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Injuries and Rehab Discuss Injuries and Rehabilitation here.Any replies are not to be construed as medical advice but rather a general advice

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Old 20-07-2008, 01:00 PM   #1 (permalink)
nomad
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Default Shoulder pain and bench press

i have been doing incline DB presses, and lately I have been getting this pain in my shoulder. What am I doing wrong? Ideas, hints, tips.
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Old 21-07-2008, 11:05 AM   #2 (permalink)
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Can't link to url as a new member so...

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Bench Press & Shoulders Pain. Shoulder pain from doing the Bench Press is common. Switching to dumbbells or quiting the Bench Press avoids pain, but doesn’t solve your shoulder problem. What you should do:

* Improve Technique. If you don’t Bench Press with proper technique you’ll injure yourself sooner or later. Read on.
* Fix Posture. You can’t Bench Press with proper technique if you have slouching shoulders. Start doing shoulder dislocations. Focus on bringing your chest forward & squeezing your shoulder-blades.
* Avoid Muscle Imbalances. The Bench Press works your front shoulders more than the back ones. If you don’t strengthen these by doing the Upright Row & Overhead Press you’ll get a muscle imbalance. Causing bad posture & thus bad Bench Press technique.



Bench Press Setup. You need a strong base to press the weight from. Tighten your upper-back. Grip the bar hard: try to break it apart like breaking spaghetti.

* Grip Width. Too narrow & you’ll lose strength. Too wide & the distance the bar travels shortens. Grip width should be about 55-71cm/22-28″ depending on your build. Forearms perpendicular to the floor when the bar touches your chest.
* Gripping the Bar. Secure the bar with your thumbs by rotating your hands in. Put the bar in the palm of your hand, close to your wrist. If you put the bar close to your fingers, you’ll get wrist pain.
* Tight Upper-back. Squeeze your shoulder-blades before getting on the bench. Keep your shoulder-blades back & down at all times. This gives your body a solid base to press the bar from.
* Chest Up. Don’t allow your chest to go flat or shoulders to roll forward. You’ll lose upper-back tightness, losing power & increasing risk of shoulder injury. Keep your chest up at all time.
* Feet. Use a wide foot stance to increase stability on the bench. Feet flat on the floor, weight on the heels, lower leg perpendicular to the floor. This prevents extreme arching of your lower back.


The Bench Press. Remember to keep the tight position during the Bench Press from start to finish. Squeeze the bar, keep your upper-back tight & your chest up. Unrack the weight with straight arms. Bench.

* Bar to Chest. Touch your chest where your forearms are perpendicular to the floor when looking from the side.
* Press in a Straight Line. Don’t look at the bar. Fix a point at the ceiling. Press the bar in a straight line above your chest, not towards your face. Keep the bar above your elbows during the whole lift.


Common Errors. The following Bench Press errors are either inefficient or potentially dangerous. Avoid them at all costs.

* Unracking with Bent Arms. Don’t risk the bar falling on your face. Your arms are strongest when your elbows are locked. Unrack & bring the bar above your chest with locked elbows.
* Pressing to Your Face. The shortest distance between 2 points is a straight line. Press in a straight line. Fix a point at the ceiling where you want the bar to go. Don’t look at the bar.
* Bending Your Wrists. This will get you wrist pain. Put the bar in the palm of your hand. Close to your wrists, not close to your fingers. Squeeze the bar so it doesn’t move.
* Elbows. Too high is bad for your shoulders. Too low is inefficient. Put your elbows between perpendicular to & parallel with your torso.
* Shoulders Forward. Don’t let your shoulders roll forward. It’s bad posture, bad technique & a guaranteed way to get shoulder injuries. Keep your chest up, shoulder blades back and down and upper-back tight.
* Glutes off the Bench. This makes the distance the bar travels shorter & thus the Bench Press easier. However it puts pressure on your back, especially when the weight gets heavy. You’re more stable when your glutes are on the bench. Keep them there.
* Pushing Your Head into The Bench. You’ll injure your neck. Tighten your neck muscles, without pushing your head into the bench.
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Old 14-10-2008, 07:08 PM   #3 (permalink)
Zarkov
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Originally Posted by nomad View Post
i have been doing incline DB presses, and lately I have been getting this pain in my shoulder. What am I doing wrong? Ideas, hints, tips.
All that weight tends to over rotate the shoulders so try bring the weights down until your upper arms are parallel (or a little further down-as far as you can without feeling pain) to the floor.
When I had shoulder probs I found this technique to not only avoid the pain but as your pecs are always taught and dont have a chance to relax like they would at the bottom of a press, it was still very effective.
Get some treatment for the shoulder of course as well.
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Old 14-10-2008, 08:43 PM   #4 (permalink)
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What degree do you have the incline at? If it's too high, you're training the shoulders more then the chest. Perhaps try lowering it a bit and see if this fixes the problem.
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Old 12-10-2009, 01:46 AM   #5 (permalink)
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