Mobility Training: What Actually Transfers to Calisthenics
Not all mobility work is equally useful for calisthenics. Here's how I distinguish productive mobility work from time-consuming but low-transfer stretching.
High-transfer mobility work includes: wrist circles and loaded wrist flexion/extension (for planche and handstand), shoulder dislocates (for overhead position and skin the cat), pancake stretch (for straddle positions), hip flexor stretching (for L-sit and leg raises), hamstring work (for L-sit and pike), and thoracic extension (for handstand alignment).
Lower transfer for most trainees: excessive ankle stretching (useful only if you have very limited dorsiflexion), spinal rotation work (useful for general health but limited skill transfer), and neck mobility (rarely limiting in calisthenics).
The most important mobility insight: end-range strength is as important as flexibility. If you can reach a position passively but can't control it actively, you'll injure yourself in that range under load. Train the end range with active exercises, not just passive stretching.
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