So you admit that the LBBS is easier to progress but you would say that this progress does somehow not matter?
It would definitely matter, depending on the goal though, it may not matter nearly as much as progressing another exercise. If you wanted to improve your jerk, would you choose bench press as your primary, or the push press/press?
Why do you think the HBBS will elicit more glute activation? Look at the picture with the two squats I posted before. Would you not agree that even performed to this height the LBBS shows a similar amount of hip flexion as the HBBS? Does this not mean that the glutes extend over the same ROM but with more weight on the back and a bigger moment arm applied (provided that one squats HB with the bar over mid-foot)?
thats why I gave the depth disclaimer. The glutes are working the hardest in the very bottom of the squat, the longer lever arm of the high bar squat with the added depth will make the glutes work harder in this range of motion, and I dont agree that the glutes have to work very hard at any other point, they are at a leverage
advantage after that, higher up in the range of motion. Muscles work the hardest, in the
stretch.
This is my opinion, and my experience with both squat styles. If you switch from low bar to high bar, one of the most common occurrences is extremely sore glutes, why do you think this is?
Please explain to me what it is that he does and when that occurs exactly. I do not see an abnormal amount of back movement in Rip's squat. Do you?
Thats the thing, its not abnormal, for a low bar squat. It is however not optimal if strengthening the
LEGS , and driving the squat from the
LEGS is the goal. The squat of the bobsled athlete I linked, and your own squat are not "typical" low bar squats, and are much more useful for athletic training, in my opinion.
I also did not make the picture here however it was shown as an example with lumbar flexion, and I do not know how to undo the captions.
Regarding my own squat: I am aware of my technical limitations, at least some of them. That is why my squat is not a good model to follow and why I have been working for a couple of weeks now to clean it up. Relaxing the hamstrings at the bottom of the movement resulting in the knees coming forward is the biggest issue in some heavy sets. I think I somewhat succeeded with last Friday's set of 491 x 5 to avoid doing that.
You do understand that I completely disagree with that right? Everything that makes your squat different, than what Rip is saying need be done, is what makes it more transferable to athletic events outside of powerlifting. If you lean over more, drive your hips up more, etc. etc., I would bet money you start getting less and less transfer out of your squat to your olympic lifts, and jumps.
You apparently think Rip's low vertical, tested at some unknown point in time, is a function of his squat technique. You think that if he high-bar squatted 540 ATG he would have jumped higher?
YES. I do not think he could squat NEAR 540 atg with a high bar position though, if he gained the LEG strength to do so, I most definitely think he would have jumped noticeably higher, and increased his horrid numbers on his olympic lifts. Of course he would not jump "great" until he practiced it much much more, and the same with the lifts, but with that type of LEG strength at his weight, he would have increased those numbers most definitely.
I don't. Whatever the technique, the mechanisms that make progress happen in every strength exercise can be assumed to be the same. Muscles grow, bones grow, tissue adapts, the nervous system adapts and so on. If someone starts out to LBBS 150 and increases that to 600 than these adaptations took place and they are more or less the same adaptations that the progress from HBBSing 135 to 540 would have lead to.
No. If someone takes their rack pull from 300 to 400, the same adaptations that take place moving the clean pull from 300 to 400 DO NOT take place. Not even close.
So if you are of the opinion that Rip's squat style is what lead to him only jumping 22 inches and snatching 82.5, then you would have to make a damn good argument how that is the case.
No, I dont think he cared. I still think he doesnt care, Steven, and he doesnt have any reason to. He trains newb lifters and recreational lifters. Asking him about olympic lifts and sports training is like asking your plumber how to fly an airplane.
He does however have to take a very hard and fast stance on these things though, if he wants to continue the cultish type following he enjoys.
I see the difference in exercises and I disagree with your stance on their usefulness. Maybe I am not that smart after all.
the guy in the video has a 40+ inch svj, squats 550 or so, powercleans close to 400. you have a ~37 inch vj, powerclean over 300.
rippetoe squatted more that both of you, had an actual olympic lifter as a coach, power cleaned 275, and vj 22 inches. You two have strong LEGS, he has a strong lower back.
correlation doesnt imply causation. right.