Where the box sumo pulls like seated on a box?? Or pulled off a box?
Seen Laura Phelps do theses they are hard at least for me
Start shifting to sumo, but stay flexible. If the hips aren't firing, pull conventional that day. Or stay light and incorporate pause sumo.
I'm still struggling with my squat so I can't really help there lol.
I like Rodja's idea. Pull conv for primary dl and have a secondary pause sumo day. That way you can reintroduce your stronger stance and hammer technique at the same time. Then next block transition into sumo as your primary.
The hip issue is the reason I mainly do speed pulls or pause. I haven't pulled heavy in probably 6 weeks even though I'm in meet prep.
Makes me wonder how the big sumo guys pull it off long term. Must just have that good of structure and genetics.
I think it depends how big your waist is compared to your hips.
Really? That is an interesting idea
Notice how Dan Green has a thick waist? Big, thick abs help to stabilize the spine and hips.
So my power gut could help me with sumo? Lol. I do train my abs very hard and often anyways
Power gut helps everything.
And to think cutting was about to start again lol

It's nice to prep for meet conditions squatting and pulling in the same day, but you know as well as anyone that we must be mindful of what we can recover from. I love that you're hitting upper four days a week. Gonna be the resident Swoleapotamus in his natural habitat.
So I'm happy with where I'm at in training so far. But I am finding it hard to get my body primed for squats. My left side is still very shut off and just doesn't fire right. Any suggestions welcome. I know I wanna try full body but either way I need to spend more time warming up to squat over any other lift.
When I had my right side shut off, I basically started over with 135 to a box. I kept my angle at roughly 30 degrees and made sure I fired off with my hams and glutes. If it didn't, the set didn't count. I spent time outside of the gym mobilizing my ankles (roller near the Achilles while moving the foot into dorsiflexion and plantar flexion). Piriformis has practically dead and used a TENS to wake it up. Unilateral movements with hip oscillation (BSS, lunges) along with implementing the hamstring curl. Lastly, laugh all you want, but yoga.
The Duffin warmup seems to make a good difference often in feel for me, especially the BSS and his glute activation/hip shift movement where you are kneeling on one knee and the other knee is set over the angle flared out wide as you shift back and forth.
Basically some of the same movements Rodja just suggested, to mirror. A little roll/mash of the piriformis couldn't hurt either (could even be hitting some microband pullaparts to warm the shoulders as you roll/mash it simultaneously).
Badass thing about getting warm for squat before bench is you hips and shoulders are ready to rock generally come bench.
I think you sound like you know what you need to do but it's more a matter of not being as consistent as you could be. Which is probably all of us lol
Can you share a little more how this all laid out in a session? I know some of it is postural as you pointed out before so I've doing hip shift work pre squat, not as much consistent tho.
I need to mobilize ankles I do none lol. Beside basic stretches.
My bad side is my right and that is shut off at the periformis, tens barely touches it, just my left is the side I can't use when I lift, and that side responds very well to ten. The right side is the tighter side that takes most of the load. I'll start over again if I need to get things going right again.
Looks good man. Keep at it, full body will be tough for a couple weeks then you'll start to adapt.
Either mobilize between lower and bench variant or adjust setup. This change is more specific to meet day anyway, so it's a good change.
Its not a mobility issues between lifts. Its that daily mobility isn't helping them loosen up between sessions. They are tightening up more and more even with the deload. Today was bad going in and just opening them up didn't help. However still performed.
I agree if I can make it work with my issues its a good change. Its just getting to a stable point I have to figure out.
Starting to get bicep tendinitis I've never had since I quit chain supported gms. Gonna need to watch my squats closer to make sure it's not coming from there.
I those of you who have rehabbed stuff. If I have firing issues on one side, would more often activation help or should I space it out? I ask this bc if lifting to often and trying to activate is shutting me down more. I will adjust. All I want is to perform and restore myself back to healthy.
Bands became my best friend when my lats weren't firing. I'd attach one to a rack and go thru the initial 1/3 of a row/pulldown while focusing on allowing the appropriate musculature to stretch. Play around with your elbow positioning and make sure to maintain the double chin position to keep the shoulders packed.
Big fan of this one. I'm still addressing my left hip sadly. It's better but not 100%. Wondering if 4 times per week is to much with activation and squatting/pulling and I should really be at two times per week
It doesn't have to be full on pre-training activation. I still struggle with my right glute/piriformis and will do some sets of just contracting and relaxing the muscle.
Watched Darden's recent strong man Sunday vid (been following him religiously for the last year and a half) and he has been having ongoing issues with his left Lat (torn a year ago)/rear delt/ pec tie in, been rehabbing a torn bicep for last 6 months, he has Chemo treatment every Friday for his IBS, and has to do TONS of mobility/prehab/rehab. He's 38 and broken tons of bones, torn a lot of muscles, and is pretty beat up.
He has been going to bed with TENS on his rear delt/lat, turning it back on every hour or so, mashes between every set, does a lot of Super D work and flossing, uses ART tools while he works at his computer nightly. TENS unit is popping as he drives to the gym. Tons of progressive warmup sets, and more than enough autoregulation no matter what the original plan for the day was.
He's very recently boxsquatted ~700 in suit bottoms again, ran a 700lb yolk, back to loading a 345 stone to 58in, benching nearly 400 raw, just hit a 292 log and pulled 608+105 chain in loose bottoms. Weighing about 250-260.
That dude is activating and mashing between every set it seems. Before a RPE9 sometimes he will put the TENS on for a full song inbetween sets just to be careful. It's nuts, but what it really makes me realize is you really are only limited by how much effort you are willing to put into it.
TLDR: I know you aren't looking to live your life rehabbing just to lift weights, but I think whatever you are willing to put into it is what you can expect to handle, workload-wise.