Here is a good example of what not to do when you belt squat, as demonstrated by one of my young bucks. I'm not picking on him here- this is the first time we put him on the belt squat and he's always eager to learn and try new things.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SV9BfZZjKuY&feature=youtu.be]

And most times I actually prefer to let them have at it with little instruction to see where their head is at and how they approach the movement.

My feedback for Noah - and these are pretty standard issues I see with most people that belt squat...

  1. All hinge, no squat. Here he is reaching his hips back, but never quite opening up. Yes, this will tax the glutes and hips, but not optimally.
  2. Bad Patterning - As a by product, we're no longer patterning the squat, so any carryover we get to a competition squat is minimal.
  3. 'Soft Back' - Too much reliance on hands/assistance. Which, as you can see pulls his upper body out of position. This 'soft back' is a bad habit and will most certainly carry over to poor positioning in the squat. 

Some fixes for this...

  • Lighten up the weight.
  • Take hand assistance away - have the lifter hold a KB/Goblet during the lift
  • Cue the same you would for a squat - root, external rotation, brace hard, set your back
  • And you can even add a PVC pipe to it - having them 'squat' with it across their back.

Noah is a great client and I'm looking forward to seeing where his hard work takes him.

 

tiger belt squat