Frog Hip Internal Rotation (IR) Lift-offs
2m 59s
Develop active hip internal rotation strength from one of the deepest and most demanding base positions available with this frog IR lift-off drill — a precise, isolated movement that trains the internal rotators to generate real force at the very limit of their available range.
Starting deep in the frog position with both knees wide and hips loaded into abduction and rotation, the setup is deliberate — you settle into the frog base but stop short of absolute end range, leaving just enough space in the hip to allow internal rotation to occur. From here, the movement is initiated by lifting one foot off the floor, which drives the hip of that leg into internal rotation. The rotation comes first from the foot lift — not from rocking, not from shifting weight, not from momentum. Once the foot is lifted and the hip is rotating, the internal rotators take over and sustain the contraction. Alternate legs smoothly, maintaining the frog base position throughout.
The frog position creates a powerful environment for hip IR training because the hips are already loaded in abduction and rotation — placing the internal rotators in a lengthened, challenged state before the movement even begins. Initiating the IR through a foot lift rather than a hip shift keeps the pelvis stable and ensures the contraction is coming from the right place. The alternating pattern maintains continuous engagement across both hips while allowing each side to reset briefly between reps. No rocking, no momentum, and no compensation means every rep is a genuine strength stimulus for the hip's internal rotators — tissue that is chronically weak and underloaded in most people.
Expect a deep, concentrated contraction through the back and inner hip of the working leg as the foot lifts and the hip rotates inward. The movement will feel small and the effort will feel large — that is exactly correct. Any rocking of the pelvis or shifting of the torso signals that the active range has been exceeded or that the frog position needs to be adjusted to leave more room for IR. Over time, this drill builds the hip IR strength that supports better squatting, running, rotational sport performance, and long-term hip health.