Barbell Bent Knee Good-morning

The Barbell Bent Knee Good-morning primarily works the Erector Spinae, Gluteus Maximus, with secondary activation of the Adductor Magnus, Biceps Femoris (Long Head), Gluteus Maximus and stabilizer support from the Erector Spinae, Rectus Femoris. It is a barbell isolation exercise at intermediate difficulty.

The Barbell Bent Knee Good-morning is an intermediate isolation exercise performed with barbell, following a extension movement pattern. It primarily targets the Erector Spinae, Gluteus Maximus, with secondary engagement of the Adductor Magnus, Biceps Femoris (Long Head), Gluteus Maximus. This is a bilateral pulling movement, engaging both sides of the body simultaneously.

A barbell isolation pull exercise targeting the Erector Spinae and Gluteus Maximus.

EquipmentBarbell
DifficultyIntermediate
TypeIsolation
MovementExtension
ForcePull
LateralityBilateral
PrimaryErector Spinae, Gluteus Maximus
SecondaryAdductor Magnus, Biceps Femoris (Long Head), Gluteus Maximus

Muscles Worked

Front
Back
Primary Secondary Stabilizer

The Erector Spinae, and Gluteus Maximus are the primary movers, collectively driving the movement and absorbing the greatest share of the load. The Adductor Magnus, Biceps Femoris (Long Head), and Gluteus Maximus act as secondary movers, assisting the primary muscles and contributing meaningfully to the overall output. The Erector Spinae, Rectus Femoris act as stabilizers, maintaining joint position and postural alignment throughout the movement.

Primary Muscles

Secondary Muscles

Stabilizer Muscles

How to Perform

Preparation

  1. Position barbell on back of shoulders and grasp bar to sides.

Execution

  1. Bend hips to lower torso forward until parallel to floor.
  2. Bend knees slightly during descent.
  3. Raise torso until hips are extended.
  4. Repeat.

Comments

  1. Target muscle is exercisedisometrically.
  2. Begin with very light weight and add additional weight gradually to allow adequateadaptation.
  3. Throughout lift, keep back straight.
  4. Knees will have to bend more in those withless hamstring flexibility.
  5. Knees can be kept bent throughout movement.
  6. Also see straight legGoodmorning,emphasizing Hamstrings.

Tips & Common Mistakes

Programming Suggestions

Adapt your sets and reps to your training goal.

Strength3–4 sets × 6–8 reps at 75–85% 1RM with 90–120 seconds rest.
Hypertrophy3–4 sets × 10–15 reps at 60–75% 1RM with 60–90 seconds rest.
Endurance2–3 sets × 15–25 reps at 40–60% 1RM with 30–45 seconds rest.

Alternative Exercises

These exercises target the same primary muscles (Erector Spinae, Gluteus Maximus) and can be substituted based on your equipment or variation preferences.

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