home / Forums / Bodybuilding / Training / Weak Front Delts?
This topic contains 0 replies, has 1 voice, and was last updated by Zillagreybeard 4 years ago.
Weak Front Delts?
Discussion in 'Training' started by Zillagreybeard, Oct 21, 2020.You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
Recent forum posts:
Baseball9Unblocked4 replied 3 weeks, 6 days ago
Sciroxx replied 1 month ago
steven johns726 replied 1 month ago
Do you need front raises in your training?
–
If your front deltoids are a weak point and you’d like to train them with more volume, a front raise is fine to include in your workouts. But for most people, the front deltoids will be trained sufficiently with your upper body push exercises. Especially if we look into shoulder press and incline chest press variations, we see that the front deltoids are quite dominant during many push exercises [1-3].
–
With other movements like a chest fly and dips, your front deltoids also get a good amount of stimulation. Not to mention that our everyday lives tend to be quite “front-dominant”. It is common for people to develop a rounded forward posture because of having overpowered muscles on the front side of the upper body.
–
For all these reasons, most people don’t need front raises to have well-developed front deltoids. The push exercises in your workouts will cover the front delts and you can focus more on the side and rear deltoids with the shoulder isolation exercises you do. But again, eventually, it depends on your individual training goals whether front deltoids are useful in your training or not.
–
References:
1. Saeterbakken, A. H., & Fimland, M. S. (2013). Effects of body position and loading modality on muscle activity and strength in shoulder presses. The Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research, 27(7), 1824-1831.
2. Lauver, J. D., Cayot, T. E., & Scheuermann, B. W. (2016). Influence of bench angle on upper extremity muscular activation during bench press exercise. European journal of sport science, 16(3), 309-316.
3. Campos, Yuri AC, et al. “Different shoulder exercises affect the activation of deltoid portions in resistance-trained individuals.”