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SLING
SHOT:
(focus: core abdominals and cardio)
Stand with feet shoulder width apart. Holding the bell in front of
you with two hands, swing the bell around your body in a circle. Keep
your feet grounded, legs and gluts tight. Your arms should extend away
from your body and be relaxed. Most important, keep your abs tight
and contracted as the bell moves around your body. Make sure you get
a good grip on the bell as you change hands – front and back.
Keep your shoulders and torso squared off to the front. Do not use
your shoulder or arms to move the bell, instead feel the abdominals
as pulling the bell around the body. You may move your body slightly
as a counterweight. Then slow down and reverse the direction.
Do as many each way as you want. 10-20 in each direction and repeat
as desired.
SWINGS:
(focus: gluts, hamstrings, adductors, quads abdominals, cardio)
Stand with your feet a comfortable distance apart, feet can be straight
or slightly turned out. Holding the kettlebell with two hands, eyes
straight ahead and abdominals contracted. Swing the kettlebell back
between your legs as you sit back into a deep squat, thighs should
be close to parallel to the floor. Your weight should be back on your
heels, your butt sticking back as though you were sitting on a chair
and your head up. It should feel like the kettlebell is pulling you
back and loading your hamstrings as your arms swing the bell between
your legs. Keep your spine straight and your knees over your toes.
Straighten the legs as you snap your hips forward by contracting your
gluts explosively. It feels similar to a vertical jump.
Lock your knees by pulling up your kneecaps and contracting your quads.
Squeeze your gluts at the top of the movement as though you’re
pinching a coin between your butt cheeks. Let the bell swing up to
about waist or chest high, keeping your arms straight and relaxed.
When you’ve reached the top of the movement, sit back and squat
letting the kettlebell fall between you legs. Once you reach the lowest
point, exploded up again and repeat. Do not pause at the bottom. Note,
that the arms are not lifting the kettlebell; it is the hips exploding
forward with the glut squeeze and knee lock that drives the kettlebell
up and out.
Repeat as many times as you can manage. Or do sets of 10-25 reps.
Once you have mastered the two-arm swing, try the one-arm version.
You can also pass the kettlebell from hand to hand at the top of the
pull.
CLEANS:
(focus: gluts, abs, hamstrings, quads, adductors, chest, arms cardio)
The clean is the movement of bringing the kettlebell up to your shoulder/chest
in one clean movement. You swing the kettlebell back between your legs
as you did in the swings, but instead of projecting the bell forward,
you direct it up to your shoulder. Some describe it as similar to an
uppercut movement. Start with the two-hand clean.
Stand as you did in the swings, hip distance or what feels comfortable.
Hold the kettlebell with both hands, left hand is on top of the right
hand.
Swing the kettlebell back between your legs, keeping your arms loose.
As you snap your hips forward and stand up pull you arm in. Keep your
elbow close to your body, quickly drop your elbow under and into your
body when the bell is about to reach your shoulder. The kettlebell
should ROLL around your wrist and end up between biceps and forearm.
Keep your wrist straight, your arm should be squeezing into your body
and your forearm vertical. Try not to let it flip up and over your
arm, otherwise it will bang your forearm. As the kettlebell lands,
squeeze the handle and dip your knees and get under it. This will also
help to soften the landing.
Just reverse the movement by sending your hips back and sitting down
into a squat position as you let the kettlebell fall between your legs.
Repeat immediately. Do as many as you can do with good form and repeat
on the other side. When you’re first learning the clean keep
the reps and sets low. Build up slowly as your technique improves.
Once you have mastered the two-hand clean move onto a one-hand clean.
The technique is the same for both.
MILITARY PRESS:
(focus: shoulders, chest, lats, arms, abs,)
Start by cleaning the kettlebell to your shoulder. Tighten your body
as the kettlebell lands and squeeze the arm against the body. Tighten
your abdominals and gluts. Press your shoulder down as you start to
press the kettlelbell overhead. Inhale before you start and hold your
breath till the top. Squeeze the kettlebell as you lift it and imagine
you are punching the ceiling with your fist. Keep your wrist straight
and tight.
Keeping your body tight, you can take a small breath or inhale a little
more and then slowly lower the kettlebell down to your shoulder. At
the top of the lift your elbow should be locked, wrist straight and
your shoulder pressed down. Feel that you are pulling the kettlebell
down with your lat as you lower the kettlebell to the starting position.
Make sure you keep your legs, gluts and abdominals tight throughout
the lift.
Do 3-4 sets of 3-4 reps. Each arm.
WINDMILLS:
( lats, rotator cuff, obliques, chest, shoulders, hips, spinal rotation)
Starting with your feet slightly less than hip distance apart. Turning
both feet 45 degrees diagonally to the left. (This is not warrior pose;
both feet must face the same angle and must be closer together). Thrust
your hips back and put all your weight on your back leg (right). The
back leg must be straight and vertical. Your front knee (left) should
be soft and you should be able to lift your front foot off the ground.
Holding the kettlebell in your right hand press it up overhead, keep
your eyes on the kettlebell throughout the exercise. Fold forward from
the hips, as you rotate your spine. Keep your abdominals and gluts
tightly contracted. Keep your shoulder blade locked down. Open up your
chest and let your arm move as far back as you can safely manage. Start
to bend further over to the front and side reaching your left hand
down along your front (left) leg. Go as far down as you can. Don’t
forget to keep your weight on your back leg, and do not bend your front
knee. Squeeze your right glut and your abdominals and start to come
up. Keep your eyes on the kettlebell and imagine you are punching the
ceiling with your fist. You must keep your elbow locked and your wrist
straight throughout the drill. Repeat on other side.
Do 3-4 sets of 3-4 reps each arm.
ONE-LEGGED DEADLIFT:
(focus: gluts, hamstrings, quads, adductors, abdominals, calf and ankle)
Stand with feet shoulder width apart holding a kettlebell with both
hands in front you. Keep your gaze either at eye level or on the floor
a few feet in front of you. Put all your weight onto one leg. Pull
up the arches of your feet and grip the floor with your toes. Tighten
the muscles of your legs like you’re pulling all the muscles
up into the groin. Tense the gluts and abdominals. Start to bend the
knee as you fold over at the hips. Do not round the back! Try to keep
spine neutral. Reach your free leg back and keep the muscles tight.
Go as far as you can or touch the kettelbell to the floor; remember
to keep your whole body tight. Tighten your gluts and press your foot
into the floor to stand up. Think about pressing away from the floor
instead of standing up. If you feel like you are losing your balance,
just touch the free leg to the floor. Don’t jerk around to keep
your balance. Stand all the way up and give an extra glut squeeze at
the top, letting your hips reach forward (like at the top of the swings).
Tense up and repeat. Do the same for the other leg.
Do 3-4 sets of 3-4 reps each leg.
Variation: Use two kettlebells instead of one. Holding one in each
hand along side your body.
SNATCH:
(full body plus intense cardio)
The Tsar of all Kettlebell lifts! Think of a swing add a little clean
and end at the top with a military press-punch-up. A good way to think
of the timing is hips – shoulder – fist. First, you snap
the hips then you pull your shoulder back or “suck” it
back and then you finish with a strong punch up with your fist.
To begin, start as if you are doing a swing, send your hips back and
the kettlebell back between your legs, explosively snap your hips forward.
As the kettlebell reaches about eye level, suck your shoulder back,
and slightly bend the elbow to redirect the kettlebell. As it starts
to move back towards you or flip over your wrist, strongly punch straight
up.
The shoulder must stay down, the elbow locked and wrist straight as
the kettlebell lands on your forearm. The arm must lock out momentarily
with legs and arms straight and the body still. To lower the kettlebell,
send the hips back and relax the arm, let the kettlebell fall down
to the spot between your legs. Do not bring it down to your shoulder
first, just let it fall down. Don’t forget you are “catching” the
kettelbell at the bottom with your hamstrings just like in the swing.
Try not to let the kettlebell flip over and bang your forearm. Make
sure your shoulder is tight and down when the kettlebell lands. The
elbow and wrist must be straight. Start slowly, don’t do many
reps until you have mastered the groove and can perform the snatches
smoothly. Once you have it do as many as you can each arm. Or sets
of 10 reps each arm.
There is no better fat-burning exercises than the snatch!
OBLIQUE TWIST:
( obliques, rectus, and transverus abdominals)
Sit with your knees bent, holding a kettlebell with two hands in front
of your chest. Lift your feet off the ground. Keeping the abdominals
very tight twist your upper body to the left as your knees twist to
the right.
Alternating directions. Exhale and squeeze abdominals with each twist.
You can extend your top leg with each rep to make it harder.
Do as many as you can do.
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