Stance looks a bit wide as well, to my eye. I wonder if your adductors are close to their limit of extensibility.
Since you’re working things out, maybe confirm that the bar is sitting plumb, too. Looks to be tilting left.
Stance looks a bit wide as well, to my eye. I wonder if your adductors are close to their limit of extensibility.
Since you’re working things out, maybe confirm that the bar is sitting plumb, too. Looks to be tilting left.
I wondered the same thing about my stance. I was kind of overthinking it yesterday. Need to just remember shoulder width/30 degree toes. I see that about the bar too. I’ve noticed that some times I come up with my whole body just kind of crooked. Not sure if that’s related to the hip issue.
I have seen some people try and remedy hip shift issue by using a very light resistance band pulling in the direction of the shift, the idea being that in pulling away from the resistance of the band, the hip shift would be corrected.
Additionally, I have been told to stand on a thine plate like a 10lb bumper while squatting. The thinking here is that the plate under the right leg would over load it, and cause me to shift to the left, or in my case closer to the center. Idk, but seems like it could be problematic, and wanted some input before I attempted either method.
I’m going to really cue shifting to the left on tomorrows squats and see how they look with 205lbs.
Do those other strategies have any merit?
Do you have any scoliosis?
If you’re suggesting that it’s a strength imbalance and you can fix it this way, around here we would suggest deloading to a weight the weaker side can handle with a regular squat, focusing intently on symmetry, and gradually building back up.
If the problem derived from a leg length discrepancy, shimming the short leg is a valid fix, although I would recommend having a cobbler modify your shoe. That’s more permanent and more stable than standing on a plate (I know that’s not what you meant when you suggested a bumper plate - I’m just adding extra information that may be relevant).
This much asymmetry cannot be addressed this way. He's going to have to actively try to move his ass the other way, to retrain the movement back to symmetry, because he can't feel the asymmetry even on the first rep. IOW, he needs to learn a brand-new movement pattern.
If there is a LLD, he's still going to have to do the above process, even if the shim corrects the LLD. The movement pattern is the problem now, not the LLD, which may or may not have started it.If the problem derived from a leg length discrepancy, shimming the short leg is a valid fix, although I would recommend having a cobbler modify your shoe. That’s more permanent and more stable than standing on a plate (I know that’s not what you meant when you suggested a bumper plate - I’m just adding extra information that may be relevant).
Thanks so much for the advice. I’ve been really stumped about this, and now that you mention this, I had custom orthotic inserts as a kid for flat feet. I remember that one of them had a shim for a leg length discrepancy . I grew out of them and never got another pair made. I hadn’t thought about it in years. That would be worth looking into. Dropped the weight to 205 this morning and really forced my hips to the left. In the footage, it’s not perfect but an improvement on some reps.
Need to look into getting a shim, and continue the LP from 205.
Would a thin plate under my heel be worth a try?
heels look too wide,
toes are splayed wider than 30,
and knees aren't tracking over the too wide toes/feet,
narrow the heels a couple inches,
turn toes in more, to 30*, measure and mark a line @ 30*, each side, till it's engrained,
then see if knees can't track parrallel to foot angle,
take some weight off the bar.