This is horrible advice. Always point your feet in the same direction your knees are bending to prevent injury. Bar placement looked okay to me. I liked the first 2 reps then you started leaning forward too much coming out of the hole. You want to flex your glutes as hard as you can and keep your chest up when you are coming back up. This prevents you from rounding your back (impossible with glutes flexed) and minimizes pull back which will put extra stress on erector spinae. Post this on a bodybuilding forum if you want solid feedback.
First off fix your hat! Don't wear it backwards when squatting, it can only get in the way. Wearing it backwards kinda makes you looks like a douche,trust me my buddies in the gym comment to me when I do it,but I still do it sometimes. Lol
Your doing too much weight and starting to lose control near the bottom of the rep,look at how your upper half starts to lean forward. Try to keep your back a little more straight,it shouldn't be a problem when you have less weight though.
Nice and deep,that's how you do'em.
It's never about the weight but the intensity and isolation that make you grow.
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Foot placement is largely up to you. Don't obsess over it. A good rule of thumb is slightly wider than shoulder width, toes at a 30-45 degree angle. Try to "sit back" into the squat a little more.
Bar placement also depends on your body structure and comfort. If placing the bar low on your traps causes you to lean forward too much, don't do it. Just put it where it is comfortable and allows you to reach depth without doing a good morning.
Your depth was fine. Lose the hat. Pick a spot on the wall and stare at it the whole set. When you come up from the bottom push your elbows forward. Take a huge breath before each rep, hold it, then let it out in a controlled manner on the way up. This will help you keep tightness.
Foot placement is largely up to you. Don't obsess over it. A good rule of thumb is slightly wider than shoulder width, toes at a 30-45 degree angle. Try to "sit back" into the squat a little more.
Your nuts if you dont think foot placement is important !!! WTF how the hell can you go into a DEEP squat with your toes pointing straight ahead. OR wide for that matter ??? the closer the feet (and more of an outward angle) the lower you sink period.
Bar placement also depends on your body structure and comfort. If placing the bar low on your traps causes you to lean forward too much, don't do it. Just put it where it is comfortable and allows you to reach depth without doing a good morning.
ok to some extent this is true but for his leverages LOWER bar placement would be LESS sheering stress on his back than a high bar placement. The dude DOES NOT HAVE A LONG TORSO...
Your depth was fine. Lose the hat. Pick a spot on the wall and stare at it the whole set. When you come up from the bottom push your elbows forward. Take a huge breath before each rep, hold it, then let it out in a controlled manner on the way up. This will help you keep tightness.
you only address 1 issue and its not even an issue for the OP DURING the making of his video. pushing the knees outwards is taught by every respectable coach that everyone on this board follows.
Pie in the Sky = No comment get your weight up rookie
I like using a slightly narrower stance as I find it really helps me to use my quads a bit more. Your stance width looked fine.
See !! Not to mention it allows you to go DEEPER !! a wide foot placement would probably change where the emphasis was on your legs and how low you would be able to sink in the squat.
The reason why I said 'dont do this' is you used the word "extreme" in two different contexts. Nothing about squat form should be extreme.
Foot placement IS up to the lifter. I know 600 lb squatters who squat both very wide and surprisingly narrow. Newbies will listen to all this different advice about foot placement find squatting difficult, until one day they just put them where they feel right and they like squatting again. I'll give you the outward flaring of the knees, but this is more of a cue to help recruit power from the glutes and hams. Pointing the toes at an 'extreme' outward angle overly recruits the adductors. Pointing them straight forward is asking for knee problems. Yes, you can easily reach depth with the feet close and ducked outward, but this is not a good way to squat long term and it shouldnt be taught to a newbie.
Regarding bar placement, I think mid-trap is best if you aren't squatting with equipment, but some guys like it a little higher or a little lower. Too low will just make him hunch forward and do a good morning.
One of the best ways to really learn form is to find a powerlifting gym in your area have the guys check your squat,dead,bench,military press....you'll learn A LOT. Even better if you join it.
I hope that's a joke. If the OP is getting his blood flowing from 5 reps at a relatively light weight w/o 100% form he doesn't need to move up in weight. He is only increasing his chance of injury by upping the weight.
Without 100% form you aren't lifting weights,you just throwing them around.
Your right Colossus, I was actually speaking to OP the way I talk to my clients, using verbal cues...there is no excessive or extreme actions in the movement but when I use those cue words it helps my clients to correct there technique.
I sometimes forget in the online world things can get misconstrued and misunderstood very easily.
I hope that's a joke. If the OP is getting his blood flowing from 5 reps at a relatively light weight w/o 100% form he doesn't need to move up in weight. He is only increasing his chance of injury by upping the weight.
Without 100% form you aren't lifting weights,you just throwing them around.
Call me lazy, but throwing around weights is WAAAAY more fun than actually lifting them. I LOVE lifting explosively... I believe there's a place for both explosive and controlled movement in fitness. Lifting rather than exploding is probably a lot safer and arguably more productive for hypertrophy, but I believe strength gains come w/ more explosive lifting.
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Call me lazy, but throwing around weights is WAAAAY more fun than actually lifting them. I LOVE lifting explosively... I believe there's a place for both explosive and controlled movement in fitness. Lifting rather than exploding is probably a lot safer and arguably more productive for hypertrophy, but I believe strength gains come w/ more explosive lifting.