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#1 |
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Registered User
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Below parallel?
BODYBUILDING SUPPLEMENTS High Quality Supplements For Bodybuilders and Athletes. www.ironmaglabs.com I'm sure this topic has been covered many times
before, and know it's probably controversial. Some swear by going below parallel when doing squats, and others say it can cause serious injury. I'd like to hear some comments on this. I'll also mention that I have started going below parallel for now, only on the lighter sets, just to see if I get better results. |
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Half the lies they tell about me aren't true.
Yogi Berra |
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#2 |
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Well Read
Elite Member
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Cape Canaveral, FL
Posts: 1,853
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I started going past parallel after reading some of the posts here too - also on the lower weights. I find I like it. It gives me a better stretch feeling and I am getting a much deeper burn and post workout good kind of sorness than I was getting with much heavier weights at parallel or slightly aboive parallel.
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"Doc, If I had known I was going to live this long I would have taken better care of myself..."
Est unusquisque faber ipsae suae fortunae. We Americans scoff at the likes of African witch doctors yet spend 100's of millions of dollars on fake reducing systems. The only regular exercise he gets is stretching the truth. His intellect is not replenished, he is only an animal, only sensible in the duller parts... |
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#3 |
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jersey's here
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i cant squat for shit .. but when i was in highschool one of my best friends, who was really into football would touch his ass to the ground .. he was crazy .. he also squated 495 with no injuries.. besides a year later tearing his pec .. now he is fat
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somehow trying to get the abs but bulk at the same time.......
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#4 |
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the one & only
Administrator
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I have always gone below parallel and I have never hurt myself.
If it bothers you to go below parallel than I would not recommend that you do so; we're all built a little bit different. ![]() Also, you need to build up the flexability and strength, so begin with lighter weight and work your way up. Do not try and use the same weight that you have been using prior to going below parallel. |
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#5 |
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The Searcher
Join Date: May 2003
Location: NC
Posts: 129
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Going parallel has helped me--I think--to alleviate sore knees, plus I have found that my form is better, which has helped improve my legs.
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#6 |
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Registered User
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Thanks for the replies on this topic.
It makes sense that if you go beyond parallel you would get more range of motion. I did the first couple of sets with lighter weight, pretty far past parallel yesterday. So it will take awhile to see what kind of difference it will make. I am blessed with very good knees, never had any problems with them. I don't know how anybody could touch their ass to the ground doing a squat, but I'm not going to say it's impossible. We are all different, but for me it would be a physical impossibility. I remember reading an article years ago, it might have been an old Bob Hoffman magazine. The article was written by Paul Anderson, it was titled "You've got to bend em". About all I can recall is that he would do one legged squats on a sturdy table, and he would use a broom stick for balance, and he would go way below parallel! A lot of the old ways of weight training have gone by the way side, but it's apparent that some people were ahead of their time. ![]() |
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Half the lies they tell about me aren't true.
Yogi Berra |
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#7 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: New York
Posts: 489
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Going below parallel is fine, there is a myth that it puts more stress on the knee however the truth is that once you break parallel the hamstrings and glutes get the extra stress not the knee. Leg extensions are much more dangerous for the knee than squats.
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