I wish I had watched this video a year ago. I'd been really stuck in the tuck position for months without progression so I gave up. Then watched this and saw the tip about keeping the scapula protracted. What a difference it has made! Invaluable bit of advice. Nice work, Daniel!
9yrs ago! Wow how time flys! Well done in general :) I’ll be sure to add the ques into my routine :) thanks for all that you do! Stay strong 💪🏼 and always have fun!
Bro check out "Overcoming gravity, a sistematic approach to bodyweight and gymnastics", its an incredible book, with the basics of strengh, programming, and exercise progression, from push ups to iron cross, straight arm ring Muscle Up, etc.
This has been so helpful for me. I am comfortable with German hang and lift but the progressions are fantastic to show me what I should be doing and also give me a benchmark for my current progress. I'm only at the tuck stage but I'm really enjoying playing with it and trying to get onto the advanced tuck.
Daniel, after watching this video, I was curious if you will ever do a front lever tutorial? I know you have a front lever training routine, just not a full tutorial. You are one of my primary motivations in pursuing gymnastic strength. Love your knowledge, passion, and professionalism. As always, keep up the good work!
oh my god thank you, i finally found out why backlever was so hard for me, my scapulas position was wrong like you said, now i can hold it no problem, thanks to you.
Wow....good stuff. I've been following you and watching you progress for a while. Thanks again for all your knowledge, I have gotten way stronger from your workouts
I understood finally how to protraction and I can hold back lever, but without that, I was like "never even gonna happen" and boom, it happens, I need to clean my form right now(but actually it's not that bad). This feeling means more than anything :) Thanks coach. Maybe I record my back lever when I will be able to hold it with perfect form.
Ok, Trying to bring your hands to your glutes helps drasticly. I was doing single leg back lever drops and i couldn't hold it at the propper position. Once i started bringing my hands to my glutes i held it for like 6-8 secs.
Thanks mate. I didn't know this was an actual move/exercise. I thought I'd invented it and often wonder if people at gym think I'm a weirdo !! I find it VERY easy and don't feel much strain on my abbs, I just flex them to exercise them while I'm at it. My question Daniel is....how long should I hold it for to get maximum benefit ? It gets boring after 30 secs but if it's going to help my back ? I'll do if for as long as you recommend. I'm 62 and started gym 4 years ago but mainly just listen to my body and make up my own routines.
Unreal, why is nobody else on TH-cam talking about the scapular protraction when in back lever. As soon as I adopted that I was holding a one leg back lever for a solid 15 secs when before I was barely reaching a full second.
Is it okay to do it on a bar instead of rings, or is it too hard on the shoulders due to it fixing your arms in place? Thanks, awesome video, best tutorial out there :)
How should I incorporate this into my workout during the week? should I do it in an off day? after a workout? Before a workout? And if so, which muscle group?
Quite nice tutorial; big plus for explaining the "scapular retraction-protraction". Big minus for the wrong pronunciation as lever is pronounced /ˈlɛvər, ˈlivər/ and not /ˈleivər/.
My guess would be biceps, brachialis, serratus anterior, anterior deltoid, pectoralis major (and pectoralis minor too, if you strongly depress the scapula), and whatever muscles that hold your back straight.
How would you recommend incorporating this into back work in its totality? Should I do lever work one day of the week, and pull patterns another? Or just focus purely on the back lever?
Great tutorial! I am not into my full back lever yet (after 12 months of training... - 189 cm height can be challenging with levers) however I've noticed that including tucked back lever lifts significantly improves solidness of each progression and fastens learning curve. By the way - have you tried back lever with false grip?
Hi ! If we don't have rings, do we have to do the back lever on the high bar in supination or pronation? When you do it with the rings, you start with pronation and you go in supination. Thank you !
how much rest do you suggest between each set of hold and of lift and how much rest do you think would be good between each hold in a set? would be very usefull to know :)
Hey Daniel :) this helped me a lot But still I have some questions. How often should I chance the exercise between the backlever hold and the backlever lifts in order to get the backlever ? What kind of exercise did you prefer in your training, static hold or lifts ? It would be really nice if you could answer. I know you're very busy. But anyway thanks a lot! You motivate so many people around the world! Greetings from Germany :)
Hey Daniel, When engaging the glutes and abdominals during the back lever, I tend to get a slight arch in my lower back. I'm unsure as to whether the goal here is to maintain a body structure like that of a hollow body hold, or to have that very slight arch Please give me some feed back Yours truly, A dedicated fan x
Your chest will of course tend to descend below the scapulae (if that is what you mean), unless you protract your scapulae to prevent that. Why does proper back lever include scapular protraction? Not sure, perhaps that is stipulated in the gymnastics code. I think that would make more sense if you consider back lever not an end goal, but instead merely a step towards ring planche and ring maltese (both of which require strong scapular protraction).
For the holds do you count one rep as spinning over holding for 8-12s spinning back over, feet touch floor to reset? Or do you keep constant contact with handles throughout? Great channel btw!
I just wondered during hanging (which is not the best of ideas) which orientation of the hands is right. You have palms down, many people have palms up, especially the ones doing it on a bar. I am doing it palms up intuitively, but am open. Pros and cons?
For the German Hang Holds at 1:30 you recommend scapular retraction, but for the static hold progressions you advise scapular protraction. Is this correct?
Is there an alternative to the back lever for someone with a bad dislocating shoulder? Until I get surgery, this would be impossible for me right now. TKS!I
Hi! great tutorial but I have a question. Why on the German Hang Holds at the beginning do you say to focus on scapula retraction, but later in the video you say that protraction is what will make the hold easier, and to not do retraction? Please clarify, thanks!
Hi Daniel first of all thanks for a lot of things you taught me. Now im researching in antagonist exercises. which one would you think work best w/ back lever ? thanks Rémi
Very nice video it helped me too much¡¡¡ i've been training in calisthenics like 10 monts but i still can't do the back lever correctly and i can berely do the straddle front lever for 3 seconds :( i don't know if i'm blocked or i don't programme good my workouts :( can u give me some advice? thx, respect.
Hey Daniel, thanks for your videos ! I used to hold skin the cats and advanced back lever with scapula RETRACTED. I really regret it now because my sternoclavicular joint is slightly unstable and makes "pop" sounds, even though I never had any pain. Do you think the ligament can heal over time or will it stay unstable ? Should I avoid pull-ups, dips and other stuff ? Thank you so much, I'm quite concerned about this !
My Back Lever Program 👉 leverprofessional.com
Wow, this training method really works. I went fromm tuck back lever to advanced tuck back lever in 2 weeks. I will post my results after 1 month.
+AnimecreatorVevo2001 Its really good before I could hold advanced tuck for like 2-3 seconds and now I can hold one leg for 10 seconds!
+AnimecreatorVevo2001 I will keep training until I get it. I hope to get it by end of month. I 'll post my results then.
+Astro64 What's the result?
+prince muzzammil I now can hold it for 8-10 seconds with perfect form and protracted scapula:)
Amazing. How are you doing now?
I wish I had watched this video a year ago. I'd been really stuck in the tuck position for months without progression so I gave up. Then watched this and saw the tip about keeping the scapula protracted. What a difference it has made! Invaluable bit of advice. Nice work, Daniel!
9yrs ago! Wow how time flys! Well done in general :) I’ll be sure to add the ques into my routine :) thanks for all that you do! Stay strong 💪🏼 and always have fun!
Best back lever tutorial, hands down. No one else talked about shoulder protraction.
This is vastly superior to the 'building a gymnastic body' book written by a professional gymnast.
Bro check out "Overcoming gravity, a sistematic approach to bodyweight and gymnastics", its an incredible book, with the basics of strengh, programming, and exercise progression, from push ups to iron cross, straight arm ring Muscle Up, etc.
@@MrDL10 it is. The guy who wrote the book was in the club gymnastics team at my college
This is the best Back Lever tutorial , much respect bro
Why is this channel so underrated, content desearves more views
those lil moments . "Ding"
are awesome
No questions because you Explained it all so well. Motivational.
This has been so helpful for me. I am comfortable with German hang and lift but the progressions are fantastic to show me what I should be doing and also give me a benchmark for my current progress. I'm only at the tuck stage but I'm really enjoying playing with it and trying to get onto the advanced tuck.
The movement is safe due to being active. Work slowly within your range of motion limits with the goal of gradually increasing ROM.
Your videos are great, can't believe I've only just found this channel.
Appreciate it Evo!
@@FitnessFAQs can back lever will be injure of shoulder
really nice that u have set recommendations, most tutorials neglect that
Was some getting used to protracting the scap while having your arms behind your back. But getting the hang of that now. Indeed makes it a lot easier.
You are fantastic! I've seen a lot of back lever tutorial, but you're the first one even mentioning protraction.
Daniel, after watching this video, I was curious if you will ever do a front lever tutorial? I know you have a front lever training routine, just not a full tutorial.
You are one of my primary motivations in pursuing gymnastic strength. Love your knowledge, passion, and professionalism. As always, keep up the good work!
I had NO idea about protraction vs retraction. Awesome video.
waw ive been working so hard and i was doing the wrong "beginner mistake " . glad i watched this . thx a million
oh my god thank you, i finally found out why backlever was so hard for me, my scapulas position was wrong like you said, now i can hold it no problem, thanks to you.
Dude, excellent video. Your pace in the explanation is perfect, along with the visual cues. You earned yourself a sub, mate.
Wow....good stuff. I've been following you and watching you progress for a while. Thanks again for all your knowledge, I have gotten way stronger from your workouts
Too easy - cheers!
*pointing spiderman meme*
One thing that really helped me was doing glute bridges and those back extensions "holds" on the floor, sort of like a reverse hyper.
Nice to see this old video of you.
best back lever tutorial on youtube!! Hope your wrist is getting better. I will be waiting impatiently for a straddle planche tutorial
awsome stuff. for me u do highest quality stuff besides LBM. keep up ur gr8 work man! i appreciate
Thank you, great tips!
This is something that I recently added to my routine. Excited to see how it helps my planche training. Enjoyed the video.
Nice tutorial. Thanks for doing these awsomes stuffs!! Keep the good work!
I understood finally how to protraction and I can hold back lever, but without that, I was like "never even gonna happen" and boom, it happens, I need to clean my form right now(but actually it's not that bad). This feeling means more than anything :) Thanks coach. Maybe I record my back lever when I will be able to hold it with perfect form.
Omg saying how to warm up gave u my like. Great vid
Exactly what I wanted to know! Great work!
ace tutorial Dan! Very professional!!
the best of tutorial for back lever
Amazing will try this now 👌
Excellent explanation thank you.
Excellent tutorial. I think that you should look forward or almost forward while holding back lever but I may be wrong.
Great tutorial. Great info, thanks for the video.
Stupendous. Many thanks!
Muy bueno tutorial para Back lever
thank you, will try tomorrow
Best back lever video thank uuuuuuuuu so much
Great tutorial, great video, thanks for the superb content !
perfect just what I needed more vids please :)
Ok, Trying to bring your hands to your glutes helps drasticly. I was doing single leg back lever drops and i couldn't hold it at the propper position. Once i started bringing my hands to my glutes i held it for like 6-8 secs.
My biceps are on fire!
Thank you for this tutorial. It was very helpful!
thank you so much for your really good explanations!!
nice tutorial, Thank you
Thanks mate. I didn't know this was an actual move/exercise. I thought I'd invented it and often wonder if people at gym think I'm a weirdo !! I find it VERY easy and don't feel much strain on my abbs, I just flex them to exercise them while I'm at it. My question Daniel is....how long should I hold it for to get maximum benefit ? It gets boring after 30 secs but if it's going to help my back ? I'll do if for as long as you recommend. I'm 62 and started gym 4 years ago but mainly just listen to my body and make up my own routines.
I went from bent back tuck to straight adv tuck in a month . I will share the results in the future..
Excellent!
very nice tutorial
Unreal, why is nobody else on TH-cam talking about the scapular protraction when in back lever. As soon as I adopted that I was holding a one leg back lever for a solid 15 secs when before I was barely reaching a full second.
Is it okay to do it on a bar instead of rings, or is it too hard on the shoulders due to it fixing your arms in place? Thanks, awesome video, best tutorial out there :)
How should I incorporate this into my workout during the week? should I do it in an off day? after a workout? Before a workout? And if so, which muscle group?
amazing video
tutorial- Tuck, Advanced Tuck, Straddle and Full Back Lever :),, nice video Dan
great back lever tutorial man! planche tutorial someday?
Thank you so much!
Quite nice tutorial; big plus for explaining the "scapular retraction-protraction". Big minus for the wrong pronunciation as lever is pronounced /ˈlɛvər, ˈlivər/ and not /ˈleivər/.
Front leveer tutorial !!
Hey Daniel, great vid man 2 questions tho:
- why do we retract in a german hang?
-how long did it take u to get the BL?
Thanks
My guess would be biceps, brachialis, serratus anterior, anterior deltoid, pectoralis major (and pectoralis minor too, if you strongly depress the scapula), and whatever muscles that hold your back straight.
Advanced tuck open is actually easier than advanced tuck, I believe. Just as straddle is easier than full. Right? Great video!!
great tutorial! just one question, do you hold your breath while holding a back lever or do you focus on breathing while holding a back lever?
Perfect video my friend
perfect tutorial :)
thx
How would you recommend incorporating this into back work in its totality? Should I do lever work one day of the week, and pull patterns another? Or just focus purely on the back lever?
Starting my calisthenics journey now lol, glad I found one of your old vids
Look at the Arabian Prophet on TH-cam.
You're awesome. Cheers
Great tutorial!
I am not into my full back lever yet (after 12 months of training... - 189 cm height can be challenging with levers) however I've noticed that including tucked back lever lifts significantly improves solidness of each progression and fastens learning curve.
By the way - have you tried back lever with false grip?
Hi ! If we don't have rings, do we have to do the back lever on the high bar in supination or pronation? When you do it with the rings, you start with pronation and you go in supination.
Thank you !
how much rest do you suggest between each set of hold and of lift and how much rest do you think would be good between each hold in a set? would be very usefull to know :)
I will try
this is cool tutorial! tnx
Hey Daniel :) this helped me a lot But still I have some questions. How often should I chance the exercise between the backlever hold and the backlever lifts in order to get the backlever ? What kind of exercise did you prefer in your training, static hold or lifts ? It would be really nice if you could answer. I know you're very busy. But anyway thanks a lot! You motivate so many people around the world! Greetings from Germany :)
Great, thanks
Hey Daniel,
When engaging the glutes and abdominals during the back lever, I tend to get a slight arch in my lower back. I'm unsure as to whether the goal here is to maintain a body structure like that of a hollow body hold, or to have that very slight arch
Please give me some feed back
Yours truly,
A dedicated fan x
Your chest will of course tend to descend below the scapulae (if that is what you mean), unless you protract your scapulae to prevent that. Why does proper back lever include scapular protraction? Not sure, perhaps that is stipulated in the gymnastics code. I think that would make more sense if you consider back lever not an end goal, but instead merely a step towards ring planche and ring maltese (both of which require strong scapular protraction).
For the holds do you count one rep as spinning over holding for 8-12s spinning back over, feet touch floor to reset? Or do you keep constant contact with handles throughout? Great channel btw!
Hey man! Are you able to go from a korean dip into a back lever? If so, do you have any tips on that? Awesome content by the way!
Yes you can
I just wondered during hanging (which is not the best of ideas) which orientation of the hands is right. You have palms down, many people have palms up, especially the ones doing it on a bar. I am doing it palms up intuitively, but am open. Pros and cons?
Time to learn back lever
awesome!
For the German Hang Holds at 1:30 you recommend scapular retraction, but for the static hold progressions you advise scapular protraction. Is this correct?
Great video! But what muscles exactly does this exercise work?
Is there an alternative to the back lever for someone with a bad dislocating shoulder? Until I get surgery, this would be impossible for me right now. TKS!I
Hi! great tutorial but I have a question. Why on the German Hang Holds at the beginning do you say to focus on scapula retraction, but later in the video you say that protraction is what will make the hold easier, and to not do retraction? Please clarify, thanks!
Veryy GOod tutorial :)
very good tutorial ;)
Can I adopt the set reps scheme for front lever training? Instead of lift should I use lats pulldowns on bar?
FRONT LEVER TUTORIAL NEXT !!! :D
Excellent tutorial. Very helpful. Thanks!
Hi Daniel first of all thanks for a lot of things you taught me. Now im researching in antagonist exercises. which one would you think work best w/ back lever ? thanks Rémi
planche work
Very nice video it helped me too much¡¡¡ i've been training in calisthenics like 10 monts but i still can't do the back lever correctly and i can berely do the straddle front lever for 3 seconds :( i don't know if i'm blocked or i don't programme good my workouts :( can u give me some advice? thx, respect.
Wait, so for a workout, are you supposed to do the holds, THEN the lifts? or interspersed?
John Burnham First you do the holds for 3-5 sets. After you are done with these sets you move on to the lifts and do 3 sets
Hey Daniel, thanks for your videos !
I used to hold skin the cats and advanced back lever with scapula RETRACTED.
I really regret it now because my sternoclavicular joint is slightly unstable and makes "pop" sounds, even though I never had any pain.
Do you think the ligament can heal over time or will it stay unstable ? Should I avoid pull-ups, dips and other stuff ?
Thank you so much, I'm quite concerned about this !
you can use low bar when you can touch the ground with your feet. it could to destroy your fear.