
Stick Standing Shoulder Mobilization in Extension
- Zielmuskel
- —
- Equipment
- Stick
- Körperregion
- Shoulders
- Typ
- Strength
The Stick Standing Shoulder Mobilization in Extension is a standing drill that uses a stick to guide and gradually deepen the shoulder's extension range of motion — the movement of the arm backward behind the body. Regular practice helps reduce posterior shoulder stiffness, restores natural joint mobility, and makes a practical warm-up or cool-down addition to any upper-body training session.
Stick Standing Shoulder Mobilization in Extension: So führst du sie aus
- 1Stand tall with your feet hip-width apart and your core lightly braced. Hold a stick (dowel, broomstick, or PVC pipe) behind your back with both hands, gripping it just outside hip-width with your palms facing backward.
- 2Let your arms hang naturally so the stick rests across the back of your hips or low back — this is your starting position.
- 3Keeping your elbows straight and your chest lifted, slowly raise the stick away from your body by driving both arms backward and upward into extension.
- 4Move only as far as you can without hunching your torso forward, arching your lower back excessively, or shrugging your shoulders toward your ears.
- 5At the end of your comfortable range, pause for 1–2 seconds and breathe out, allowing the shoulder structures to release gently.
- 6Slowly lower the stick back to the starting position under control, maintaining an upright posture throughout.
- 7Repeat for the prescribed number of repetitions, keeping each rep smooth and deliberate rather than using momentum.
Technik-Tipps
- Keep your grip on the stick relaxed — white-knuckling creates unnecessary tension that limits how far your shoulders can extend.
- Focus on moving at the shoulder joint itself: avoid compensating by arching the lower back or leaning the torso forward to gain extra range.
- Use slow, controlled repetitions (2–3 seconds up, 1–2 second hold, 2–3 seconds down) to maximise the mobility benefit and stay within a pain-free range.
- If one shoulder feels tighter than the other, spend a few extra holds on the restricted side after finishing your bilateral sets.
- Stop immediately if you feel sharp or pinching pain in the shoulder joint — mild tension is expected, but pain is not.
Häufige Fehler
- Arching the lower back to fake extra range: this shifts load to the lumbar spine instead of opening the shoulder joint, defeating the purpose of the drill.
- Rushing through reps with momentum: swinging the stick up and down removes the sustained stretch that drives actual mobility gains.
- Gripping the stick too wide: an overly wide grip reduces the extension demand on each shoulder individually and limits how much range you can develop.
- Letting the shoulders shrug toward the ears during the lift: this closes down the joint space and reduces the effective stretch.
- Holding your breath: breath-holding increases overall tension and prevents the relaxation response that allows the shoulder to move into a deeper range.
Häufig gestellte Fragen
What does shoulder extension mobilization actually do?
It progressively increases the shoulder joint's range of motion in the backward direction — the arc the arm travels behind the body. Consistent practice reduces stiffness in the posterior shoulder, which can improve posture and upper-body movement quality over time.
Is this exercise suitable for beginners?
Yes. Because you control the range with a stick and your own body weight, it is low-risk and self-limiting — you can only go as far as your current mobility allows. Beginners should start with a shoulder-width grip and widen it only once the movement feels comfortable.
How many sets and reps should I do?
Two to three sets of 10–15 repetitions is a practical starting point. For mobility work, consistency across sessions matters more than volume in a single session — performing it daily or before every upper-body session yields faster results than doing high-rep sets infrequently.
Where should I feel this exercise?
You should feel a gentle, diffuse stretch across the front and posterior shoulder area as the arm moves behind the body. A dull pull is normal; sharp, pinching, or radiating pain is not — if those occur, reduce the range of motion or consult a healthcare professional.
Can I use a towel or band instead of a stick?
A towel held taut between both hands works well as a substitute. A resistance band is less ideal because its elasticity changes the tension profile and makes it harder to control the precise range of motion you are trying to develop.







