Olympic WeightliftingAdvanced
Hang Snatch - Below Knees
Category
Olympic Weightlifting
Hamstrings
Secondary Muscles
AbdominalsCalvesForearmsGlutesLower backQuadricepsShouldersTraps
Exhale as you pull the weight toward your body, inhale as you extend back to the start.
- •Using momentum instead of controlled muscle tension
- •Not maintaining proper form throughout the movement
- •Rushing through reps instead of using a controlled tempo
- •Use a spotter or safety racks when lifting heavy
- •Always warm up properly before attempting this exercise
- •Stop immediately if you feel sharp or joint pain
- •Try a close-grip stance to shift emphasis
- •Perform with a slower eccentric for more time under tension
- •Use a safety squat bar if available
- •Choose another exercise that targets the hamstrings
- •Increase the weight by 5-10% once you can complete all reps with clean form
- •Slow down the eccentric (lowering) phase to 3-4 seconds
- •Reduce rest periods between sets to increase workout density
- •Add an extra set or rep each week (progressive overload)
- •Try the same exercise with a barbell instead of dumbbells to handle heavier loads
- •Drop to a moderate weight and focus on the mind-muscle connection
- •Reduce the weight to focus strictly on technique
- •Decrease the range of motion if you feel joint discomfort
- •Increase rest intervals to ensure full recovery between sets
- •Perform with just the bar or light dumbbells to groove the movement pattern
- •Even advanced lifters benefit from revisiting the basics — check your form with light weight periodically
- •Use micro-loading (0.5-1 kg increments) to continue making progress
- Use a 2-1-3 tempo (2 seconds up, 1 second pause, 3 seconds down) to maximise time under tension
- Implement progressive overload by tracking every session and adding small increments
- Breathe deliberately — exhale during the hardest part of the movement
- Periodically deload (reduce volume by 40-60% for a week) to manage fatigue and prevent plateaus