You think that kettlebell swings are explosive? How many reps are you using?
Hi.
I was just wondering about your opinion on kettlebell swings, as for increasing explosiveness (sports related). I don't have access to bumperplates and are therefor unable to perform Power Cleans, so I wondered if incoorperating kettlebell swings would be a good way too add some explosive training?
Thanks for your time,
Simen
You think that kettlebell swings are explosive? How many reps are you using?
I haven't actually tried them yet, as I didn't know if they would be worth adding. I guess they are not.
But lets say I do 10 reps, wouldn't that contribute to an explosive posterior chain?
Kettlebell swings are not explosive. They are repetitive, which limits their intensity.
As a BJJ practitioner I'm often confronted with the latest-and-greatest in explosivity training (box jumps, weighted ropes, kettlebell movements de jour), which sometimes tempts me like the carried voices of sirens. To this, I refer to the Starting Strength Series (TM) interview with Jim Wendler, "I want to power clean 315 pounds with the shittiest form possible."
Therefore, who would I rather fight? An opponent who does 20 kg kettlebell swings or an opponent who can powerclean 315 pounds with shitty form?
I've never had access to bumper plates and I've been power cleaning for more than 2 years. How do you think people power cleaned before the invention of bumper plates? After racking at the shoulders, unrack the bar back to the hang position and set the weight down like a deadlift. This might impede your ability to perform 1RM cleans because of the risk of missing and damaging floors, bars, and plates. However, since you're just starting, you should build confidence and technique by never missing a lift.I don't have access to bumperplates and are therefor unable to perform Power Cleans
You don't need bumper plate to do power cleans. Just use iron and set the bar down with out dropping it. Yes your max weight would be somewhat limited but at least you would be getting some truly explosive benefit.
I find kettlebell swings work very well as an active recovery exercise. As far as explosiveness, even the 100 lb kettlebell I've used doesn't compare to a power clean, heavy shrug, or high pull when it comes to building explosiveness. Kettlebells are just too light to increase that kind of power. Useful in their own right. As far as not being able to perform power cleans with metal plates, sure you can. You just don't drop them from overhead. Bringing a heavy barbell down gently so as not to piss of those in charge is a great way to build strength. In the old days, that's how everyone did cleans. And there were some very strong individuals in the old days...