Lat Pull-Down with Hip Hinge
This exercise combines a lat pull-down pattern with a hip hinge, training the posterior chain as an integrated unit. It is particularly useful in hamstring rehab programs because it teaches the hamstrings to work in coordination with the lats and glutes during hip extension.
Setup
- Anchor a resistance band at a high point (top of a door frame, pull-up bar, or cable machine).
- Stand facing the anchor, holding the band with both hands at shoulder height.
- Hinge at the hips, pushing your butt back while keeping a flat back and slight knee bend.
- As you hinge forward, pull the band down toward your hips, squeezing the lats.
- Return to standing by driving through the hips while controlling the band back up.
- Perform 10–12 reps.
Coaching Cues
What to feel:
- The hamstrings and glutes loading during the hinge
- The lats engaging as you pull the band down
- A connected feeling from the hands through the back to the hips
Common mistakes:
- Rounding the lower back during the hinge — keep a proud chest and neutral spine
- Pulling the band with the arms only instead of coordinating with the hip hinge
- Hinging too deep before you have the hamstring flexibility to maintain a flat back
Tip
Think of the pull-down and the hinge as one synchronized movement. As the hips push back, the hands pull down. As the hips drive forward, the hands return up.
Video and animated demos coming soon.
Programming
| Parameter | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Reps | 10–12 |
| Sets | 2–3 |
| Frequency | 3 times per week |
| When to do it | Hamstring rehab routine, lower body focus |
Progressions
- Beginner: Light band; small hinge range.
- Intermediate: Moderate band; full hinge with slow tempo.
- Advanced: Heavy band; single-leg hinge variation.