Plank Scapular Retraction ISO
5-10 Min: Short Lessons
•
1m 45s
Develop active scapular retraction strength and mid-back control with this plank retraction isometric — the natural counterpart to the protraction drill, training the scapulae to draw firmly together under load and hold that position with maximum muscular effort, building the posterior shoulder and mid-back strength that supports healthy, balanced shoulder mechanics.
In a standard plank position with the core tight and the body forming a long, rigid line from head to heel, the task is to pull both scapulae into full retraction — drawing them firmly together toward the spine — and hold that position under maximum isometric contraction. The elbows stay locked, the hips stay lifted, and the spine does not move. No collapsing through the elbows to assist the retraction. No sagging of the hips. No rounding or arching of the thoracic spine. The scapulae do all the work — squeezing together under their own muscular effort and holding firm.
The distinction here mirrors the protraction drill — this is not a row, not a collapse, and not a spinal movement. This is isolated scapular retraction performed under plank load, with the ribcage fixed and the mid-back tissue driving every bit of the contraction.
Scapular retraction — the drawing together of the shoulder blades toward the spine — is driven primarily by the rhomboids, middle trapezius, and lower trapezius. These muscles are chronically underloaded in most people, particularly those who spend significant time at a desk or in anterior-dominant training patterns. Loading retraction in a plank base places these muscles under significant demand — they must work against bodyweight to draw the scapulae together and sustain the isometric hold. The no-elbow-collapse rule is critical — bending the elbows shifts the load from the scapular retractors to the triceps and reduces the drill to a partial push-up descent. The elbows must stay long and the movement must come entirely from the shoulder blades pulling together.
Expect a deep, concentrated squeeze through the mid-back, between the shoulder blades, and into the rhomboids and middle trap as the scapulae draw together and the hold is sustained. The upper trap and neck should remain quiet. The elbows should feel long and stable. The hips should stay completely level — no sagging, no piking. If the hold causes the elbows to bend or the spine to move, reduce the hold duration and rebuild from a stricter base. Over time, this drill builds the posterior shoulder and mid-back strength needed for pulling movements, postural control, scapular balance, and long-term shoulder health.
Up Next in 5-10 Min: Short Lessons
-
Quadruped Shoulder Internal Rotation ...
Strengthen and expand your shoulder internal rotation end range with PAILs and RAILs in a quadruped position — a precise, well-loaded drill that uses the opposite hand as a passive lever to achieve end-range shoulder IR and then trains the tissue to own and extend that range through targeted isom...
-
Quadruped Scapular Protraction ISO
Build genuine serratus anterior strength and active scapular control with this quadruped protraction isometric — the more accessible version of the plank scapular protraction drill, delivering the same targeted stimulus to the scapulae and serratus anterior in a position that is easier to sustain...
-
Supine Hip IR PAILs/RAILs with Stick
Strengthen and expand your hip internal rotation end range with PAILs and RAILs in a supine position using a stick, PVC pipe, or dowel — an accessible, well-controlled drill that uses the stick as a passive lever to achieve end-range hip IR and then trains the tissue to own and extend that range ...