Modified Quadruped Hip Abduction Lift-offs
5-10 Min: Short Lessons
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2m 23s
Build active hip abduction strength and control with this modified quadruped lift-off drill — a deceptively challenging movement that isolates the hip abductors and demands strict positional integrity from the entire body.
Starting in a standard quadruped position, one leg extends straight out to the side in abduction rather than remaining bent behind. From this modified base, the task is to lift the straight leg higher into abduction — without any rocking, leaning, or twisting through the spine or torso — hold at the top, and then slowly and deliberately control the descent back down. Every phase of the movement must be earned.
The straight leg position places the hip abductors — primarily the glute medius and glute minimus — under direct load from the very start, before the lift even begins. The quadruped base creates a clear reference point for compensation: any shift in the torso, rotation of the spine, or dropping of the opposite hip signals that the working hip's active range has been exceeded. The hold at the top builds isometric strength at end range abduction, while the slow controlled descent develops eccentric capacity — the often-neglected ability to resist and control movement on the way down, which is where real stability is built.
Expect a strong, burning contraction along the outer hip and glute of the working leg, particularly during the hold and the slow lowering phase. The torso and spine should feel completely locked and stable throughout — if they're not, reduce the range until they are. The movement should feel small and precise, not large and swinging. Quality of position always outweighs height of lift. Over time, this drill builds the unilateral hip abduction strength that supports better single-leg stability, improved gait, reduced knee and hip injury risk, and stronger performance in any sport or movement that demands lateral control.
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