Seated Shoulder IR PAILs/RAILs
2m 55s
Strengthen and expand your shoulder internal rotation end range with PAILs and RAILs in a seated position with the arm placed behind the back — a direct, well-loaded drill that uses bodyweight and hand position to passively achieve shoulder IR end range and then trains the tissue to own and extend that range through targeted isometric loading.
Seated upright, the working arm is internally rotated and placed behind the back with the top of the hand pressing against the spine. Hand height is the key load variable — positioning the hand higher up the back increases both the internal rotation and extension demand, loading the shoulder closer to end range. Positioning the hand lower reduces both demands, making the passive stretch more accessible. Find the height that creates a meaningful passive stretch without forcing the position, and allow the tissues to settle into that stretch before any contraction begins.
From this passively loaded position, the drill moves through two distinct isometric phases: for PAILs, press the top of the hand firmly into the back — driving the shoulder toward external rotation and away from the stretch — while the back acts as an immovable surface and prevents any actual movement. For RAILs, actively try to pull the hand away from the back — driving the shoulder into further internal rotation and extension — using the internal rotators and posterior shoulder tissue to deepen the range under muscular control.
PAILs (Progressive Angular Isometric Loading) contract the shoulder external rotators and anterior shoulder — the muscles being stretched at IR end range — pressing the hand into the back and building tensile strength and tissue resilience through the lengthened tissue. The back acts as a fixed anchor, ensuring the contraction is purely isometric with no actual rotation occurring. RAILs (Regressive Angular Isometric Loading) then fire the internal rotators and posterior shoulder — the short-side, regressive tissue — actively pulling the hand away from the back and driving the shoulder deeper into IR and extension range. The seated position keeps the torso upright and stable, ensuring the movement stays honest and the shoulder does the work without compensation from the spine or ribcage.
Expect significant effort through the front of the shoulder and chest during PAILs as the external rotators press the hand firmly into the back. During RAILs, expect a deep, concentrated contraction through the back of the shoulder and internal rotators as the hand actively pulls away from the spine. The torso should remain completely still throughout both phases — no leaning, no twisting, no ribcage flaring. Build each contraction gradually, never forcing the joint. Over time, this drill builds genuine active shoulder IR range that translates to better overhead mechanics, improved rotator cuff health, and greater shoulder mobility for sport and daily life.