Happy New Year
Please find below our first exercise this month.
Meet the Zercher Squat
What an exercise! It almost sounds mythical.
I would say that outside of most strength and conditioning coaches, very few people have heard of a Zercher Squat or know what is.
The Zercher Squat is a heck of an exercise: you hold a barbell in the crease of your arms and squat up and down.
What makes it so great?
This movement has a lot of details hidden in it for athletes to make major gains:
- Tension: It creates and teaches you to generate a lot of tension throughout your body. We need to learn how to brace and squeeze. Due to the bar’s placement, we subconsciously, or naturally, must contract all the right places.
- Toughness/Grit: I’m not going to lie – this movement doesn’t always feel great. Many athletes may need to wrap some form of padding around the bar for a while. That’s just the cost of admission though. The mental fortitude you need to perform the exercise will pay off.
- Safety: It is very hard to load this exercise to the point of increasing an athlete’s risk of injury. Also, if the athlete gets in trouble, they can just bail by dumping the bar out in front of them. No spotters needed.
- Mobility: We struggle with many lifting movements due to not being mobile enough to access the correct positions. The Zercher doesn’t require much mobility, and mimics natural movement, making it a good fit for the majority of the athletic population.
Any drawbacks?
It can be awkward, but it’s well worth it.
How to Perform a Zercher Squat
- Set the rack up just below your elbow
- Put the bar in the crease of your elbows and keep them tight to your sides
- Squeeze your hands together or have palms facing the ceiling
- Get your hips under the bar, grab a big belly breath and stand it up from the rack
- Take a couple steps back, settle the bar, and grab more air if you can to brace
- Squat down until your elbows touch your thighs or fall in between
- Stand up. Repeat.
No Rack? No problem.
You can perform a Zercher deadlift with the bar resting on the floor.
You can also do a conventional deadlift it, then let the bar rest on your knees, scoop it up at the elbow crease, and go right into your squats.