Discover how to get ahead working your behind. New findings reveal the best exercises for your gluteus maximus, including the glute exercise all runners need to know about.
Read on and you’ll discover:
While many focus on the aesthetic benefits of building strong and powerful gluteal muscles, there are many more reasons why it’s important to work your booty. Getting your glute mechanics in good shape is key to keeping your lower limbs aligned during any weight-bearing activities – and that’s basically any activity you do on your feet!
The gluteus maximus and the posterior fibers of the gluteus medius laterally rotate the femur, so they help prevent the knee from drifting inward – this is particularly important during exercises such as squats and lunges. Strong glutes are also important for preventing knee pain during impact activities such as running, walking and climbing stairs. And, your glutes help to hold your pelvis together and prevent pelvic instability, which is the painful situation where your joints in the lower back and pelvis move excessively when you walk and run.
Activities like climbing, lifting and digging all engage our glute muscles vertically. Squats and lunges are great for training vertical strength. These exercises create vertical forces initiating a high demand on our posterior chain and therefore a strong glute max contraction. The largest contraction kicks in at the bottom of the movement when the hips are flexed.
Walking, running and pushing are the types of activities that engage our glute muscles horizontally. This is where bridges and hip thrusts come in. These exercises are highly effective because they strengthen our glutes into full extension, the glutes stay under constant tension throughout the whole movement, and the move is not compromised by back strength, which cannot be said of squats and lunges.
Research shows the hip thrust will elicit greater gluteus maximus and hamstring activation compared to the back squat and produces higher horizontal forces that we need when we run. Researchers came to this conclusion after collecting EMG data from 12 male athletes as they did squats, lunges and hip thrusts. The researchers measured their peak force during each exercise and correlated it to their speed when sprinting. They found that peak horizontal force during sprinting was linked with peak velocity (horizontal force) but not peak vertical force.
So, if you want to run faster, training your glutes horizontally with hip thrusts and bridges is the way to go.
However, whether you’re a runner or not, a glute training program consisting of nothing but thrusts is probably not a good idea. With this in mind, we’ve combined new findings with insights from a previous study that explored the most common therapeutic exercises to restore glute function and rated them according to the amount of electric activity they generated. The result is a comprehensive list of the top glute exercises to try out for maximum impact.
You can do this exercise without any weights, or intensify it by adding a weighted barbell across your hips. Repeat 10-15 times.
Start with your feet hip-width apart, chest lifted and abs engaged.
Repeat 10-15 on each leg.
Repeat 10-15 on each leg. For an extra challenge keep your foot off the ground when you return to standing.
Repeat 10-15 on each leg.
Repeat 10-15 on each leg.
STEPPING BACKWARDS CAN BE A SMARTER MOVE
Further studies have shown that you can enjoy all the benefits of the forward lunge and reduce the risk of injury by simply stepping backward. Find out why you can’t beat backward stepping lunges here.
Aim for 10-15 on each leg.
Repeat 10-15 times then change sides.
Repeat 10-15 on each leg.
Workouts like BODYPUMP, LES MILLS CORE and LES MILLS BARRE all provide plenty of great opportunities to train your glutes.
FIND A WORKOUT WORK OUT ON DEMAND
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