibility of getting a coach for Bench only. 93kg, would like to bench 200kgs, hovering around the 180s atm.
Thank you so much for this video! I do have one question to clarify; when you say “over the heels,” do you mean center of the heel (middle of the malleolus), or do you mean that it should line up just behind the heel? From the camera angle, sometimes it looks as if the buckle is right at the end of the heel (like the Achilles tendon). Not trying to nitpick, just trying to clarify. Maybe I’m overthinking it.
I rarely cue anything on the concentric. The eccentric determines the concentric action, so if you get that right, the concentric is just about lifting the weight.