Hello guys,
Disclaimer: I cannot low bar squat because I don't have the shoulder mobility to do it. I have tried several times before and It gives me all types of pain. That's why I have resorted to high bar squatting.
The question:
I have a problem with my left leg, it caves in. At the beginning I thought I had a leg length discrepancy, but I went to the doctor and the x-rays showed otherwise. However, the doctor discovered that my left foot arch collapses very easily, so he told me to squat in hard orthotics (which is what Rip suggests for this kind of problem). I try to push my knees out as much as I can but I still get some level of caving in from the left leg, a lot less than before using hard orthotics though.
My question is, is this level of "caving in" acceptable, is it advisable to keep adding weight? Taking weight of the bar and working my way up with super perfect form hasn't worked, I always get this level of "caving in" which is a lot less than before the orthotics.
Here is the video of the first set with 115Kg. It's from the back, so the knee caving in can be seen more clearly.
High Bar Squat - 115Kg - Set 1 - YouTube
Just for some other context information I'm 1.87m tall, weight close to a 100Kg, and the other lifts go up nicely it's only the squat that's problematic.
Based on your grip width on the high bar, I have a really hard time believing you don’t have the shoulder mobility to move the bar down and do a low bar squat. Maybe you don’t have the mobility to move it down and hold it the wrong way, but it certainly looks like you have the mobility to. I’ve it down and hold it the right way.
Anyway, your stance looks too wide.
Depth?
That day I didn't record from the side, by I always hit depth, I'm sure of it.
I make sure that the crease of the shorts goes a little bit bellow the top of the knee. That's why I started using white shorts, the crease can be seen more easily in videos.
Well, the high bar squat is going to force your knees to come a little further forward and the back angle a little more upright. If your stance is wider than it should be and the knees have to come further forward, what do you think they're going to do?
As far as depth goes... If Rip is questioning your depth and not giving you a form check... ummm... You're high.