In 1995, my cousin and training partner at the time bought me The Complete Book of Butt and Legs because, in his words,
he'd "never met someone so obsessed with training his glutes."
I pored over that book, and since then I've read almost every
study, article, and book ever written on the glutes. My bookshelf
is loaded with glute and hip extension exercise material, including
four extra-large three-ring binders full of glute articles and
studies that have been printed and highlighted over the
years.
Whether the publication was geared toward bodybuilding,
powerlifting, or sport-specific training, if it pertained to the
glutes in any way, I read it.
In 2006, I opened up Lifts, a Scottsdale-based fitness studio
that specialized in glute training. I developed several brand new
glute exercises, which my clients and I believed were much more
effective than what most people were doing for their glutes. Lifts
quickly became known as the butt-perfecting gym in
Scottsdale.
Glute Gauges
Early in 2009, I was trained by Noraxon to use their Myotrace
400 and Clinical Application Software, a system that measures and
records the muscular activity of exercises via a process known as
electromyography, or EMG.
I'd long suspected that the methods and exercises I developed in
my training studio were far more effective than what the typical
fitness publications were printing, but after performing thirty
straight leg workouts and experiments in my skivvies with wires and
electrodes attached to me so I could measure and record the glute,
quad, hamstring, and adductor activity of over a hundred different
hip extension exercises, it became clear to me that the glutes are
the most wrongly-pegged muscle group in fitness.
I tested common and unique bodyweight, dumbbell, band, barbell,
apparatus, and machine exercises, and then tested three other
individuals with varying anthropometry or body segment lengths to
make sure the results I saw weren't atypical.
Knowing that the fitness population would seek scientific
explanation to lend support to my data, I knew what my next step
needed to be. Fourteen years after reading the book my cousin
bought me on the glutes, I wrote my own glute-book entitled Advanced Techniques in Glutei Maximi Strengthening.
Within its 675 pages, you'll find pictures and descriptions of
over 200 glute exercises, many of which you've never seen or tried
before, as well as over 700 references and links to other sources.
The book dispels many myths surrounding the glutes, "functional
training," and "sport-specific training." If you're interested in
glute training, this book is a must-read.
The Glute Guy
Recently, a colleague of mine nicknamed me "The Glute Guy," and
it stuck. I'm certain that I've done more research on the glutes
than any other person on this planet. My research has made me
realize two things.
First, the experts don't know shit about the glutes. Yes, this
means all of your favorite authors, professors, trainers, and
coaches. Despite the fact that the gluteus maximus muscles are
without a doubt the most important muscles in sports and the fact
that strength coaches helped popularized "glute activation," none
of them have a good understanding of glute training. Neither do
bodybuilders, powerlifters, or physical therapists. They all think
they do, but they don't.
In fact, the experts are so far off the mark that their best
glute exercises can only activate half as many fibers as the glute
exercises I'm about to show you.
And second, athletes' glutes are pathetically weak and
underpotentialized. Even people who think they have strong glutes
almost always have very weak glutes in comparison to how strong
they can get through proper training.
Follow the Logic
I expound upon these concepts much more in Advanced
Techniques in Glutei Maximi Strengthening, but for this article
I'll be very brief. Some of this might contradict what you've read
in the past but keep in mind this is coming from "The Glute
Guy."
• The lower gluteus maximus is involved in
three distinct actions; hip extension, hip hyperextension, and hip
transverse abduction.
• The upper gluteus maximus is involved in
five different distinct actions; hip extension, hip hyperextension,
hip abduction, hip transverse abduction, and hip external rotation.
• These motions are the most important motions
in sports and include sprinting, leaping, cutting from side to side,
and twisting.
• The strongest joint action at the hip is
hip extension/hyperextension.
• The hip can hyperextend ten degrees with
bent legs, twenty degrees with straight legs, and thirty degrees when
forcibly pulled back.
• Hip hyperextension is safe and occurs naturally
during walking, running, sprinting, grappling, throwing, lunging, and
hip flexor stretching.
• Length tension relationships dictate that
a muscle contracts best when it's at resting length, which means that
the gluteus maximus muscles contract the hardest from zero to twenty
degrees of hyperextension.
• Hip flexor flexibility allows for hip hyperextension
and is an absolutely critical component to maximum glute activation;
tight hip flexors prevent hip hyperextension and maximum glute
activation.
• A vertical jump involves maximal vertical
propulsion; whereas a sprint involves maximum horizontal
propulsion.
• A sprint activates 234% more mean gluteus
maximus muscle than a vertical jump.
• Due to the increased glute activation, sprinters commonly
experience "butt-lock;" whereas repetitive vertical jumpers
experience "quad-lock."
• In resistance training, there are two distinct
types of hip extension exercises; those that mimic vertical jumping
and those that mimic sprinting.
• Hip extension exercises that mimic vertical
jumping have vertical or axial directional load vectors and include
squats, deadlifts, and static lunges.
• Hip extension exercises that mimic sprinting
have horizontal or anteroposterior directional load vectors, involve
hip hyperextension, and include reverse hypers, back extensions, hip
thrusts, pendulum quadruped hip extensions, and pull
throughs.
• Hip extension exercises that mimic jumping
will be referred to as hip extension exercises, whereas hip extension
exercises that mimic sprinting will be referred to as hip
hyperextension exercises.
• The propulsion phase of a vertical jump
involves simultaneous hip, knee, and ankle extension, whereas sprinting
involves hip hyperextension.
• Hip extension exercises are usually performed
while standing.
• Hip hyperextension exercises are usually
performed in the supine, prone, or quadruped positions.
• Hip hyperextension exercises can be performed
with bent legs or straight legs.
• Straight leg hip hyperextension exercises
maximize hamstring contribution.
• Bent leg hip hyperextension exercises place
the hamstrings in a shortened state which limits their contribution
and maximizes gluteal contribution.
• In order, the hip extension exercises with
the highest glute activation are the kneeling squat (67%), deadlift
(55%), sumo deadlift (52%) and Zercher squat (45%).
• In order, the hip hyperextension exercises
with the highest glute activation are the single leg bent leg reverse
hyper (122%), hip thrust (119%), pendulum quadruped hip extension (112%),
bent leg reverse hyper (111%).
• Hip abduction, transverse abduction, and
external rotation exercises often maximally recruit the upper gluteus
maximus muscles to a much greater degree than hip extension or hip
hyperextension exercises.
• A well balanced gluteal routine involves
hip extension exercises, hip hyperextension exercises, hip abduction
exercises, and hip external rotation exercises.
Exercise Progressions
As mentioned earlier, most people think they have strong glutes,
but they don't. They believe this because they think that squats,
deadlifts, and lunges are the best glute exercises, and they've
spent years getting very strong at these. Even though they can make
your glutes very sore, squatting, deadlifting, and lunging don't
strengthen the glutes much. They target the quads and erector
spinae. Even box squatting, walking lunges, and sumo deadlifts
don't activate much glute in comparison to the exercises
below.
If you studied glute activation like I have, you'd be blown away
by the data. Most individual's glutes contract harder during
bodyweight glute activation exercises than from one-rep max squats
and deadlifts.
This isn't due to the fact that the individuals don't know how
to use their glutes or don't adhere to proper exercise form. It's
due to the fact that biomechanically the glutes aren't maximally
involved in squatting, lunging, and deadlifting. They're only
maximally contracted from bent leg hip hyperextension
exercises.
Furthermore, just because someone's glutes are big, it doesn't
mean that they're strong. In addition to training around three
hundred "normal" clients over the past few years, I've trained
various elite athletes, from NFL players and powerlifters to
sprinters and figure models. I taught each of these individuals the
exercises listed below, and I almost always had to start them off
with their own bodyweight for resistance.
Although one of the powerlifters could do raw squats and
deadlifts with over three times his bodyweight, when he first
performed hip thrusts, he had to start out with two sets of twenty
reps with his own bodyweight. We initially tried using 135 pounds
on the hip thrust, which was roughly a third of what he squatted
and deadlifted, but he could barely budge the bar.
The NFL players were both 350-pound offensive lineman who'd do
hip thrusts for two sets of twenty reps as well. When you weigh 350
pounds, bodyweight exercises can be very productive! Both linemen
mentioned that the hip thrust was the best posterior chain exercise
they'd ever performed and remarked about how they loved the
fact that they didn't have to wrap their knees or wear a belt to
perform the exercise.
The Olympic sprinter had the best relative glute strength of the
bunch, easily being able to perform twenty single-leg hip thrusts
on his very first workout.
Strength gains for the new exercises come very quickly. I
started off using 185 pounds for ten reps on the hip thrust and
within a year I could do 405 for five.
The following plan will get your glutes much sexier, stronger,
and speedier. Since everyone possesses varying ranges of glute
strength, I'm going to provide four phases, which become
progressively more challenging and difficult.
If you belong at phase one and start off at phase three, you'll
just end up improving your existing dysfunctional patterns, which
will lead to a pulled low back, hamstring, or groin muscle. You'll
have to be the judge as to which phase you start at, but I suggest
playing it safe and starting on phase one, spending two to three
weeks in each phase.
I also included an array of exercises, some of which can be
performed at your local gym or garage gym, and some of which
require specialized equipment. I believe that the equipment below
should become staples in glute training and sport-specific
training, as they effectively train the sprint-vector and maximize
glute activation.
Don't stop performing your squat, lunge, deadlift, and back
extensions movements. Do these on your regular leg day and perform
two weekly glute workouts on separate days. The workouts will be
brief and won't get you very sore. Always begin each glute workout
with a simple warm-up consisting of hip flexor stretches and a
couple of bodyweight glute activation exercises.
Phase One: Hip Flexor Flexibility and Glute
Activation
You must possess adequate hip flexor flexibility in order to
open up the hips and maximally activate the glutes. Furthermore,
you must be able to control your own bodyweight and learn how to
contract the glutes properly before you begin adding weight. Mark
Verstegen, Mike Boyle, Eric Cressey, and Mike Robertson have done
an excellent job of discussing the importance of glute activation.
Perform two sets of hip flexor stretches for sixty-second static
holds, progressing deeper into the stretch as time
ensues.
Pick two exercises and perform two sets of ten reps with a
five-second isometric hold up top:
Glute bridge
Quadruped hip extension
Bird dog
Hip thrust
Single-leg glute bridge
Pick one exercise and perform two sets of ten reps with a
five-second isometric hold up top:
Lying abduction
Clam
Fire hydrant
Phase Two: Glute Hypertrophy
Now it's time to progress into more challenging exercises and
start packing on some functional glute mass.
Pick two exercises and perform two sets of ten to twenty
reps:
Barbell glute bridge
Pendulum quadruped hip extension
Single-leg hip thrust
Weighted bird dog
Pick one exercise and perform two sets of ten to twenty
reps:
Band standing abduction
Band seated abduction
Band external rotation
Phase Three: Glute Strength
At last, we've reached the maximum strength phase. By this time,
you'll have developed a superior mind-muscle connection and will be
able to maximize your glute activation through heavy strength
training.
Pick one exercise and perform four sets of five
reps:
Barbell hip thrust
Bent-leg reverse hyper
Bent-leg back extension
Phase Four: Glute Power and Speed
Finally, it's time to test out your new-found glute strength and
increased locomotive capacity.
During these sprint sessions, you'll notice increased gluteal
recruitment while running, and you'll be able to hold the "sprint
position" throughout the entire 100-meter race. Make sure to spend
about twenty minutes warming up and progressively increase speed as
the sets progress.
Perform these workouts five days apart. On your first sprint
session, work your way up to four 100-meter sprints at 80%
max-speed. On your second sprint session, work your way up to two
100-meter sprints at 90% max-speed. On your third sprinting
session, work your way up to one 100-meter sprint at 100%
max-speed. Have a buddy bring a stop-watch and see if you can set a
personal record.
When you finish with these phases, you can simply mix together
your own glute program based on equipment availability and
individual exercise preference. After building up strength on these
exercises, your workout will never feel right without having at
least one maximum glute-strengthener in your routine. The days of
just squatting and deadlifting are long gone.
Tips for Special Populations
Ronnie Coleman upped the ante for bodybuilders' glutes when he
showed up at the 2003 Mr. Olympia at 293 pounds with huge, shredded
glutes. If you've seen Ronnie's videos, you'll know he loves his
heavy squats and deadlifts, as well as his grueling parking lot
lunges. I can't imagine what his glutes would've looked like had he
done hip thrusts or pendulum quadruped hip extensions.
Bodybuilders are right on the mark with quad training and way
off the mark with glute and hamstring training. Their arsenal of
exercises is too narrow. Bodybuilders should stay away from
sprints, plyos, and one-rep maxes, as the risk-to-reward ratio just
isn't great enough.
A better strategy is to just integrate some of the exercises
listed below into your routine for higher reps. If you're a
300-pound bodybuilder, performing 20 controlled reps with a slight
pause up top on the hip thrust with just bodyweight will really tax
the glutes. Since the glutes are on average a 68% slow-twitch
muscle, they may respond very well to higher reps.
However, there's also much evidence that shows that since the
gluteus maximus is often the largest muscle in the body, it remains
dormant during low-intensity activities in an attempt to spare
energy for more intense purposes. In this way they are like
"sleeping giants"; they only want to be bothered when absolutely
necessary.
If you're a bodybuilder and you need bigger glutes, then you
must perform the exercises below. Squats, deadlifts, and lunges
aren't doing it for you. I like Haney Rambod's FST-7 method where
he suggests performing a couple of heavy exercises in the eight to
twelve rep range, followed by seven sets of a lighter isolation
exercise for eight to twelve reps with shorter
rest-times.
I'd suggest performing four sets of heavy hip thrusts followed
by seven sets of either an abduction movement like a band abduction
or a more targeted movement like a single-leg glute bridge or even
a quadruped hip extension with a five-second isometric hold up top.
Many gyms have good glute machines too. These machines can
activate the glutes to a much higher degree than typical standing
free-weight exercises. Just pin extra weight to the stack if
need-be.
TC has alluded to the importance of the "A-shape" for sexy
female glutes. While the shape of the glutes are largely genetic,
women still need to attempt to preserve the sexy A-shape as much as
possible and watch their upper glute to lower glute
ratio.
The girls in the "good" category have a sexy A-shape and can
perform all types of glute exercises. The girls in the "bad"
category have well-developed glutes, but are losing their A-shape
due to overdeveloped upper glutes. Their upper glutes are getting
too big. These girls should avoid hip hyperextension, abduction,
and external rotation exercise and stick to solely hip extension
exercises. Although hip extension exercises don't work the glutes
like hip hyperextension exercises do, they focus on the lower
glutes and limit upper glute involvement.
The glutes can't get too strong in sports. The stronger
they get, the more powerfully they contract in sprinting and the
better they protect against low back, knee, hamstring, and groin
injuries. Charlie Francis talked about how there were only a few
athletes in the world who could maintain "sprint form" in the
100-meter sprint and how sprinters knew they had a bad day if they
felt their sprints in their quads.
Over twenty years ago, he was prescribing reverse leg presses as
his main glute and hamstring exercise in order to prepare his
athletes for the big race. The reverse leg press was like a donkey
kick performed while standing backwards facing away from a leg
press on a Universal gym. Talk about being years ahead of your
time! The reverse leg press is a great exercise, but the hip thrust
and pendulum quadruped hip extension are even better.
FAQ
Your research sounds pretty crazy. Is there any existing
research to substantiate your claims?
Yes, there are, including a study performed by the American
Council on Exercise (ACE) in 2006, which showed that a bodyweight
quadruped hip extension activated more gluteus maximus muscle than
a one-rep max squat. There's also a study performed by Kearns, et
al. which showed that back extensions activated more gluteus
maximus muscle than straight-leg deadlifts, and a study performed
by researchers at the Madonna Rehabilitation Hospital that showed
that jogging on a treadmill activated over twice as much gluteus
maximus muscle as the Stairmaster. Even walking beat out the
Stairmaster.
In Advanced Techniques in Glutei Maximi Strengthening, I
explain these studies by exploring and analyzing muscle fiber
orientation, load vectors, length-tension relationships, and
angular kinematics. In the three studies described above, quadruped
hip extensions, back extensions, and treadmill running (all
anteroposterior actions) beat out squats, deadlifts, and the
Stairmaster (all axial actions).
You've been having your clients hip thrust for over two
years? It looks pretty dangerous. Is it safe? Have any of your
clients injured themselves?
Yes, the hip thrust is perfectly safe. In the past three
years, I've had around ten male clients regularly hip thrust over
365 pounds for ten reps and around ten female clients hip thrust
135 pounds for ten reps. I've been hip thrusting 405 to 455 pounds
for two year now, and my back has never felt
healthier.
In almost three years of prescribing hip thrusts, not a single
individual has ever hurt themselves from performing the exercise.
Not only do they not lead to lower back injury, they even prevent
lower back injury because they maximally strengthen the glutes; the
best back-sparing muscle there is.
Why would any movement that focused on targeting the glutes
— the strongest muscle in the body — through direct hip
extension while keeping the spine in neutral be
unsafe?
Ronnie Coleman had the best glutes of all time, and he never
did hip thrusts. Neither did Andy Bolton, and he deadlifted more
than any man in history. Usain Bolt is the world's fastest man, and
he never did any hip thrusts. What gives?
Ronnie's glutes would have been even bigger from hip thrusts.
Andy Bolton could get stronger at his deadlift lockout if he did
hip thrusts. And Usain Bolt could get even faster if he performed
hip thrusts. They are that good! Expect this exercise to be
very popular in time.
Activation exercises were meant to just activate muscles with
bodyweight resistance. I don't think you're supposed to load them
up.
You can load any movement in exercise. I agree that you
shouldn't try to load exercises like scapular wall slides, but
glute bridges? Come on! We're talking about the glutes. The
powerhouse of the human body!
Those exercises look funny. I don't want to do them at my
gym.
You don't like humping? What's wrong with you? Just kidding;
they are indeed strange looking. I have to confess that when I
first started doing these at Powerhouse Gym I got some strange
looks. Now I have half the gym doing them. I have people come up to
me every day and say, "You're the guy who taught my friend the hip
thrust. He taught me them and I never do a leg workout without
them!"
They're no more awkward than Romanian deadlifts or hip
adductions, but we've gotten desensitized to them. In time, they
won't look so awkward. If you're okay with settling for half your
possible glute activation, then don't do them. But if you want
maximum glute strength, sprinting speed, low back health, and
sex-appeal, then you better start thrusting.
Are you sure that lunges aren't the best glute exercise?
Every time I do them I can barely sit down for a week.
Yes, I tested them many times on myself and on several other
people to. They sure make the glute-ham tie-in sore, but they don't
make the upper glutes sore, nor do they cause a burn or a pump in
the glutes like the exercises listed above. Contrary to popular
opinion, they only get glute activation to at most 30% of MVC,
while others can get glute activation to over 120%.
Pendulum Quadruped Hip Extension
Bret
Contreras received his master's degree from Arizona State University
and has been a Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist and
fitness studio owner for the past several years. If you have comments
or questions for Bret, or if you'd like to purchase Advanced Techniques in Glutei Maximi Strengthening,
please visit his website at TheGluteGuy.com or email him at bretcontreras@hotmail.com.
© 1998 — 2009 Testosterone, LLC. All Rights Reserved.