November 08, 2006

Learning the Olympic Lifts-The Stance, by Mike Burgener & Tony Budding - Nov 06 CFJ

All of the Olympic lifts (the snatch, the clean, and the jerk) are nothing more than a jump and a land. The jump is a vicious extension of the ankles, knees, and hips that creates momentum and elevation on the barbell. In the brief moment that the barbell becomes weightless from that jump, the lifter aggressively pulls (or pushes, in the jerk) himself under the bar and lands with it in the receiving position.

stance.jpg


As simple as this may seem, there are many components to successfully jumping and landing with weight and many common obstacles that make it hard to move and receive heavy weights. This article is the first of a series in which I’ll talk about single aspects of the lifts in detail, along with common faults and effective remedies.

Click for full article in PDF


Comments: Learning the Olympic Lifts-The Stance, by Mike Burgener & Tony Budding - Nov 06 CFJ
1. Posted by Justin on November 8, 2006 04:52 PM

17 minutes. May have missed one set. Lost count part way through.

2. Posted by ToddB on November 8, 2006 06:03 PM

Cool

3. Posted by Michael Stehle on November 9, 2006 05:07 AM

Nice one guys. Very well explained and easy to understand. Thank you.

4. Posted by Jross on November 9, 2006 10:17 AM

Good stuff!

Post a comment









Remember personal info?






 
close window