You're in Oakland and LA, and you're not going to see Campitelli (Oakland) or Horn / Ness (LA) to fix this???
Thanks for the form check.
I popped my hip and strained my rectus femoris 7 weeks ago, so I had to start all over with the 45lb bar and slowly adding weight. I couldn't lean over as much when I was rehabbing, so I wanted to make sure I'm not too upright.
I switched to a thumbs-around grip for a number of reasons--mostly elbow tendonitis ruining my bench and press--and I wanted to make sure it didn't badly change the mechanics of my squat. When I had the thumbs-over grip, I would constantly flex my wrists and roll the bar up and down my back--a movement that was exacerbated by raising my elbows and shrugging my shoulders, both of which caused me to initiate my squats with thoracic flexion.
Now that my thumbs are around, the bar isn't as stable and tight on my back, so I have to be careful about balancing it. The bar still moves up and down my back about a little, but it is a big change from having it roll up to my traps, folding me over, and forcing me on my toes.
Thanks for the help!
You're in Oakland and LA, and you're not going to see Campitelli (Oakland) or Horn / Ness (LA) to fix this???
These look ok except for I think your stance is a tad wide, and rep 4 is wrong. Watch your hips stop moving halfway up and then lift your chest - that's loss of hip drive. On all your other reps your hips stay in motion the entire ROM.
Thanks, Steve. I also lost my balance as a result of what you mentioned on rep 4, which is why it took me a while to do my last rep. The major downside of having my thumbs around the bar is that the bar tips to the left or right if I don't let enough of the weight rest on my wrists.
When my elbow tendonitis subsides, I might try thumbs over again.
Muchas gracias.