Frog Hip Abduction Straight-leg Lift-offs
Beginner
•
2m 15s
Build active hip abduction strength with this frog straight-leg lift-off drill — a precise, demanding variation that extends one leg fully out to the side from a deep frog base, isolating the hip abductors under significant load and demanding strict positional control through every phase of the movement.
Starting in a deep frog position, back out slightly from absolute end range to create just enough space for a clean lift to occur. From here, one leg is straightened fully out to the side while the other remains in the standard frog position, anchoring the base. With the straight leg extended and the hip loaded in abduction, the task is to lift the leg straight up — controlled and deliberate — and lower it back down with equal precision. No rocking, no momentum, no rotation of the spine. The movement is purely vertical — straight up and straight down — with the torso and base leg remaining completely still throughout.
The degree to which you back out of frog end range before straightening the leg determines the difficulty. Back out too far and the abductors are too far from their challenged position — the stimulus reduces. Stay too close to end range and a clean lift becomes impossible. Find the sweet spot where the hip is deeply loaded but a genuine, uncompensated lift is still possible, and work from there.
Straightening the leg dramatically increases the lever arm compared to a bent-knee frog lift-off, placing significantly more demand on the hip abductors to generate and sustain force throughout the movement. The abductors — primarily the glute medius and glute minimus — must work hard to initiate the lift, control the ascent, and resist the descent under load. The deep frog base keeps the hip loaded in its most challenged abduction position, meaning the muscles are working from a lengthened state throughout. The no-rocking, no-spinal-rotation rule ensures all of that demand stays exactly where it belongs — in the hip abductors — rather than being distributed across the lower back or opposite hip.
Expect a strong, burning contraction through the outer hip and glute of the working leg from the moment the lift begins, sustained through the hold and intensified during the slow controlled descent. The base and torso should feel locked and still. Any rocking or spinal rotation signals that either the lever arm is too long, the range is too close to end range, or the active capacity of the abductors has been exceeded — adjust accordingly. Over time, this drill builds the unilateral hip abduction strength and control needed for better lateral stability, improved athletic performance, and long-term hip health.
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