Prone Shoulder Extension ISO with Stick
Joint Focus: SHOULDERS
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1m 56s
Build deep, sustained shoulder extension strength with this prone isometric stick drill — a simple but powerful end-range hold that trains the posterior shoulder to generate and maintain maximum force at the limit of available extension, building the kind of active shoulder strength that passive stretching and dynamic drills alone cannot develop.
Lying face down with the body long, both hands hold a stick, PVC pipe, or dowel either palms up or palms down. Both grips are valid and deliver a slightly different stimulus — palms up creates more supination and loads the posterior shoulder and biceps tissue differently, while palms down emphasises the triceps and posterior deltoid. Experiment with both to understand what each position demands from your shoulder. Keeping the elbows close to the body throughout, the task is to pull the shoulders into extension — lifting the stick toward the ceiling — driving to end range and continuing to pull deeper, holding the maximum contraction for the prescribed duration.
Unlike PAILs/RAILs where contractions are built and released in phases, this drill is a sustained, maximum-effort isometric hold at end range. By continuously pulling deeper into extension throughout the hold — rather than simply maintaining a fixed position — you are training the posterior shoulder tissue to generate progressive force under sustained load. This creates a powerful adaptation stimulus for the muscles responsible for shoulder extension, building both strength and neurological ownership of the end range position. The elbows-close cue keeps the movement honest, preventing the arms from drifting wide and shifting the load away from true shoulder extension.
Expect a deep, burning, sustained contraction through the back of the shoulder, posterior deltoid, and into the upper back as you hold and continue pulling the stick upward. This should feel like a relentless effort — not a passive hold but an active, continuous attempt to extend further throughout the entire duration. The body stays completely grounded, long, and still. No arching of the lower back, no rotation, no compensating through the neck or upper trap. Over time, this drill builds the posterior shoulder strength and end-range extension capacity needed for pulling movements, postural control, overhead stability, and long-term shoulder health.
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