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Prone Band Lat Pulldown

How to Do the Floor Lying Down Band Lat Pull Down | In-Depth Guide [VISUAL LEARNERS]
Beginner

Proper Form, Common Mistakes, & Variations + Easier | Home Resistance Training

LET’S DO IT: HOW TO DO Prone Band Lat Pulldowns - FULL VERSION (5 min)

WHAT DO YOU WANT TO SEE?

QUICK DEMO

QUICK DEMO

QUICK DEMO: HOW TO DO Prone Band Lat Pulldowns - FAST VERSION (2 min)

MUSCLES THIS WORKS

MUSCLES

MAIN MUSCLES WORKED IN Prone Band Lat Pulldowns

LATISSIMUS DORSI

OTHER MUSCLES WORKED:
  • Lower and mid traps
  • Pectoralis major
  • Rhomboids
  • Serratus anterior
  • Teres major

STARTING POINTERS

Starting Pointers

WHAT WE'RE DOING TODAY

MOVE INTRO: GETTING STARTED WITH Prone Band Lat Pulldowns (2 min)

ALL WE'RE DOING:

Pull both end of the band down towards your torso, letting your elbows bend.

This is probably my favorite lat pulldown exercise. I think because you'll also feel a lot of your upper back muscles working super hard too. This is one of the few "weight training" exercises that I get pretty out of breath from. But maybe that's because I'm laying on my stomach too ;). 

This is a unique version of the lat pulldown that is done lying down on your stomach (prone). In this position, the lats, in addition to pulling the arms to the sides of the body (adducting), are also going to be working hard, along with the muscles of the back and hip, to provide a stable base for the arms to work off of. Without a machine, this exercise can be completed with a resistance band.

In standing the band is pulling the body forward - so the core, hips, and leg muscles need to hold the body still to prevent being pulled forward.

When lying on your stomach gravity is pulling down on your body. The muscles of your back, hips, and legs need to lift the weight up and hold the position against the downward pull of gravity. 

HOW TO DO THE EXERCISE

LOOKS

HOW Prone Band Lat Pulldowns SHAPE OUR BODY

Good posture, slim V waist (hourglass shape).

PROPER FORM

PROPER FORM: Prone Band Lat Pulldown

LET’S DO IT: HOW TO DO Prone Band Lat Pulldowns - FULL VERSION (5 min)

EQUIPMENT, SETS & REPS

EQUIPMENT

Main set (3: Light/Med/Heavy)
X-Heavy Band (I recommend getting this too if you plan to use resistance bands frequently).

Mat

SUGGESTED STARTING WEIGHT FOR WOMEN:

Moderate resistance bands

SETS & REPS:

2 sets of 8 reps

PACE:

Moderate pull down - with control and back stability, and slower return to start.

BODY POSITION

BODY POSITION FOR THE Floor Band Lat Pulldown

BAND: Anchored low, a few inches from the floor. A table leg works well for this. Band is coming from behind the head when lying down, your body should be positioned so that the band is taut when your arms are overhead. Arm positioning can be overhead as far as your shoulders are comfortable. This will be dependent on the length and strength of the band, where the band is anchored, and the mobility of your shoulders. You should be able to pull your upper arm down to your sides. 

BODY STANCE: Lie on your stomach on the floor. Neutral spine (includes neck).

ARMS: Arms are stretched overhead - how far depends on comfort and how much tension is on the band - the goal is to pull your upper arms all the way to your torso.

HAND/GRIP: Prone grip, palms down. Hold one end of the band in each hand. The band enters your palm from the thumb side of your hand and crosses your palm, to exit out the pinky side. The very end of the band is on your pinky side.

HOW TO DO

HOW TO DO Prone Band Lat Pulldowns

CUE: If you feel back discomfort, tighten your abdominal muscles to counter the strong pull of the lats.

Activate your back extensors and hip extensors to lift your chest and legs up off of the ground 1-2 inches. Your cervical spine should remain in neutral and stacked over your thoracic spine when it is lifted off of the floor. Your cervical muscles will contract a little bit to hold the neutral spine position against the pull of gravity on your head. 

Hold this position and pull your upper arms down to your sides, your shoulder blades will move down and in towards your spine. Your elbows will bend as your arm comes down - bending your elbows will decrease the activity of your triceps and really target your lats, but bending them too much will shorten the lever arm.

Continue moving your upper arms in until they touch the sides of your torso. 

Pause at the end of the movement and then slowly return to the starting position.

This can be a challenging exercise for the back muscles, especially the neck. Take a break by resting your head, upper back, and legs on the floor any time that you feel like you need one. Slowly work up to increasing the number of reps.

HOW TO SAFELY GET OUT OF THE EXERCISE

Return to the starting position and release the bands.

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COMMON MISTAKES

COMMON MISTAKES

WHAT TO AVOID WITH THE Floor Band Lat Pull Down

KEY TIP:

Guess what? Good news! Many avoids are the same for most movements. Once you learn the basics, there's really only a few extra avoids for each individual movement.

MISTAKES: COMMON MISTAKES TO AVOID (2 min)

1. Avoid arching low back

AVOID: Arching your low back.

WHAT TO DO:

  • Maintain a neutral spine position to prevent low back joint injury, muscle strain, or damage over time. 
  • If your ribs lower ribs flare upwards or your belly is lifted up - this indicates you are arching your low back. Your pubic bone and front hip bones should be in one plane - can check by placing your fingertips on your pubic bone and setting the base of your palm on your hip bones - your hand should be flat.
  • To prevent arching - avoid taking the arms up too far overhead: move the arms down.
avoid-arching-spine-prone-lying-banded-lat-pulldowns-home-exercise-common-mistakes

2. Avoid Hands too close

AVOID: Hands too close.

WHY NOT?

  • The hands will move in, closer to the shoulders.
  • This will move the resistance closer to the shoulder joint and the muscles will not need to work as hard.

WHAT TO DO:

  • Keep your hands about 2 inches wider than shoulder width apart.
avoid-hands-too-close-together-prone-lying-banded-lat-pulldowns-home-exercise-common-mistakes

3. Avoid Elbows Flaring Out

AVOID: Letting your elbows flare out.

WHY NOT?

  • This will decrease the muscle activity of the lats - the lats pull the upper arm in (adduct) and flaring the elbows out is the same as the upper arm being out from the side of the body (abduction).
avoid-elbows-flaring-out-prone-lying-banded-lat-pulldowns-home-exercise-proper-form

VARIATIONS

VARIATIONS

VARIATIONS OF Prone Lat Pulldowns

reverse snow angel lat pull

VARIATIONS: HOW TO CHANGE UP Prone Band Lat Pulldowns (2 min)

reverse snow angel Lat Pulldown

reverse-snow-angel-prone-lying-banded-lat-pulldowns-home-exercise-variation

MAKE IT EASIER

EASIER

MAKE THE MOVEMENT MORE DOABLE

EASIER: HOW TO MAKE Prone Band Lat Pulldowns EASIER (4 min)

legs on ground prone lat pulldown

legs on ground

Bend your knees and put a folded towel under your ankles to take any pressure off of your knee joints and low back. Leave your legs on the floor during the exercise. Keep your arms straight as you pull them down to your sides.

This will be like a reverse snow angel or pulling yourself through the water with a sweeping ½ circle arm movement. As you pull your arms down, your upper arm will rotate in and your hands will end up with your palms up. This is the internal rotation function of the latissimus dorsi muscle. 

This will decrease the activity of your hip and back extensors.

legs-on-floor-prone-lying-banded-lat-pulldowns-home-exercise-easier

torso on ground prone lat pulldown

torso on ground

Bend your knees and put a folded towel under your ankles to take any pressure off of your knee joints and low back. Leave your legs on the floor during the exercise. Keep your arms straight as you pull them down to your sides.

This will be like a reverse snow angel or pulling yourself through the water with a sweeping ½ circle arm movement. As you pull your arms down, your upper arm will rotate in and your hands will end up with your palms up. This is the internal rotation function of the latissimus dorsi muscle. 

This will decrease the activity of your hip and back extensors.

chest-head-on-floor-prone-lying-banded-lat-pulldowns-home-exercise-easier

whole body on ground Floor lat pulldown

whole body on ground

Follow the instructions in the previous two variations - this is the easiest variation.

all-body-parts-on-floor-prone-lying-banded-lat-pulldowns-home-exercise-easier

WHAT WE'RE DOING TODAY

WHAT & WHY

BENEFITS OF TRAINING THE LATISSIMUS DORSI

WHAT: WHAT Lat Pulldown IS ALL ABOUT (2 min)

WHAT

Lat pulldowns are different from lat pushdowns in that you let your elbows bend, rather than keeping the arms straight. This motion lets you use more resistance than in a pushdown AND reduces how much the triceps contribute to the exercise.

Pulldowns work many muscles of the back and shoulders, with a focus on the largest muscle of the back, the latissimus dorsi - often referred to as the “lats”, while minimizing the work done by the triceps. Lat pulldowns involve stabilizing the torso while pulling the arms down and in towards the sides of the body (extension and adduction). This exercise trains posture and core stability, during the movement of the shoulder blade and arm.

WHY BOTHER DOING IT?

WHY

WHY DO WE EVEN CARE?

BENEFITS: WHY BOTHER DOING Prone Band Lat Pulldowns (3 min)

TRAINS YOU TO LIFT MORE WEIGHT + REDUCE INJURY RISK

The latissimus dorsi is a large flat muscle that runs across your back from about mid spine all the way down to the pelvis, it crosses the bottom part of your shoulder blade and runs under your armpit to attach to the upper arm bone. The latissimus dorsi can pull the arm down and back (extension), in towards the body (adduction), and internally rotate the arm. The attachments to the spine and the pelvis make it an important muscle for holding the torso still - it is like a large back brace of muscle and fascia (fascia is thin, strong connective tissue).

Lat pulldowns involve stabilizing the torso while pulling the arms down. Training your core muscles, including the large lat to hold your torso still will allow you to move more weight and decrease your risk for injuries. 

BALANCE OUT OUR COMMONLY TIGHT FRONTS

Not only do the lats stabilize the spine and move the arms, they also pull the shoulder blades down the back. This is important for healthy shoulder movement and good posture. Most of our daily activities involve working in front of us, using the muscles of the front of the body. The muscles on the front of the body pull the shoulders and the shoulder blades forward. It is important to balance this out by working the muscles of the back of the body that pull the shoulders and shoulder blades back. 

TRAIN WHAT CONNECTS OUR UPPER & LOWER BODY - SEEMS LIKE A SMART THING TO DO?

The latissimus dorsi connects the upper body with the lower body, it is broad and covers more area than any other back muscle.

As such, it helps coordinate something called reciprocal movement of the arms and legs during walking and running, sports - like batting, golf, tennis. If that term is confusing, it was to me! I was like recipro-what? Insert raised eyebrow. This is just a technical term to describe the way in which we naturally move our bodies when doing things like walking- meaning when your right foot takes a step forward, your left arm naturally swings forward as well. And vice versa. This is what creates balanced movement for us along with a little momentum that helps propel us forward so that it doesn't require as much effort to move our bodies through space. 

In more scientific speak, the force is transmitted from the ground, up the legs across the low back and to the arms - this is the cross pattern - one leg to the opposite arm - and the lat plays an important role in this. If this connection is weak it leads to decreased power, speed, poor posture, poor alignment of the lower body. 

The lat also plays an important role in walking and running - it helps to coordinate the reciprocal movement between the arm and leg movement. When the lats are weak or tight, it can affect the activity of the gluteus maximus - resulting in a shorter walking stride - shorter steps because the leg is not moving behind the body as far. The lats connect the lower body to the upper body to transfer energy from your legs to your arms - think about swinging a bat or a golf club, you plant your foot and rotate the upper body to transfer all of the energy up and across to the other arm to hip the ball.

EVERYDAY LIFE

EVERYDAY LIFE &

MUSCLE FUNCTION

HOW WE USE OUR LATS MUSCLES IN EVERYDAY LIFE

IN LIFE: EVERYDAY WAYS WE USE our lat muscles (4 min)

1. PULLING THE ARM DOWN (EXTENSION FROM A FLEXED POSITION)

  • Swimming
  • Cross country skiing
  • Chopping wood
  • Golf swing
  • Driving - turning the steering wheel

2. PULLING YOUR BODY UP WHILE KEEPING THE ARMS STABLE

  • Using crutches
  • Pushing up out of a chair
  • Pushing yourself out of a pool (hands on edge of the pool)

3. MOVES AND STABILIZES THE SHOULDER BLADE - DURING ALL ARM MOVEMENTS

  • Depresses (pulls down) the shoulder blade
  • Holds the shoulder blade down to provide a stable base for your arm to work off of

4. HOLDS THE TORSO IN A HEALTHY UPRIGHT POSTURE

5. STABILIZES THE LOW BACK

HOW TO FEEL WHAT MUSCLE IS WORKING

How to Feel What Muscle is Working

Sitting on a chair with a hard seat. Take your opposite hand and place it on your back (towards the side of the body) about 5 inches lower than the armpit. Place the hand on the side you will be working on the seat of the chair. Push down into the seat as if you were going to lift your bottom up off the seat. You should feel the latissimus dorsi contract.

SCIENCY STUFF

SCIENCY STUFF

SPIFFILICIOUS FACTS ABOUT MUSCLES & MOVES

This movement works the muscles of the back used to bring the arm down (against resistance) from an abducted position, to adduct the arm (move in towards the side of the body). This is a good exercise for training good posture and core stability, during the movement of the shoulder blade and arm. Along with the lower and mid traps, pectoralis major, rhomboids, and serratus anterior, the latissimus dorsi moves the shoulder blade down and inward as it pulls the arm down and in. This action will reinforce good movement patterns to keep the shoulder joint and soft tissues healthy.

The latissimus dorsi connects to the spine and pelvis through a strong layer of connective tissue, called the thoracolumbar fascia. Interestingly, the thoracolumbar fascia also attaches to the gluteus maximus, traps, and hamstrings. This connection ties in with the stability of the shoulder to the spine, the pelvis and the hips. The latissimus dorsi can pull the arm down and back, pull the arm in towards the body, internally rotate the arm, move and hold the scapula down, and when the arms are straight down and stable - it can lift the pelvis - as in crutch walking. The latissimus dorsi also plays a role in helping to expand the rib cage during inhalation (breathing in). It is an interesting muscle because, despite all that it can do, it depends on other muscles to help it out. So even though it is a very important muscle that can do a lot, it is not the sole muscle for any one of its functions. Because of this, the muscle can be in reconstruction or wound repair surgeries.

The lat attaches to the thoracolumbar fascia, so when the lat is tight it can pull the pelvis into an anterior tilt. An anterior pelvic tilt shortens the iliopsoas muscle - which is a hip flexor - when the iliopsoas muscle is tight it can limit hip extension, and lead to gluteus max weakness.

There is a bit of a chicken and egg thing here because weak glutes can cause an anteriorly tilted pelvis which can cause tightness of the iliopsoas and lats. it is the tight or hypertonic iliopsoas that limits the hip extension.

The posterior oblique sling is made up of the lat, thoracolumbar fascia, and the contralateral gluteus maximus. The thought (the research varies on the exact mechanism) is that when the arm moves forward and the contralateral leg moves forward (the reciprocal movement) the lat and glute are stretched - and the fascia is stretched. This increased tension on the muscles and fascia builds up kinetic energy in the tissues. The energy is released as the muscles shorten.

You can kind of feel this if you pull your finger back as far as possible and release it - it bounced back to the neutral position.

The lats run under the arm and internally rotate the upper arm. In a slouched posture the shoulders are forward and the upper arm is internally rotated. Tons of people have tight lats - they get stretched when you extend the arm up overhead, lengthen the spine, and with a posterior pelvic tilt. Many undertrained muscles are tight. There used to be a common belief that tight muscles were strong muscles and weak muscles were losers. This is not true. You can have weak and tight muscles.

ALLLL MUSCLES & WHEN

ALL MUSCLES WORKING & WHEN DURING THE Floor band Lat Pulldown

The arms begin in abduction, neutral shoulder position (no internal or external rotation). In this position the shoulder blade is rotated upward and pulled slightly into protraction - this is passive - no muscle activity because the resistance of the band is holding the arm in this position. 

The back extensors - from the cervical spine to the pelvis, and the hip extensors - gluteus maximus and hamstrings work to hold the neck, upper body, and legs slightly off of the floor.

The latissimus dorsi and teres major work concentrically to pull the arm down from the starting position, and the lower fibers of the pectoralis major also help when there is enough resistance. As the arm comes down the biceps contribute to bend the elbows. The mid trap, lower trap, rhomboid, and serratus anterior work to move the shoulder blade to control the positioning of the shoulder joint, including retracting (pulling towards the spine) and depressing (pulling down the back), and rotating the shoulder blade down and to hold the shoulder blade to provide a stable base for the arm to move off of. 

To return to the starting position the same muscles will work eccentrically to reverse the motions and control the pull of the band as the arms are lifted back up. 

PIN IT FOR LATER!

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