By Marjorie Korn, Men's Journal
Chest presses are probably a staple of your gym routine. They’re perfectly respectable for building strength but not all that dynamic, since your body weight is entirely stable and supported by a bench.
Now, do that same move on a foam roller and it becomes a super-challenging, total-body move. “The foam roller chest press is an anti-rotational exercise—the kind that forces the muscles in your core to fire,” says Joel Seedman, a neuromuscular physiologist and athletic-performance specialist in Atlanta.
Anti-rotational exercises are great for athletes (boxers, golfers, tennis players) who derive power through core rotation. This kind of strength is useful if you’re simply taking down a cast-iron pan from a high shelf. In this move, when you’re pushing with the right arm, the ab muscles on your left are working like crazy to stop you from rolling onto the floor.
As a bonus, since the lower body acts as an anchor, there’s a lot of engagement from smaller muscles in the hips and ankles. When you first start, choose a weight that’s half of what you’d use for a regular chest press, working up to 75 percent of your normal lift. (The movement is very slow, so the muscle- building potential in your chest is the same.)
Since you’re already on the floor, do a total-body foam roll at the end. You’ll need it.
Chest presses are probably a staple of your gym routine. They’re perfectly respectable for building strength but not all that dynamic, since your body weight is entirely stable and supported by a bench.
Now, do that same move on a foam roller and it becomes a super-challenging, total-body move. “The foam roller chest press is an anti-rotational exercise—the kind that forces the muscles in your core to fire,” says Joel Seedman, a neuromuscular physiologist and athletic-performance specialist in Atlanta.
Anti-rotational exercises are great for athletes (boxers, golfers, tennis players) who derive power through core rotation. This kind of strength is useful if you’re simply taking down a cast-iron pan from a high shelf. In this move, when you’re pushing with the right arm, the ab muscles on your left are working like crazy to stop you from rolling onto the floor.
As a bonus, since the lower body acts as an anchor, there’s a lot of engagement from smaller muscles in the hips and ankles. When you first start, choose a weight that’s half of what you’d use for a regular chest press, working up to 75 percent of your normal lift. (The movement is very slow, so the muscle- building potential in your chest is the same.)
Since you’re already on the floor, do a total-body foam roll at the end. You’ll need it.
HOW TO DO IT
1. Lie on a foam roller so it’s along spine, hips high, feet under knees and wider than hip-width apart.
2. Have a friend place kettlebell or dumbbell in right hand. Extend left hand out to the side for balance, and press weight up while maintaining hip position, then return to start for one rep. Each rep should take you twice as long as a traditional press.
3. Start with sets of 4 reps per side, working up to 8 reps. Complete all reps on right side, then switch to left side. Rest 2 minutes between sets.
2. Have a friend place kettlebell or dumbbell in right hand. Extend left hand out to the side for balance, and press weight up while maintaining hip position, then return to start for one rep. Each rep should take you twice as long as a traditional press.
3. Start with sets of 4 reps per side, working up to 8 reps. Complete all reps on right side, then switch to left side. Rest 2 minutes between sets.