3 Useless Chest Exercises to Avoid—and 3 Muscle-Building Moves to Do Instead
A strength and conditioning specialist explains 3 chest exercises to avoid, alternatives, and what makes a good chest exercise for muscle growth.
Source: Cubes |
04.12.2024, 16:32
IN THE AGE of peak fitness influence on social media, there's no shortage of exercises circulating your feed. While it's nice to have a vast library of movements to keep your days in the gym interesting, many of those influencer-designed options are better served to gain clicks than they are for building muscle. Chest-focused training, in particular, has seen a particularly problematic influx of questionable content.
"We're talking about exercises that aren't really going to stimulate our chest, that aren't going to push us to our goals, and they're just not really going to help us get that good mechanical tension that we need to build chest size and chest strength," says Samuel.
Many of these exercises have the right idea in mind, but ultimately execute in a non-optimal way. Here, Samuel provides a few small tweaks that can make them effective.
3 Chest Exercises to Avoid
Prayer Press
In theory, the prayer press is meant to stimulate chest adduction by squeezing two plates together and lifting and lowering in a similar pattern to a traditional bench press. This exercise can be performed standing or lying on a bench.
Neither option optimally loads the chest, though. If your perform this movement standing, gravity places more load on the shoulders to control the weight. If done lying down, the plate cuts the range of motion, neglecting a proper stretch through the chest before contraction. Thus, more of the work is applied to your triceps.
Plus, progressively overloading this movement is hugely challenging, Samuel says. The bigger the plate, and the more you slap together, the more awkward and difficult it is to situate.
So, what can you do instead? The bench supported cable fly is an underrated exercise that properly loads up chest adduction.
How to Do It:
Sets and Reps: Aim for 3 sets of 10 to 12 reps
Hex Press
The hex press is very similar to the previous exercise in that the goal is to squeeze the dumbbells together as you're pressing the weight upwards in an attempt to train adduction while also pushing. As you hold the two dumbbells in a neutral grip with your elbows close to your torso, however, you lose the optimal angle to create true mechanical tension in your chest. The tension here instead is going through your triceps, rather than your chest.
Hex Press Alternative: Banded Dumbbell Press
To get the best of both worlds, grab a resistance band and loop it around your back. The placement of the band really emphases a squeeze at the top of the motion.
How to Do It:
Sets and Reps: Aim for 3 sets of 8 to 10 reps.
High Incline Press
The high incline press is typically used to place an emphasis on the upper chest. When the bench incline goes north of 30 degrees, however, the line of gravity runs more through the shoulders than it does your chest.
High Incline Press Alternative: Single-Arm Incline Press
The single-arm incline press allows you to hit that upper chest, so long as you keep the angle of the bench to 30 degrees. The exercise provides other big advantages: Moving one arm at a time allows you to focus on the mind-muscle connection, and dial in on working though a full range of motion, which will help to maximize your muscle building.
How to Do It:
Sets and Reps: Aim for 3 to 4 sets of 8 to 10 reps.
What Makes a Good Chest Exercise?
THERE ARE A few criteria for determining what makes a chest exercise effective. The first thing to look for in an exercise is that it can be progressed. "We've got to be able to go heavier in these exercises. That way, as we get better at them, we can load them up more," Samuel says. This will lead to muscle gains, too.
The second is that the exercise needs to create significant mechanical tension through the muscle group you're looking to target. With many of these exercises, the influence of gravity and the external load ends up puts more of the mechanical work on other close-by muscles, like your shoulders and triceps. You want to make sure the focus is squarely on the pectoral muscles as much as possible.
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