Downward Dog
Downward dog is one of the most efficient single positions for the posterior chain. It stretches the calves (both gastrocnemius and soleus depending on knee position), lengthens the hamstrings, decompresses the lumbar spine, and opens the shoulders — all at once. It also doubles as a mild shoulder and thoracic mobilization when done with intention rather than passively hanging.
Setup
- Start on hands and knees with your wrists directly under your shoulders and knees under your hips.
- Spread your fingers wide and press through the base of each finger — don’t let the weight collapse into your wrists.
- Tuck your toes under.
Execution
- Exhale and press the floor away, lifting your hips up and back.
- Your body should form an inverted V-shape — hips high, heels reaching toward (but not necessarily touching) the floor.
- Keep your arms straight and externally rotate the upper arms (think: biceps toward your ears).
- Press your chest gently toward your thighs to open the thoracic spine.
- Hold for 30–60 seconds, breathing slowly. On each exhale, drive the heels a little closer to the ground.
Bent-Knee Variation (Deeper Calf Stretch)
From the full position, bend one knee and extend the other leg fully. Press the heel of the straight leg firmly toward the floor. This isolates the calf on one side at a time and allows a deeper soleus stretch. Alternate sides every 20–30 seconds.
Coaching Cues
What to feel:
- A strong pull through the back of the lower leg, especially if heels are close to the floor
- Length through the hamstrings — a pulling sensation behind the knees
- Chest moving toward the thighs as thoracic extension increases
Common mistakes:
- Rounding the upper back — focus on a long, flat spine rather than just getting heels to the floor
- Heels never working toward the floor — actively drive them down on each exhale
- Bending the elbows — keep the arms long and the shoulder blades drawing toward each other
- Locking out the knees to get heels down — a slight bend in the knee is fine; posterior tilt of the pelvis is more important
Tip
If your hamstrings are very tight, bending both knees generously lets you get the posterior pelvic tilt (hips rotating toward the ceiling) which is the key movement here — more important than straight legs.
Video and animated demos coming soon.
Programming
| Parameter | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Hold time | 30–60 seconds |
| Sets | 2–3 |
| Frequency | Daily — works well as a morning reset or post-workout cooldown |
| When to do it | Morning, after walking or running, before lower-body training |
Progressions
- Beginner: Bent knees, focus on hips reaching up and back. Heels don’t need to touch the floor.
- Intermediate: Legs straight, actively push heels toward the floor. Add the single-leg variation (pedaling) to deepen each side.
- Advanced: Elevate the feet on a step to increase the calf stretch angle. Or add a slow pike — lowering your hips toward the floor and back up for a dynamic version.