đĽ DONâT SQUAT THE DEADLIFT & VICE VERSA
đ¨ Itâs extremely common to see newbies âsquatâ their deadlift, but whatâs worse than that, is that some coaches actually advice people to do so. There couldnât be a faster way to snap your lower back, honestly.
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When youâre performing a deadlift, you want to learn how to Hip Hinge, and not
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đ¨ Squat your way down at the set up.

â The hip hinge is a flexion or extension originating at the hips that involves a posterior weight shift. With the hip hinge, you maintain a neutral spine, bending at the hips, with your knees slightly bent. This pattern relieves stress off of the lumbar spine and can prevent many injuries.
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1ď¸âŁ Your hips will sit higher than parallel: less quad engagement and more hamstrings/posterior chain engagement.
2ď¸âŁYouâll be able to keep your back tight which is TOO important for lower back health. â
3ď¸âŁyour shoulders will either be in line or beyond the bar, creating a favorable leverage for you to pull off of.
âââSitting too low will instead cause many consecutive problems:
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1ď¸âŁSitting too low simply wonât allow you to keep your lower back tight, quite infact, itâll tilt posteriorly, making you start with a ROUNDED lower back. Which is never safe, especially when deadlifting.
2ď¸âŁYouâre not doing this exercise for your quads.
3ď¸âŁYour shoulders are behind the bar, creating a NON-favorable leverage for you to pull the weight up.
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đ¨ PLEASE do not squat the deadlift, and definitely donât deadlift the squat! â
Quite in fact, the opposite will work for squats. This time, the load will be directly placed on your back â so Hip Hingind doesnât make sense, unless youâre a masochist.