According to Soviet research, isometrically tensing one’s muscles before a dynamic contraction can improve performance by up to 20%. All elite arm wrestlers, weightlifters, powerlifters, strongmen, and gymnasts know this. Consciously or not, they are all masters of pre-tension.
“I turn myself into a rubber band, I am ready to accept the weight and toss it back up,” famously quipped Ernie Frantz. “If the body is tight, it can accept any shock,” clarified the powerlifting great who had instinctively taken the right track in his training and whose book, Ernie Frantz’s Ten Commandments of Powerlifting, had the rare honor of being translated into Russian. “If someone were to hit you in the stomach, it might hurt, but not if you tensed your stomach muscles first...”
You need to practice maximally tensing your body before you un-rack a heavy squat, squeeze off a heavy pull, or perform any other manly effort. All the top guys are already doing this. The following three self-correcting drills will help you acquire this pre-tension skill quicker—and teach you to stay tight for the duration of the lift. |