Frog Hip Abduction Lift-offs
Joint Focus: HIPS
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3m 12s
Build active hip abduction strength from one of the most demanding base positions available with this frog abduction lift-off drill — a precise, compensation-prone movement that demands pure tissue engagement and strict positional control to deliver a genuine strength stimulus at the hip's abduction end range.
Starting in the frog position, the setup is intentional — rather than settling into absolute end range abduction, you back out of the position by 10-15 degrees. This is critical. At true end range, a lift-off is not possible — the tissue is already fully loaded and has no room to contract and produce movement. Backing out slightly creates just enough space for a real, active lift to occur, placing the abductors in a long, challenged position while still allowing them to generate force. From here, the task is to lift one knee off the floor — driving the hip further into abduction — without any rocking, shifting, or momentum. Pure tissue engagement only.
The frog base loads the hip abductors — primarily the glute medius and glute minimus — in a deeply lengthened position before the lift even begins. This means the muscles must generate force from a state of significant stretch, which is one of the hardest and most valuable training conditions for building genuine end range strength. The compensation risk in this drill is high — the body will want to rock the pelvis, shift the torso, or use momentum to get the knee off the floor. None of these are acceptable. Any compensation signals that either the active range has been exceeded or that the position needs to be adjusted further from end range until a clean lift is possible. The range of lift may be very small — that is expected and correct.
Expect a strong, burning contraction through the outer hip and glute of the working leg as you attempt to lift the knee off the floor. The lift will likely be minimal and the effort will feel disproportionately large — this is normal and a sign the drill is working exactly as intended. No rocking, no momentum, no cheating. Over time, as the abductors get stronger and the nervous system adapts to this position, the range of lift increases and the compensation urge reduces — building the active hip abduction capacity that supports better lateral stability, stronger single-leg control, and improved performance in any sport or movement that demands hip abduction strength.
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