Seated Shoulder Internal Rotation (IR) Lift-offs
2m 36s
Develop active shoulder internal rotation and extension strength with this seated lift-off drill — a direct progression from the seated shoulder IR PAILs/RAILs drill that removes the passive anchor of the back entirely, demanding that the internal rotators and posterior shoulder generate real, concentric force to lift the hand away from the spine and hold it there under sustained isometric contraction.
Seated upright, the working arm is internally rotated and placed behind the back — the same setup as the PAILs/RAILs variation. Hand height remains the key load variable — higher up the back increases both the internal rotation and extension demand, loading the shoulder closer to end range. Lower positioning reduces both demands, making the lift more accessible. Find the height where a genuine lift-off is possible without compensation, and work from there.
From this starting position, the task is to actively lift the hand away from the back — driving the shoulder into further internal rotation and extension — and hold the lifted position under maximum isometric contraction for the prescribed duration before controlling the hand back down. The back is no longer an anchor — the lift must come entirely from the muscular effort of the internal rotators and posterior shoulder tissue, with no pushing off the spine to initiate the movement.
Where the PAILs/RAILs drill uses the back as a fixed surface to generate isometric contractions, this lift-off variation demands concentric force production — the internal rotators must actively shorten and produce movement to lift the hand away from the spine. This is a higher-order demand that directly builds active range rather than just end range tolerance. The isometric hold at the top then layers in a sustained strength stimulus at the furthest actively available position — training the shoulder to not only reach that range but stay there under load. The no-pushing-off-the-spine rule is critical — the lift must be initiated and sustained by the shoulder muscles alone, keeping the stimulus honest and the adaptation genuine.
Expect a deep, concentrated contraction through the back of the shoulder, internal rotators, and posterior deltoid as the hand lifts away from the spine and the hold is sustained. The lift may be small — even a few centimetres off the back — and that is completely correct. What matters is that the movement is genuine, unassisted, and held under real muscular effort. The torso should remain completely still throughout — no leaning, no twisting, no ribcage flaring to assist the lift. Over time, this drill builds the active shoulder IR and extension strength needed for better overhead mechanics, improved rotator cuff function, and greater shoulder mobility for sport and daily life.