SPEAKER_01 3:39–6:58
Think about energy going upwards. Okay. So how do you put, how do you put tension, overcoming tension on connective tissues that were static prior to the pull? That means I have to go even harder to create the tension on the connective tissues to allow that because I don't have the expanded representation and then the compressed representation. I have to literally produce that within the structure itself. It's like, I have to actively contract a muscle to pull the connective tissues into an energy storing and then release it all at once. It's much more effortful to do so. And you can feel it. All you gotta do is pull something off the floor and do a squat. You go, oh, the squat was just much easier because you could store and release. It's this natural expansion compression, right? Now, if I have to increase the degree of effort to overcome the inertia and I'm a narrow ISA, okay. In what direction am I squeezing and pushing pressure inward? Ian, feel free to share downward, downward. I have to put pressure down against it so I can put pressure up against it. So I'm squeezing. So if the pressure downward is great, I am sticking that person into the ground for a longer period of time than I would prefer. That's the problem. So maybe their deadlift numbers go up, but the duration that is required for them to apply the force to actually make the weight room numbers go up, increases the duration of their application of force into the ground. I've just made somebody slower, right? Because I took them outside of where they apply internal rotation to the greatest degree in the shortest period of time. So it doesn't mean that you would never trap bar deadlift in a narrow stance. It just means you better pay attention to what you're doing and the desired outcome. If it's just chasing weight room numbers and you have no other performance measure to worry about, to your heart's content. But now think about some positioning, think about timing, right? Modulate the load to where they can lift in a reasonable timeframe, right? And you say, I'm keeping you on a time constraint, right? You ever do a top-down deadlift? Yes. Yeah. So you take them out of the rack, like you put the bar in the rack, you take them out of the rack, they start to deadlift from the top, they go down and they come back up. So it looks more like a squat type of behavior. Yeah. Right?
connective tissue mechanicsforce application timingdeadlift biomechanicsnarrow stance deadliftforce duration