Forearm Workouts

I don't have much to do for my forearms, so it seems I usually just leave them out of my weekly routine. This is a very bad idea for a person like me, because I am a tournament tennis playing and wrists/forearms are a HUGE (probably the most used) muscle in tennis. I goto a local gym, and im looking for some excersises for my forearms. something done w/ a barbell or dumbells would be ideal, and please be descriptive don't just give me some excersise ive never heard of and expect me (a 17 year old) to know what you're talking about. Thanks a lot in advance
dan
 
If there was ever any advice I could ever give a young strength athlete would be not to do any forearm-specific lifts, like forearm curls. There are some great exercises you can do that can explode forearm growth.

First, if you do chin-ups, do them holding onto a towel. I have seen many guys using straps when doing chins... This is a waste of an opportunity to develop forearm strength. Using a towel makes it work 3 times harder.


Farmers walk will absolutely demolish your forearms. It is one of the best exercises out there. Very simple... Just grab a couple of hundred lb. dumbbells and walk with them. Give yourself a goal destination and try to walk there and back to the rack without setting the weights down.

Here's Strongman Competitor Chad Coy doing the Farmer's Walk with 330 pounds in each hand.

Zottman curls will seriously hit the brachioradialus. Have you ever tried those? Start with a pair of DB's, at your side, palms facing out, curl the weight to your shoulders where palms are facing your shoulders, and then rotate the DB's till your palms are facing back out, and then lower the weight.


Last but not least is the One-arm barbell curl. Start with an empty bar, hand centered on the bar, just curl it like you would a DB. This will work core stabilizers AND it will work your forearms a lot harder because they have to work to keep the weight from wobbling.



All of these will hit your forearms really well... you will be PROUD of the forearms you get from doing them in a very short amount of time! Keep me posted on your progress.
 
thanks for the help, and I'll defanitely try a few of those. Don't see the barbell curls anywhere in my immediate future, seeing as I think I could probably do that once, and my gym doesnt have any smaller straight bars. But I'll figure it out.
Thanks again
Dan
 
You might want to try a wrist roller. I made one when I was a teenager from a 1" piece of dowel, a screw eye, a rope and a snap hook. I still have it 40 years later. I rolled the rope up and down once with my palms down and once with my palms up (equalled about 25-30 'writ curls' each way). I used the basement steps in my parents house to rest my forearms on (they were the kind with open backs). I stated with a small weight and added 1-1/4 pounds every day, until I could not complete the rolling up and down and then backed off some and worked back up. I played baseball and after a couple of years was the best batter on my high school baseball team. Although I have not used my wrist roller for decades, to this day I still have the strongest grip of just about anybody in the gym.
 
yah I actually had been thinking about making one. probably a good idea. Should help my tennis game a lot. (like 70% wrist)
Dan
 
JP-
Just out of curiosity, why would you never recommend this? I'm always interested in getting a different take on things.

If there was ever any advice I could ever give a young strength athlete would be not to do any forearm-specific lifts, like forearm curls.
 
They are a waste of time. It is a small muscle group that gets worked plenty with other lifts without having to be specifically targetted, and I can't tell you how many guys I have see doing forearm curls in the gyms, where I or my clients do none, and all have rather large developed forearms. Honestly, if you can do some of these modifications you will notice a difference. I am also against using straps when doing dead lifts, snatch, powercleans, etc, for the same reason.

A lot of trainees actually slow down their progress by performing direct arm training specifically designed to cause hypertrophy in the "little muscles". Many times the smaller muscles are heavily used in most basic, heavy, multi-joint exercises so much so that any further direct stimulus becomes counter productive. Direct training of smaller muscles tends to become more necessary at higher levels of strength development when work capacities are higher and when "little muscles" can be limiters of performance, like your triceps in the bench press.
 
hi there!
one of the essential elements of any strengthening exercise for specific areas is knowing first of all, its level of flexibily. and this level of flexibilty is not the muscular portion but the joints and its attachments.
when recommending exercises for the forearm i have people squeeze a ball of socks, yep. socks rolled together. socks are soft enough to squeeze the finger together to make a fist. the easier it gets, you simple add another sock. sock come in different fabric. of course wool and cotton atheltic socks are harder oppose to nylon. this methods allows to work both the flexibilty of the fingers and the strength of the forearms.
another exercise is simple hanging from a chinup bar. using a relaxed, breathing posture, you hang as long as you can. once the burn is felt you let go and do hand stretching exercises of open-close five to eight times and then making a fist by tightening the forearm not the fist and rotating inward and outwards, then up and down. the movements all coming from the foearm. you repeat this for two to three times but each time you do it, you need to hang a little longer than before.
although many people feel they don't have grip strength, everyone does. this is simply thinking what would happen if you fell off a cliff and the only thing saving you is a branch you are holding on two.
because you play tennis, your forearm flexiblity is just as important as the strength. this is because of the energy that is generated through your backside that travels all the way to your racket. if there is too much strength used, the power of your serving or hitting would be limited. power comes from a "path of least resistance. the transfer of energy is a quick burst. here is the example i use for my students. get a towel and flick it to make a "whipping" sound. then wet half of the towel and whip it. the weight will make it slower even if there is a craking sound. it is not as crisp. same thing with the transfer of energy when playing tennis. okay, i getting off the subject.
there are books and writings about the transfer of human energy. there are also chinese martial internal arts that teach this. the basics again of strenthening comes from its flexibilty.
sorry if i got carried away. it would much easier if i could work with you here and explain. all exercises that deal with forearms are good. you need to decide what is best.
good health to you.
dat's it for now!
aloha!
mikey q.
 
one of the essential elements of any strengthening exercise for specific areas is knowing first of all, its level of flexibily. and this level of flexibilty is not the muscular portion but the joints and its attachments.


I disagree. How does having greater flexibility have any bearing on the range of motion? Stretch your joint tissue and it is like stretching your favorite sweater... joints aren't supposed to stretch too much. They are for keeping our bones together. Lets use people who practice yoga as an example... How many yogis do you think had to do a 40 meters dash under 5 seconds, or take a hit from a 300 pound behemoth, or serve a tennis ball over 100 mph, or pitch a fast ball, or run a hurdle course? If you were an athlete the only flexibility you need is within the set points of the required range of motion of the motion you need to perform. Going beyond that can actually possibly set you up for injury. If a pitchers shoulder is too flexible, he will injure his shoulder more often than not.

I also know a lot of rock climbers who have huge forearms and not one of them has overly flexible hands. In fact, that would be a detriment to them!

Here is a quote from Strength and Conditioning coach and physical therapist, Bill Hartman:

When planning an athlete's flexibility training you must also consider specific movement patterns, speed of movement, and loads which are not addressed with static forms of flexibility training.

Ideal methods in this case include full ROM strength training and isometric stretching which promotes flexibility-strength especially at end ROM, and progressive, dynamic stretches in which the athlete performs movements near and at end ROM at progressively faster speeds to develop flexibility-speed capabilities. These types of activities also reduce the difference between passive and active flexibility (flexibility deficit).

A low flexibility deficit promotes injury prevention. Static stretching promotes a flexibility reserve against unexpected movements beyond normal ROM, but does not affect the flexibility deficit. Full ROM strength training,dynamic stretches, and isometric stretching will increase both static (passive) and dynamic (active) flexibility.

All methods of flexibility training is not created equal. There are times an places where each method may be ideal.

In regard to static stretching before activity...
Static stretching has been shown to reduce power output in vertical jump tests. Therefore it is not recommended prior to activities which require any significant levels of power. It is also not systemic, but rather isolative in nature as a warm-up and therefore may be insufficient as a form of warm-up whereas dynamic stretches tend to be more full body exercise which increases systemic body temperature (based on sweating patterns) and can be performed in more sport specific manners in preparation for specific activities.
 
hi there!
a basic simple reply about flexibilty.
what permits movement? what provides movement?
now let's look at gymnast and bodybuilders. which posses greater overall strength?
another example: olympic lifters and powerlifters.
which one posses awesome power?
now let's look at the mind of understanding.
flexibilty permits movement. without it your movements are limited.
Flexibilty is an act of freedom to possibilities...range of motion is comfort worked slowly to its fullest.
learn more about it, and you will understand it!
exercise it and you will realize it!
dat's it for now!
mikey q.
 
Quiocho said:
hi there!
a basic simple reply about flexibilty.
what permits movement? what provides movement?
now let's look at gymnast and bodybuilders. which posses greater overall strength?
another example: olympic lifters and powerlifters.
which one posses awesome power?
now let's look at the mind of understanding.
flexibilty permits movement. without it your movements are limited.
Flexibilty is an act of freedom to possibilities...range of motion is comfort worked slowly to its fullest.
learn more about it, and you will understand it!
exercise it and you will realize it!
dat's it for now!
mikey q.

I think you misunderstand me. I am not underselling flexibility. On the contrary I think it is crucial. Did you read the quote from Bill Hartman about the "flexibility deficit?" What I am questioning is your claim about static stretching. One of the best moves you can do to increase flexibility in your legs, hips, hams, calves, lower back is a lunge, or a squat, or an overhead squat. Increase flexibility by warming up with dynamic moves. Doing stretches on your hands are not going to increase your forearm size either. You need to overload a muscle to make it grow. Basic principles of strength training.
 
aloha again!
static stretching was not in mind. because of my work with exercise intervention, prevention, inner health education and working with youths, athletes, rehab, and seniors, i try try not to stress dynamic stretching. you burnup to much energy.
the basics of stretching is of a pyscho-physical achievement, rooted in the chemistry of the body.
from my work, the greatest movment for increase flexibilty is breathing. knowing how use the breath to move the joints and joint attachments, creats open passages to neuro-muscular facilitaion or awakening. within the joints are the message transporters to the brain. the better the sensation the more the response from muscle fibers. this promoting increase strength gains progressively.
keeping the hand flexible keeps the whole arm stronger.
have you ever seen an internal martial artist holding a 25lb. glass ball in the air by using an open palm hand with fingers stretched out? This great power does not come from static stretching but from simple opening and closing of the hand.
now as you said, "you need to overload a muscle to make it grow." does this mean to grow in size or in health? does the size determine the strength?
an average chimpanzee is stronger than most strong man and it does not have big muscles.
The more flexible you are, the greater you physcial and mental health will be. There is much more than the mere intellectual knowledge to the principles of strength-fitness.
exercise is a dynamic process. but one must understand its true significane for it to be real.
okay, dat's it for now!
aloha!
mikey
 
Bumping to the top since forearms are being discussed again. :)
 
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