The inverted row: best pull exercise you can do with just a table
Scapular Control: The Foundation of Safe Calisthenics
If I had to identify the single most important motor pattern for calisthenics safety and performance, it would be scapular control. Here's why and how to develop it.
The scapula can move in six ways: protract, retract, elevate, depress, upwardly rotate, and downwardly rotate. In different exercises, you need precise combinations of these. In the pull-up, you need initial depression and retraction. At the top, you need retraction. In the push-up lockout, you need protraction. In the handstand, you need elevation and slight protraction.
Most people can move their scapulae passively but can't control the movement under load. The fix is isolation training: scapular pull-ups, scapular push-ups, and wall slides. These movements isolate the scapula-moving muscles so you can develop awareness and strength there.
Signs of poor scapular control: shoulder winging (shoulder blade lifts away from the back during push-ups), shoulder elevation during pull-ups (shrugging), and impingement pain during overhead pressing.
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