Extra Decline Sit-up exercise animation (Hombre)

Extra Decline Sit-up

Músculo objetivo
Equipamiento
Body weight
Parte del cuerpo
Waist
Tipo
Strength

The extra decline sit-up is a bodyweight core exercise that trains the abdominals, especially the rectus abdominis. Performed on a decline bench with your feet anchored higher than your head, it increases the range of motion and resistance over a flat sit-up, making it a tougher way to build trunk-flexion strength.

Cómo hacer el Extra Decline Sit-up

  1. 1Set the bench to a moderate decline and sit at the lower end with your knees bent over the upper edge.
  2. 2Hook your feet securely under the foot pads or roller so your legs stay anchored higher than your head.
  3. 3Lie back until your torso is along the bench, keeping a slight bend in your knees and your chin gently tucked.
  4. 4Cross your arms over your chest or place your fingertips lightly at the sides of your head without pulling on your neck.
  5. 5Brace your abdominals and exhale as you curl your torso up, leading with your chest toward your knees.
  6. 6Continue lifting until your upper body is well past vertical, keeping the movement controlled rather than swinging.
  7. 7Pause briefly at the top and squeeze your abdominals.
  8. 8Inhale and lower your torso back down under control until your shoulders return to the bench.
  9. 9Complete your reps, then unhook your feet and sit up carefully to finish.

Consejos de técnica

  • Move with your abdominals, not momentum — slow, controlled reps keep tension on the muscles through the full range.
  • Keep your chin gently tucked and your neck neutral so your abs do the work instead of your neck muscles.
  • Exhale as you crunch up and inhale on the way down to maintain a strong brace.
  • Adjust the decline angle to set the difficulty — a steeper decline makes each rep harder.
  • Lower under control all the way down rather than dropping, so you keep the abdominals loaded on the descent.

Errores comunes

  • Yanking on your head or neck to start the rep, which strains the neck and takes load off the abs.
  • Using momentum to swing up instead of curling, which reduces tension and makes the exercise less effective.
  • Lowering too fast or letting your back slam down, wasting the eccentric portion and risking your lower back.
  • Setting too steep a decline before you have the strength, which encourages cheating and poor form.
  • Holding your breath through the rep, which raises pressure and limits how hard you can brace.

Preguntas frecuentes

What muscles does the extra decline sit-up work?

It mainly works the abdominals, particularly the rectus abdominis along the front of your trunk, which flexes your torso toward your hips as you curl up.

Why use a decline bench instead of doing sit-ups on the floor?

Anchoring your feet higher than your head on a decline increases the range of motion and resistance, so each rep is harder and challenges the abdominals more than a flat sit-up.

Is the extra decline sit-up good for beginners?

It is more demanding than a floor sit-up, so beginners should start on a shallow decline or master flat sit-ups first, then increase the angle as their core strength improves.

How many sets and reps should I do?

For core endurance, 2–4 sets of 12–20 controlled reps works well. Increase the decline angle or slow your tempo before chasing very high rep counts.

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