Plank Scapular Protraction ISO
1m 26s
Build genuine scapular control and serratus anterior strength with this plank protraction isometric — a precise, isolated drill that trains the scapulae to glide fully around the ribcage under load, building the kind of active scapular stability that underpins healthy shoulders and efficient pushing mechanics.
In a standard plank position with the core tight and the body forming a long, rigid line from head to heel, the task is to push both scapulae into full protraction — gliding them around the ribcage away from the spine and toward the sides of the body — and hold that position under maximum isometric contraction. The spine does not move. The hips do not sag. The only movement is the scapulae protracting fully, and then the squeeze is held.
The distinction here is critical — this is not a plank with a small push-up at the top. This is a deliberate, isolated scapular movement performed entirely without spinal contribution. No arching, no rounding, no using the thoracic spine to assist the protraction. The ribcage stays fixed. The scapulae do all the work.
Scapular protraction — the forward gliding of the shoulder blades around the ribcage — is primarily driven by the serratus anterior, one of the most important and most commonly undertrained muscles in shoulder health. In a plank base, the serratus is loaded against bodyweight, creating a significant strength stimulus when protraction is performed deliberately and held under isometric contraction. The core tight, no-sag rule ensures the plank base remains honest throughout — any sagging of the hips or arching of the lower back immediately reduces the load on the serratus and shifts it elsewhere. The isometric hold builds both strength and neurological ownership of the fully protracted position, training the scapula to stay stable and active under load.
Expect a deep, burning contraction along the sides of the ribcage and beneath the shoulder blades as the scapulae glide fully forward and the hold is sustained. This is serratus anterior working hard — a sensation many people have never felt before. The upper trap and neck should stay quiet. The spine should feel completely still. If the hold causes the hips to sag or the spine to round, reduce the hold duration and rebuild. Over time, this drill builds the scapular strength and stability needed for pressing, pushing, overhead movements, and long-term shoulder health.