FRONT SQUAT
The front squat lowers the demands on your hips and hams and shifts the emphasis to your quads. The position of the bar forces you to maintain a more erect body position, which also highly engages your deep core musculature. It’s not uncommon to feel sore in your obliques and transverse abdominis after a hard front squat session.
BODYWEIGHT SQUAT
The bodyweight squat has similar benefits because it allows you to keep an upright body position, again emphasizing your quads. Using the Tabata protocol – eight, 20-second bouts of work followed by 10 seconds of rest – allows you to log a relatively high volume of reps in a short period of time. If you keep the pace high but controlled, you will likely notch 120 reps or more.
SQUAT HOLD
You’ll finish the workout with three, minute-long squat holds. These can be done against a wall if you’re really trashed but you should strive to perform them in open space. For your first go, get your thighs below parallel and hold. If you fail before 60 seconds, stand up, shake it out and get right back to it. Your goal should be to hold for the full 60. On each subsequent set, it’s permissible to hold your squat a little higher. Trust us…that quarter squat on your last set will feel like you’re holding 400 pounds across your back.
People are going to skip leg day from time to time. We can’t help that. But we can help tighten the noose on the list of available excuses. So you’re short on time? How about one killer quad workout that calls for 17 minutes of total work?
THE QUAD WORKOUT
Exercise
Sets
Reps
Front Squat
3
10
Bodyweight Squat
1
Tabata2
Squat Hold
3
60 sec.
1 Using your 8-10RM, perform five front squats every minute, on the minute for 10 straight minutes.
2 Immediately after your last set of five with the front squat, perform 20 seconds of work followed by 10 seconds of rest, eight times.
–Rest 1 minute after your Tabata squats.
–Rest 1 minute between squat holds.