While we need to include mobility work and that full prehab process of foam rolling, stretching and activation in our warm up routine, we can’t out mobility work improper movement and recruitment patterns when we lift.
It’s why we need to be intentional with moves and see every exercise as a a chance to assess.
And it’s why, when the correct muscles aren’t working, we sometimes need to modify moves and even try other variations to improve that mind-body connection.
It’s why if you struggle with with using your back during rowing, you may want to switch to the Back Shrug to start focusing on that scapular retraction to engage your back and power the pull.
How Do You Do The Back Shrug:
This move boils the row down to just that initial scapular movement to learn to control that back engagement.
When you row, the movement should start because you’re you’re drawing your shoulder blade toward your spine to use your back to pull.
This movement isolates just this component of the row, removing any elbow flexion that may lead to us compensating and using our bicep instead.
Too often with rows, we end up performing a bicep curl, curling our wrist in toward our chest over driving the elbow down and back as our shoulder blade moves toward our spine.
That’s why focusing on just that scapular movement to start can be key.
To do the Back Shrug, hold a dumbbell in each hand and hinge over standing with your feet about hip-width apart.
Let your arms hang down and unshrug your shoulders while keeping a neutral spine. Make sure you’ve hinged over to load your glutes while keeping your knees soft.
From this bent over position, you are going to try to pinch your shoulder blades together while letting your arms hang down.
Draw your shoulder blades toward your spine. Don’t just shrug your shoulders. Focus on that scapular movement.
Do not bend your elbows or start to row.
Just pinch the shoulder blades together, pausing, then relaxing the weights back toward the ground. Do not shrug your shoulders up toward your ears as you retract!
You will be able to add weight as you can fully control and feel the movement on both sides.
This is a small movement. Don’t try to make it bigger by standing up or bending your arms. Make sure to keep your neck long. Your only focus is on drawing the shoulder blades toward your spine then relaxing them away. Even pause as you do the pinch over rushing.
Variations:
There are so many ways you can then vary this move based on the types of rows you general include in your training and even the other muscles you want to target and tools you have available.
You could do this with a band instead of dumbbells. Or even off a suspension trainer. All of these are great to include to prep your body to row using these different tools and postures.
Because we can struggle with that scapular retraction in different positions, it can be key to include a diversity to make sure we’re initiating those rows with our back.
And if you find you struggle even with proper mobility and strength on one side, you can even make this movement a unilateral exercise, working only one side at a time or even doing rounds or reps on only one side.
If you don’t have any equipment, you can even do a unilateral variation called the Single Arm Scapular Push Up. This is great as an activation move in your warm up before any strength work even.
But as you really work to translate that activation to the full row with weight, consider the these variations to prep the body to initial that pull with that proper scapular movement.
SUMMARY:
Moves are only as good as their implementation. And if we want to get the full benefit of an exercise, we need to make sure we’re actually engaging the correct muscles to power the movement.
If you’ve struggled with feeling your back during rowing exercises, try this scapular retraction focused back exercise to really isolate and work on that initial back engagement.
It can easily be included as part of your accessory work for a few rounds of 10-15 reps! Focus on that scapular movement over just going heavy, but don’t be afraid to progress the movement by adding loads as you can truly control that retraction!
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Great video, lots of detail, and I love all the videos, demonstrating how to do it. I will definitely add this to my exercise regime instead of just my normal dumbbell rows.
So glad this variation helps Annie!
I love the idea of “alerting” the muscle/muscle group that I will be using in a more complex exercise by starting with a very targeted, specific, and probably small exercise that just says—-HELLO!
I’m excited to add this approach to my exercise practice! I love to keep things fresh! Keeps me coming back for more.
🙂 Activation is key to improving our recruitment patterns and even hypertrophy results!