The Decline Push-Up and Handstand Push-Up Bridge
The decline push-up — feet elevated on a box or surface, hands on the floor — increases the overhead component of pushing and bridges toward handstand push-up work. Here's how to use it.
Angle variation: the higher the feet, the more the pushing angle resembles overhead pressing. Feet at hip height is a moderate decline. Feet at shoulder height (using a high box or a wall) begins to approach the handstand push-up angle.
From decline to pike: place feet on a box, walk hands close, and press in a pike position. This is the box pike push-up — the most direct intermediate before handstand push-up training.
Force distribution: in a standard push-up, the force is horizontal. In a decline push-up, some force becomes vertical. In a handstand push-up, the force is fully vertical. The progression is a continuum.
Volume and progression: build 3x8 at one angle before increasing elevation. The shoulder stability requirements increase significantly as the angle approaches vertical. Progress slowly and monitor shoulder health.
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