Fundamentals of Olympic Weightlifting: Steve Smith, Ed.D., CSCS D, RSCC, Usaw
Fundamentals of Olympic Weightlifting: Steve Smith, Ed.D., CSCS D, RSCC, Usaw
Weightlifting
Steve Smith, Ed.D., CSCS*D, RSCC,
USAW
Associate Professor of Health and PE
Head Strength and Conditioning Coach
Terminology
• This terminology is from USA
Weightlifting
Disclaimer
• I don’t care what you call your lifts
• I respectfully provide the terminology about
what I call mine so you know what I am
talking about
Power Clean
• Defined by catching the car in a ¼ squat
position (a.k.a. hang clean)
• Then defined by the starting position of the
bar (MT, above knee, below knee, FL, HB)
Clean
• Defined by catching the bar in a full squat
position (a.k.a. power clean)
• Then defined by the starting position of the
bar (MT, above knee, below knee, FL, HB)
Why OL???
Teaching Progressions
• Start with the finishing position
Front Squat-starting position
• Take the bar in the rack position
• Even grip slightly wider than shoulder
width
• Push elbows up and in so the bar can rest on
the shoulders and chest
• Feet in a vertical jump position with toes
straight or slightly pointed out
Illustration
Performing the front squat
• Take a deep breath
• Push hips back
• Sit down
• Keep heels in contact with the ground
• Once back to the starting position exhale
Illustration
RDL
• Pure strengthening exercise used in the
second half of the pull for the snatch and the
power clean
• Same grip width as the front squat
• Same foot position
• Bar rests across the thighs
RDL
RDL-
• Bend the legs slightly
• Keep chest big and back set
• Move only from the hips and lower the bar below the
knees (but do not touch the ground)
• Keep muscles under constant tension
• Use hamstrings, glutes, and back and pull the bar back to
the starting position
• Exhale
RDL-
RDL- Variations
• Use a snatch grip- allows the lifter to go
down further
• More tension on hamstrings, gluteals, and
erector spinae
• Allow lifter to stand on a block (only for
advanced lifters)
Phases of the Snatch/Clean pull in Weightlifting
Lee James, 90 Kg USA silver medalist 1976 Olympic Games
1st Pull
Transition 2nd Pull
Advantages of the second knee bend (pictures 3-4):
(1) reduced load on the torso extensor muscles Shift (jump shrug
(2) re-utilization of the hip & knee musculature through
the strongest part of their range of motion Scoop or triple
(3) elastic energy storage and stretch reflex for
extension
enhancement of the 2nd pull (pictures 4-5) thrust force Stretch !
with shrug)
(ends in the
Power Position
shown)
Clean Pull
• To me…the single most important power
transfer exercise
• Once technique is efficient and proficient
maximum speed is critical
• Start your teaching progression from the
mid-thigh
Clean Pull
• Foot position- Vertical jump
• Toes slightly out
• Back is flat
• Arm position becomes crucial- arms straight
and elbows rotated out
Clean Pull
• At this point you could use lifting straps- though there may
be some different philosophies here
• Advantages- save wear and tear on the hands, can prevent
premature bending of the elbows, lift more weight
• Disadvantages- not as much work on grip strength
• Could use a hook grip
Movement of the Clean Pull
• Starting from Mid-Thigh
• Lower the bar to above knee (RDL)
• In an explosive movement the lifter simultaneously utilizes
four movement
• Hip extension
• Knee extension
• Ankle extension
• Shoulder elevation
Risk/Reward
• If done properly injuries should not be an
issue
Injuries per 100 participant hours in
school sports- B. Hamil