sbs-squat

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Use when anyone asks about squatting in any capacity: squat form or technique, setup, bar position (high bar vs low bar vs front squat), stance width, toe angle, depth, knee tracking, back angle, bracing, ascent/sticking point cues, fixing squat problems (knee cave, butt wink, forward lean, balance loss), mobility limits, accessory selection, or squat programming for powerlifting, weightlifting, bodybuilding, or general strength.

sjawhar By sjawhar schedule Updated 3/29/2026

name: sbs-squat description: Use when anyone asks about squatting in any capacity: squat form or technique, setup, bar position (high bar vs low bar vs front squat), stance width, toe angle, depth, knee tracking, back angle, bracing, ascent/sticking point cues, fixing squat problems (knee cave, butt wink, forward lean, balance loss), mobility limits, accessory selection, or squat programming for powerlifting, weightlifting, bodybuilding, or general strength.

SBS Squat Coaching Skill

Core SBS Philosophy (Read First)

  1. There is no single perfect squat form.

    • People differ in femur length, hip socket depth/orientation, ankle ROM, and muscle moment arms.
    • Those differences change what stance, toe angle, torso lean, and depth are strongest/safest for each lifter.
  2. Optimize principles, not aesthetics.

    • The goal is to keep force balanced over mid-foot, maintain spinal position, and distribute load efficiently between quads/hips.
    • Two lifters can look different and both be technically excellent.
  3. Technique should match goal.

    • Powerlifting: shortest legal ROM, still clearly below parallel.
    • Weightlifting: deeper + more upright carryover to clean/snatch.
    • Hypertrophy/general strength: usually deepest controlled ROM you can maintain.
  4. Skill + strength both matter.

    • Bracing quality, upper-back rigidity, and sticking-point strategy can raise performance without changing muscle mass.
    • Long term, weak links (quads/core/hips) still need targeted strength work.

Scope Note

This skill covers squat technique and broader SBS training philosophy. For questions about general programming, periodization, or training principles: provide a broad evidence-based answer using SBS framing. Use squat examples when illustrative — but don't narrow general questions into squat-specific answers.

SBS Epistemic Style

  • Strong evidence: multiple converging studies, consistent outcomes, clear practical signal.
  • Moderate evidence: generally supportive but mixed/limited; give recommendations with caveats.
  • Weak evidence: mechanistic/speculative or sparse data; present as tentative, not prescriptive.
  • Separate confidence level from practical recommendation (you can still give a practical default while noting uncertainty).
  • Prefer nuanced conclusions over absolutist claims.

Greg's Distinctive Positions (High-Leverage SBS Takes)

Deadlift fatigue vs squat fatigue

  • Common claim: deadlifts are inherently much harder to recover from than squats.
  • SBS pushback: when volume is matched, fatigue outcomes are broadly similar.
  • Why perception diverges:
    • Path dependency: most lifters are less practiced with high-volume deadlift exposure.
    • Grip fatigue confound: grip limits can make deadlift sessions feel systemically worse even when lower-body recovery is comparable.
    • Programming norms: deadlift volume is usually lower, so equalized sessions feel disproportionately hard.

Belt evidence and recommendations

  • Belts improve performance mainly via intra-abdominal pressure (IAP) and tactile bracing feedback.
  • Increased IAP can transfer to greater hip extension torque — not merely a placebo/confidence effect.
  • SBS Belt Bible framing: belts are broadly beneficial for heavy compound work; "belts make your core weak" is weakly supported.
  • Practical recommendation: learn to brace without a belt first, then use belts strategically for heavier sets.

Minimalist warm-up

  • SBS framing: warm-up should be treated as a cost-benefit decision.
  • Most lifters can warm up less and perform just as well.
  • Use the minimum warm-up that enables safe, high-quality reps at target intensity.
  • If uncertain, iteratively remove one warm-up element at a time and track whether performance/readiness changes.
  • For many sessions, compound work sets are sufficient warm-up for later isolation movements.

Isometric training

  • Isometrics can improve strength most around trained joint angles (roughly ±15° carryover).
  • High-intent ballistic maximal contractions are generally more useful for strength than long moderate holds.
  • Isometrics often have a different fatigue profile due to no eccentric loading.
  • SBS framing: valuable accessory tool, but angle-specificity limits broad carryover.

Bands/chains for hypertrophy

  • Accommodating resistance changes the force curve (more load in stronger ROM positions).
  • Hypertrophy caveat: too much band/chain contribution can reduce stretched-position loading, which is often highly stimulative.
  • For powerlifting/strength, accommodating resistance is often more compelling (e.g., sticking-point and force-production practice).

Setup Checklist (Use Before Every Work Set)

  1. Bar position

    • High bar: on traps (not grinding into C7 neck bump).
    • Low bar: on rear delts (not directly on scapular spine).
    • Front squat: shelf on front delts/clavicle area with scapulae protracted.
  2. Grip and wrists

    • Grip as narrow as possible without wrist/elbow/shoulder pain.
    • If wrists hurt in back squat: widen slightly, use thumbless grip, keep wrists neutral.
  3. Elbows

    • Back squat default cue: “scratch your ribcage with your elbows.”
    • Front squat: elbows as high as possible.
  4. Unrack + walkout

    • Unrack aggressively (hips under bar, shoulders up into bar).
    • Use minimal steps (2-3) to save energy and improve consistency.
  5. Stance + toes

    • Start around shoulder width, then personalize.
    • Toe angle should usually match knee tracking direction.
    • Narrower stance/less abduction -> toes less turned out.
    • Wider stance/more abduction -> toes more turned out.
  6. Brace sequence

    • Deep diaphragmatic breath into abdomen/obliques (360° expansion).
    • Beltless: brace like taking a punch.
    • Belted: push abdomen/obliques into belt.
    • Hold pressure (Valsalva) through rep.
  7. Foot tension + whole-body tension

    • Tripod foot: big toe, pinky toe, heel all grounded.
    • Keep center pressure over mid-foot.
    • Cue hips: “screw feet into floor” (narrow/medium) or “spread floor” (wider).
    • Cue upper back: “bend the bar across your back.”

High Bar vs Low Bar vs Front Squat (Scannable)

Variation Bar Placement Typical Torso Angle Typical ROM Emphasis Typical Load Potential Best Use Cases
Low bar Rear delts Most forward lean Slightly less knee ROM, similar/more hip ROM Usually highest Powerlifting max load, hip extensor emphasis
High bar Traps Moderate lean More knee ROM than low bar Usually mid General strength + quad emphasis
Front squat Front delts/clavicle shelf Most upright High knee ROM, less hip “sit-back” freedom Usually lowest Upper-back demand, weightlifting carryover, quad-biased upright squat

Practical take: all build full-body strength; differences are usually emphasis, not completely different exercises.


Descent Cues

Primary options

  • Sit down: knees + hips break together, butt drops between heels, more upright.
  • Sit back: hips break first, butt back, more torso incline.

How to choose

  • Need more quad stimulus/depth -> bias sit down.
  • Need slightly shorter ROM (often powerlifting) -> bias sit back.
  • Limited ankle ROM -> sit-back style often feels better.

Universal descent rules

  • Descend as fast as possible while staying in control.
  • Keep tripod foot pressure and balance over mid-foot.
  • Keep spinal position (no lumbar/thoracic collapse).
  • For most training goals: squat as deep as controlled anatomy allows.

Ascent Cues (Especially Sticking Point)

Out of the hole

  • Initiate with: “traps back into the bar + feet through floor.”
  • Avoid immediate hip shoot-up that turns rep into a good morning.

Through sticking point (usually 1-6 inches above parallel)

  • Do not panic and rush hips up.
  • Cue pair:
    • “Shoulders/traps back into bar.”
    • “Hips under (forward under) the bar.”
  • Think deadlift lockout mechanics: shoulders back + hips through.
  • Goal: redistribute effort so hips don’t do everything while quads under-contribute.

Intent

  • Lift each concentric as explosively as technique allows.

Most Common Problems -> Specific Fixes

Problem What it usually means What to change immediately Accessories/longer-term fix
Knees cave excessively Stance may be too wide for hip anatomy, weak abductors, or poor motor pattern Narrow stance slightly; add cue to push knees out; use a light band around knees for feedback Hip thrusts with abduction band, abductor work, progressive practice
Butt wink (true lumbar flexion) Could be control issue or anatomy-limited end ROM Confirm if true rounding vs just moving from hyperextension to neutral; reduce ROM to controllable depth; improve bracing Progression: goblet -> front -> high bar; pin squat progressive ROM; pre-set planks/side planks
Forward collapse / good morning squat Often quad under-contribution; hip/back taking over Out of hole cue “traps back + hips under”; keep knees from shooting back immediately Front squats, leg press/hack squat, split squats/lunges/step-ups
Can’t hit depth without losing position Usually setup mismatch, mobility misunderstanding, or control under load Adjust stance/toe angle based on knee tracking; test unloaded vs loaded control; use heel-elevated shoes if true ankle limitation Targeted mobility only if truly limited; strengthen quads/calves as needed
Losing balance forward Mid-foot pressure lost, torso caves, toes/stance mismatch Re-establish tripod foot; cue traps back; keep bar over system COM and center pressure mid-foot Solid-sole shoes, practice consistent walkout + bracing routine

Good Morning Squat Pattern (Must Recognize)

Pattern: hips shoot up, knees drift back, torso inclines more than intended, rep becomes hip/back-dominant.

Why it happens: at bottom-to-mid ascent, body shifts demand away from quads toward hips because quads are limiting (most common) or bracing is failing.

Fix stack:

  1. Technical cue: traps back into bar + hips under bar.
  2. Stay patient at sticking point; don’t rush hips up.
  3. Build quad capacity: front squats + machine knee-dominant work + unilateral work.
  4. If squat:deadlift gap is huge (>15-20%), improve bracing and thoracic extension endurance.

Non-Negotiables vs Style Preferences

Non-negotiables

  • Avoid excessive knee cave.
  • Avoid meaningful spinal rounding/collapse under load.
  • Maintain balance over mid-foot with stable foot tripod.
  • Use controlled depth that matches goal and anatomy.

Style preferences (individualize)

  • Bar position (high/low/front)
  • Stance width
  • Toe angle
  • Degree of forward lean
  • Sit-down vs sit-back bias
  • Head/eye focal point
  • Belt/flat vs heeled shoe preference (solid sole required)

Quick Answers (Most Common Squat Questions)

  1. Are squats safe?

    • Generally yes when technically sound and progressed sensibly.
  2. Should everyone squat ass-to-grass?

    • No. Anatomy varies. Use deepest safe, controlled ROM you can own.
  3. Do knees over toes ruin knees?

    • Usually no in healthy knees; context and pain response matter.
  4. Should bar path be perfectly vertical?

    • Not always, especially with lighter loads. Keep system balance over mid-foot.
  5. Is wide stance always easier?

    • No. Depends on anatomy, comfort, and leverage.
  6. How should I squat for more quads?

    • High bar or front squat, sit-down bias, deep ROM, add quad accessories.
  7. What if ankles feel tight?

    • Test true ROM first; often it’s a strength/control issue (quads/calves), not pure mobility.
  8. How do I fix elbow/wrist pain in low bar?

    • Slightly wider grip, neutral wrists, thumbless grip, improve shoulder/thoracic mobility; use high bar temporarily if needed.
  9. How do I pick bar position?

    • Pick the style that best matches your sport goal and lets you train hard consistently.
  10. Do I need only squats for leg growth?

  • No. Squats are central, but full leg development usually needs additional exercises.

Decision Rules by Goal

  • Powerlifting: low bar often best for max load; manage depth to legal minimum + control.
  • Weightlifting: high bar + front squat for upright depth and clean/snatch carryover.
  • Bodybuilding: bias long ROM, stable positions, and variation variety for complete development.
  • General strength: choose pain-free, stable style you can progress for years.

References in This Skill Folder

  • references/01-setup-equipment-bracing.md
  • references/02-stance-foot-descent-depth.md
  • references/03-ascent-sticking-point-diagnosis.md
  • references/04-common-problems-and-fixes.md
  • references/05-variations-mobility-programming.md
  • references/06-general-programming-and-sbs-philosophy.md
Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/sjawhar/macrofactor --skill sbs-squat
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