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Bodyweight Fitness

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102 members Created Feb 2026

The role of antagonist training in calisthenics injury prevention

The Importance of Consistent Pulling Volume

Pulling strength is foundational to calisthenics, but it's also the category most people undertrain. Here's why and how to fix it.

Why pulling gets undertrained: pushing movements (push-ups, dips) are easier to progress from zero. You can do push-up variations immediately; pull-up variations require hanging capacity that many beginners lack. So programs often end up push-heavy by default.

The consequences: anterior shoulder tightness, posture problems (rounded shoulders), and an imbalanced strength profile that limits advanced skill work. Front lever and muscle-up both require substantial pulling strength that doesn't develop without specific programming.

Target ratio: horizontal pulling volume should approximately match horizontal pushing volume. Vertical pulling (pull-ups) should be trained at least twice the frequency of vertical pushing (handstand push-ups). Many coaches recommend a 2:1 pull-to-push ratio by volume for most athletes.

Practical fix: audit your last four training sessions. Count horizontal push sets, horizontal pull sets, vertical push sets, and vertical pull sets. Adjust until the ratio is approximately balanced.

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