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6 ultimate abs exercises for advanced lifters

You know that to be strong and look great naked you can’t neglect your abs. Though after grinding through sets of big exercises that tax your entire body, it’s easy to fall in to the trap of just “throwing in” a few abs exercises at the end. Stop wasting your time! Here are six abs exercises to challenge even the most advanced lifters.

Slider Body-Saw

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The body-saw can be done with sliders or anything else that slides on your floor. Paper party plates, an old magazine, or a towel on kitchen floor will work just fine. They can also be done in a suspension trainer to switch them up.

Body-saws are a sort of hybrid between an ab roll-out and a long-lever plank, although arguably harder – MUCH harder! There’s a large anti-extension component to these, as throughout you’re resisting your spine collapsing and pelvis tilting anteriorly. As you slide back the lever arm increases and so does the anti-extension component. As you pull back in your lats engage further enhancing the overall effect on your core.

The body-saw will help you develop insane strength through your entire mid-section. They also hit your serratus, which is an important scapular stabilizer and great for overall shoulder health. If it’s too easy just throw on a weighted vest, or to look more badass some chains across your hips.

Landmine Squat Anti-Rotation 

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These are another “anti” exercise. “Anti” exercises are what you’d usually think of as your typical “core” exercises. They basically teach you to hold or resist spine or pelvic movement. We won’t go in to the details here, but in short core exercises involve the deep muscles throughout your trunk on top of the superficial muscles you see on the outside. So as well as improving your core strength, which will carryover to lots of things, you’ll look great naked too.

It’s pretty common to see landmine rotations being done with a more dynamic-type movement, integrating spinal rotation with some hip extension. Instead, with these you’re resisting rotation as your arms move the bar. You can do these standing, or for an even bigger burn try holding a squat at the same time. This will challenge your hip mobility and stabilizers even more-so. Use these to hit your obliques and entire core.

Banded Ab Rollout

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Full ab roll-outs can be difficult to progress. But once you’ve achieved nose-to-floor technique they can get annoyingly easy. They’ll eventually start losing their punch. To continue getting the most out of them you’ll need to start adding load. You have a few options here.

Starting from your toes increases the lever arm and challenges you further with your own bodyweight. Throwing on a weighted vest will add a constant load through the entire movement and is arguably the best option to develop anti-extension strength. Or, you can use a resistance band, progressing to a thicker one over time. You might also combine some of these methods.

Because the strength curve of the exercise (stronger at the top and harder at the bottom), the resistance profile of the band helps to “even” things out – It adds less resistance at the bottom where you’re weakest and more at the top where you’re strongest. By adding more at the top as you go in to spinal flexion (flexion is optional, but that’s another topic) you’ll also load your rectus abdominis (six-pack muscle) even more. The direction of band resistance adds to its effectiveness too.

Partial Range Roller Crunches

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Not only do partial range roller crunches smoke your abs, they frazzle your lats and triceps too. They’re neither a roll-out nor a crunch. They’re a kind of partial roll-out mixed with an accentuated and very heavy band crunch at the top. 

As good of a exercise as banded roll-outs are, if your goal is pure “damn, my abs look good” kind of results, then you want to be loading the most you can in that flexed position – since that’s how you’ll get the most from your rectus “six-pack” abdominis. 

Using partial-range roll-outs there’s no need to sacrifice on band resistance like you might when doing full roll-outs. Because of this partial-range roller crunches are a highly effective way to load this position, and a good way to feel your upper and lower abs for days afterwards!!

Decline Eccentric Cable Crunch

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Eccentric training is an excellent way to tap into those neglected fast-twitch fibers and grow some six pack abs. Having the cable overhead on the way down versus the way up is a great way to increase eccentric load by changing the lever arm.

Even the most advanced lifters can struggle with these, so don’t be a hero. Start with a super light weight and have a play about with bench height. If you’re not used to this type of training then your entire mid-section will feel these for days. You’re welcome.

Hamstring-Activated Sit-Up

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The hamstring-activated sit-up is a take on the original Janda crunch proposed by Professor Janda. If you’re familiar with Russian kettlebell specialist Pavel Tsatsouline, then this is more similar to the “hardstyle sit-up” but in reverse. The theory here is the same.

By activating your hamstrings (and glutes) you reciprocally inhibit your hip flexors. You’ll not shut them off completely, but just enough to stop them taking over in common abs exercises. Strong and meaty hip flexors are fine for some, but if you want to hit your abs hard then these are deceptively difficult. Even with zero weight.

Roundup

If you want a chiselled mid-section then there’s no point half-assing a few abs exercises at the end of your workout. Try putting some effort in with these advanced variations.

If you can’t then why not start your workouts with them to make sure they get done!? Or even better, why not get me to do your programming for you 😉 Find out more HERE.

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