RegisterJr
Legend
You did look to be able to drive your back into the bar better with the wider grip. That's an improvement in my eyes.
Don't fall into the hole, pull yourself into the hole. When I fall into the hole, my butt goes too far back and my knees go too far forward and I often miss depth. When I pull myself into the hole, my hips stay under me, my shins stay more upright, and I hit depth more easily with a more upright torso. Check my 565 double attempt versus my 585 single before the meet to see what I mean.
Another thing I see is You keep reaching back further and further with your butt in the descent. Look at swim or bolt how they break at the hips and descend straight down. That's a better path for a raw squat. You don't have to break up the move like they do, personally I can't. But I do try to squat straight down. If your body still wants to push your hips back on tough reps, try to make the next month's assistance heavily quad focused. It's clear to see you have a very strong posterior chain, a little quad may help.
And in the end, it may just be the nature of your body to lean more. This is not a bad thing either. Norton, Goggins, Super D, all had more lean than what people like to see. I just saw one of Norton's instagram videos where he got roasted by a bunch of nobodies about how much he leans. Layne doesn't care what they think or how he leans, he just gets it done.
Just saw this, thanks. I also agree about quads. I added in 3 weeks ago a front squat and quad focus day every week.
I think I'm going to keep widening my stance, and that'll help with going straight down.