90/90 Hip External Rotation (ER) PAILs/RAILs
4m 12s
Strengthen and expand your hip external rotation end range with PAILs and RAILs applied to the front leg in the 90/90 position — one of the most direct and effective ways to build genuine, lasting ER mobility that goes beyond what passive stretching can achieve.
Seated in the 90/90 position, the focus is entirely on the front leg with the hip loaded in external rotation. The knee stays fixed, the pelvis remains neutral, and the spine stays tall throughout — no rocking, no tilting, no shifting. From this locked, honest position, the drill moves through two isometric phases: driving the ankle firmly into the floor for PAILs, then attempting to lift the ankle off the floor and into further external rotation for RAILs.
PAILs (Progressive Angular Isometric Loading) contract the hip external rotators — the muscles currently under stretch — building tensile strength and tissue resilience directly at end range. RAILs (Regressive Angular Isometric Loading) then fire the opposing muscles to actively pull the hip deeper into ER, training the body to access and own that range under muscular control. The ankle cues — press down, then lift up — are the most direct way to recruit the correct muscles without losing position. Keeping the knee still is critical — any movement there signals compensation and shifts the load away from where it needs to be.
Expect deep, intense effort around the outer hip, glute, and hip rotators during both phases. Build each contraction gradually — never force it — reaching close to maximum effort by the end of each hold. The position should remain completely still throughout. No rocking, no knee drift, no pelvis tilting. What you're experiencing is the nervous system being trained to recognize this range as safe, strong, and accessible — converting a range you can only passively reach into one you can actively own and control. Over time, this translates to freer, stronger hip ER in squats, lunges, rotational sport, and daily movement.