The definitive dynamic mobility drill. It targets the hips, thoracic spine, and posterior chain in a single, fluid kinetic sequence, preparing the body for multi-planar athletic demands.
The movement initiates with a deep sagittal lunge engaging hip flexors and extensors. It transitions into a transverse plane rotation of the thoracic spine, concluding with shoulder abduction. This effectively links the Posterior Oblique Sling (latissimus dorsi to contralateral glute max).
Primary pivots occur at the acetabulofemoral joint (deep flexion lead leg, extension trail leg) and the thoracic vertebrae (T1-T12). The reaching arm creates a long moment arm, increasing torque requirements on the thoracic rotators while the glenohumeral joint acts as a secondary pivot.
High stabilization demand is placed on the glenohumeral joint of the planted arm to prevent scapular winging. Isometric core engagement is critical to resist lumbar hyperextension, ensuring rotation is isolated strictly to the thoracic spine.
"The magic is in the dissociation. Can you rotate your upper back without letting your hips sway? That is the mark of true mobility."
Start in a push-up position with hands directly under shoulders. Engage glutes and core to create a straight line from head to heel.
Step your right foot forward to the outside of your right hand. Keep the back (left) leg fully extended and straight. Squeeze the left glute.
Lift your right hand and rotate towards the ceiling. Follow your thumb with your eyes. Press actively into the floor with your left hand to stabilize the shoulder blade.
Bring the right hand back down to the floor inside the foot. Step back to plank and repeat on the other side.
Precision beats intensity. Fix these common leaks to maximize the stretch.
| The Mistake | Biomechanics Fail | The Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Lumbar Arching | Compensating for lack of T-spine mobility by extending the lower back. | Exhale ribs down. Visualize rotating from the bra-line/sternum up. |
| Bent Back Knee | Reduces hip flexor tension, nullifying the anterior hip stretch. | Fire the back quad and glute hard. Imagine pushing the heel to the back wall. |
| Shoulder Shrug | Scapular winging or elevation, losing the stable base. | "Push the floor away." Create distance between ear and shoulder. |
| Hips Rising | Moves load away from hips into shoulders/quads. | Sink the hips towards the floor while keeping the spine long. |
Sources for this exercise are listed on the main exercise page.