Posterior chain work in a bodyweight routine: bridges, GHR, and more
How Anthropometry Affects Calisthenics Performance
Anthropometry — body proportions and dimensions — affects how easy or hard specific calisthenics skills are. Here's an honest look at what helps and what doesn't.
Arm length: longer arms make pull-ups slightly easier (less shoulder external rotation required at top) but make the planche significantly harder (longer lever arm). For the one-arm pull-up, longer arms increase the moment arm and make the skill harder.
Torso length: a longer torso means a longer lever in front lever and planche. Shorter-torsoed athletes have a genuine mechanical advantage in lever positions.
Leg length: longer legs create a larger moment in all lever positions and in the L-sit. Shorter legs are advantageous for planche and front lever.
Weight distribution: even at identical body fat percentages, people distribute mass differently. More mass in the legs makes lever positions harder; more mass in the trunk makes it less impactful.
Implication: don't compare your timeline directly to others without accounting for anthropometry. A shorter-limbed athlete may achieve a planche faster not because of superior training, but because their geometry is more favorable. Focus on your own progression.
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