Tip: The Cable Chop for Rear Delts

Every rear delt movement I see has the lifter start with his hands and arms in line with his body, then proceeding to move them outward (think of rear delt flyes). There’s nothing wrong with this, other than the fact that solely focusing on this kind of path severely limits how much of your muscle you’re going to hit. To change things up, try setting up on a cable machine for constant tension: This is a very isolated pattern that, when done correctly, absolutely torches the rear delts. It’s important to maintain the same elbow angle throughout the entire range of motion. This isn’t a triceps exercise; the fulcrum is the shoulder. Pull the arm all the way across the body as though you’re trying to cover your mouth with your biceps. Then aim down toward your outside shoe with your fist. It’ll take a few reps to initially feel, but once you’re rolling, you’ll get an insane pump in the target
Origin: Tip: The Cable Chop for Rear Delts

4 Reasons You’ve Got No Rear Delts

The deltoids are an easy muscle to hit… unless you’re talking about the rear deltoids. Targeting this muscle group takes more than doing standard dumbbell reverse flyes. Here’s what you need to know and do: 1 – You’re Going Too Heavy I cringe when someone does sets of 50-pound dumbbell reverse flyes, or buries their face into a pec dec hybrid machine to perform horribly executed reverse flyes with the stack. There’s a reason your rear delts are underdeveloped and weak – it’s because you’re using too much weight to get the job done and other muscle groups are actually completing the rep. Since the rear delts aren’t easy to hit, we need to respect that it won’t take much weight to hit them hard. It can, of course, be argued that delt-recruiting exercises like high pulls or cleans can be performed with heavy weight, but the amount of work that’s actually done by the upper traps and other back musculature is high. 2 – Your Hand Position is Wrong So much of our rear deltoid training is dedicated to arm abduction, but it neglects rotation. Doing bent-over flyes is all fine and dandy, but it only tackles one function of the rear delts. What you need to do instead is turn your hands so the palms face forward. You get a much fuller, much more targeted contraction. As a bonus, turning the wrists so the palms face forward on the bent-over reverse fly also helps prevent the shoulder glide that can be incurred from using a neutral or internally rotated grip. The same holds true for the face pull. Incorporating an external rotation so the hands finish higher up, over the head, can be a game-changer for just how much you feel it in the target muscles. If you’re big and wide with long arms, then using two ropes is better than one. To take things to the next level, adding a “slide” component to a face pull (like a resisted scapular slide) makes the delts responsible for external rotation from a variety of arm angles through the force curve. This is a great progression to standard wall slides. 3 – You Need to Add Isometrics The good thing about isometrics? You’re able to apply maximal forces in ranges where typical reps of an exercise merely pass through. That means a lifter will typically spend just an instant at full shoulder extension or flexion, with the meat of the rep being felt at basically every other arm angle but those positions. Working the snot out of shoulders at full flexion and extension end ranges with isometrics can not only be the hidden key to creating more available range of motion for immobile, injury-prone shoulders, but also to help develop dormant muscle groups like the rear delts, which otherwise get little to no play in exercises intended for them. Using isometrics as a primer to common exercises – or as their own exercise to be paired or grouped with others – is a great way to get the most out of your muscles through the greatest range possible. This video shows me putting T Nation editor Dani Shugart through a few of these rear deltoid and upper back isometrics. 4 – You’re Doing Same Motion Over and Over Again Every rear delt movement I see has the lifter start with his hands and arms in line with his body, then proceeding to move them outward (think of the rear delt flyes I showed above). There’s nothing wrong with this, other than the fact that solely focusing on this kind of path severely limits how much of your muscle you’re going to hit. To change things up, try setting up on a cable machine for constant tension: This is a very isolated pattern that, when done correctly, absolutely torches the rear delts. It’s important to maintain the same elbow angle throughout the entire range of motion. This isn’t a triceps exercise; the fulcrum is the shoulder. Pull the arm all the way across the body as though you’re trying to cover your mouth with your biceps. Then aim down toward your outside shoe with your fist. It’ll take a few reps to initially feel, but once you’re rolling, you’ll get an insane pump in the target
Origin: 4 Reasons You’ve Got No Rear Delts

Tip: The Cure For Stubborn Medial Delts

How To Tell If Yours Need To Growth The medial (side) delts can be stubborn. Stand in front of a mirror and square up to it. Are your shoulders rounded on the sides, almost like a ball cut in half? Or are they shaped more like a 90-degree angle? If they’re more like the latter, that’s a sign you could stand to add a little muscle there. Sadly, for most, it’s a tough area to develop. Throwing in a few token sets of lateral raises a couple times a week won’t cut it. If you want them to respond, you need to get a little creative and be willing to put up with a lot of discomfort. Why? Because the medial delts respond well to extended time under tension and skin-splitting metabolic stress work. You know, the type of stuff that causes burning, searing pain. Metabolic stress – along with mechanical tension and muscle damage – is one of the key drivers of hypertrophy. It’s the key driver that a lot of people forget to use. So, if your shoulders are flat and you covet a cannonball look, try one of the protocols below. Do a different one each shoulder workout, twice a week, for the next 8 weeks. Protocol 1: Progressive Isometrics (Machine Lateral Raise) Progressive isometrics can turn any exercise with a hard contraction in the shortened position into a nightmare (in a good way). With this protocol, pick a lateral raise variation. I prefer cables or a machine over dumbbells. Choose a weight which would make you fail at rep 15. Do one rep and hold it for a one second count at the top. Do two reps then hold it for a two second count at the top. Do three reps then hold it for a three second count at the top, etc. Notice that you’re only holding on the last rep. So you’ll do 10 total reps with a 10 second hold on the final rep. This should be grueling. But it’s not over! At the completion of the set, rest two minutes, reduce the weight by about 10%, and do it again. Protocol 2: Single-Arm Delt Destruction This is probably the nastiest thing I’ve come up with for targeting and thoroughly exhausting the medial delts. Here’s what to do… Behind-the-Back Single-Arm Cable Lateral Raise: Do 12-15 reps to failure Single-Arm Cable Lateral Raise: Do as many reps as possible using the same weight. Same goes for the next three exercises. Single-Arm Cross-Body Upright Row with External Rotation Single-Arm Cheat Cable Lateral Raise Singe-Arm Partial Cable Lateral Raise Don’t rest between exercises, just change positions. Repeat on the other side, rest for a minute, and then repeat for a second set on each arm. Expect about a 20% reduction in reps the second time through. Protocol 3: Dumbbell Drop Set for Delts Grab two sets of dumbbells – one heavy and one half that weight. Now do this: Dumbbell Clean to Ahrens Press with Accentuated Negative Lateral Raise: 6-8 reps to failure Cheat Dumbbell Upright Row: Do as many reps as possible using the same weight (Now move to the light dumbbells.) Dumbbell Lateral Raise: Do as many strict reps as possible Poliquin Dumbbell Lateral Raise: Do as many reps as possible using the same weight. Same goes for the next three exercises. Modified Bent-Arm Dumbbell Lateral Raise Cheat Dumbbell Lateral Raise Cheat Dumbbell Upright Row Rest two minutes Go down five pounds from your heavy set of dumbbells. Repeat. The priority is the first exercise because it sets the tone for the entire protocol. With the Ahrens press, press out at an angle, NOT straight up. Take a closer look. Once you reach full extension, you’ll want to get a 3-4 second negative (lowering) on the lateral raise. Take this exercise to failure until you can’t control the negative any longer. Where To Put These In Your Workouts There are a lot of ways to add them to your training depending on what your program looks like. But an easy way to start adding them in now is to do them twice weekly, and rotate through using a different one each session. Try that for 8 weeks. One day a week, do one of these protocols mid-to-late workout AFTER your heavier, progressive overload work. On the second training day, START your workout with one of these to really dial in the focus on the medial delts before you’re too trashed from your other upper body
Origin: Tip: The Cure For Stubborn Medial Delts

Stubborn Delts: The High Tension Solution

Building big, healthy shoulders goes beyond just overhead pressing a city bus. Sure, that’ll get the job done if you’re capable of it, but there’s a better way. We’ll get into some of the exercises you probably aren’t doing, but there’s something we have to talk about first… Maximizing Tension There’s a handful of reasons you might find it difficult to develop a stubborn body part. Lack of mind-muscle connection, poor execution, poor movement selection for your structure, and poor overall programming are a few. The old bodybuilding adage, “train a muscle at different angles,” was basically a way of saying that you need to take advantage of the length-tension relationship within different movements. Different exercises will provide different resistance curves to the muscles being trained, so they’ll train those muscles at different lengths within the movement. Maximizing development is about creating as much tension as possible in those different lengths. The key is to find exercises that best suit your structure and best train the muscles in various positions: lengthened, mid, and shortened. But it’s also important to use movements that stress the targeted musculature appropriate within those lengths. Here are four exercises that’ll satisfy this approach: 1 – Banded Dumbbell Press The dumbbell overhead press is a proven delt strength and size builder. But both strength and physique-focused lifters could be doing it more effectively. The most common way people do the press is seated (which is fine), then they lock the elbows back by using external rotation, and press from the shoulders to the overhead position with the dumbbells arching together over that range of motion. There are a few problems here. To start, you can’t get away from the fact that this exercise predominantly hits the anterior delts. This means you should be making sure to get the anterior delt loaded maximally in its most lengthened state. Doing this will keep you from going into excessive external rotation and instead let the elbows come forward a bit, allowing you to work in your natural scapular plane. While pressing, you want to avoid that common arching motion because it actually takes the delts out of their active range of motion very quickly. It’s the traps that adduct the arms in that overhead arching motion. This arching motion also shortens the lever arm in the movement, making it easier as you reach lockout. And that’s cool and all if you aren’t trying to stress the actual delt muscles. But if you are, it means you’re not spending as much time in the area where the movement is actually difficult. The better way to perform these is to press directly upwards with the dumbbells staying in line with the elbows. It’s no different than if you stacked the elbows and wrists in a vertical line with one another like if you were doing a barbell press. Lastly, to make these more productive, add a band to flatten out that descending resistance curve. By adding in the band we’re eliminating that dead area in the range of motion at the top and creating a longer torque curve. Now you’re maximally loading the anterior deltoid in the bottom, you’re staying in a longer active range of motion, and you’re eliminating that dead range of motion near the top where there’s very little tension. 2 – Rear Delt Row with Supination I’ve done my fair share of bent-over lateral raises (rear delt raises), but the truth is that they fall short as a rear delt movement. With a bent-over lateral raise, the rear delts never actually get fully shortened. A key component in maximizing an exercise is to get the target muscle fully lengthened and then fully shortened within a movement. But some exercises don’t do that as well as others. A better option is the rear delt row with supination. With this exercise, you’ll be rowing (as you might expect) to bring the elbow behind the body as far as possible, which will shorten the rear delt. But you’ll add a twist, literally, by supinating as you perform the row. Why the twist? Because it’ll bring about a certain amount of external rotation in the shoulder, which is one of the components of the rear delt. Supination at the forearm is actively linked with external rotation of the shoulder, just like pronation is linked with internal rotation. This isn’t an exercise you’ll go super heavy on, but you won’t need to so long as you’re using the appropriate resistance with it for the mechanics, and making sure to get the rear delt fully shortened. 3 – Incline Lateral Raise It’s nearly impossible to cheat with these, unlike the standing lateral raise. Not that cheating is bad, and I actually do add cheaty lateral raises into my programming from time to time. But for most guys having trouble getting a strong mind-muscle connection, the incline version is a better choice. This exercise will also naturally put the resistance in line with the middle fibers of the delt. When you use a standing lateral raise it’s
Origin: Stubborn Delts: The High Tension Solution