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Best Landmine Exercises to Build Muscle and Boost Barbell Workouts

Flip your barbell workout on its head for a new way to train.

BELIEVE IT OR NOT, there's more than one way to heft a barbell. You might be used to gripping a bar by its shaft, counting on the rough knurling to help you hold onto the implement as you add increasingly heavy loads on both sides of its sleeves for bilateral lifts. Triceps Rope With Handle

Best Landmine Exercises to Build Muscle and Boost Barbell Workouts

You can unlock and entirely new way to train (and potential strength, muscle, and athletic gains, too) when you grab hold of one of the sleeves and heft it up off the floor. For stability's sake, it's best to secure the other end of the bar into an anchor point. Those are (generally) called landmines—and that's where this style of training takes its name.

Landmine training will give you an opportunity to shift your routine away from the typical deadlifts, squats, and bench presses for your strength training plan—while also allowing you to explore those moves from a new perspective. "It's a perfect way to change up your training, and a method that's growing in popularity for a variety of reasons," says Men's Health fitness director Ebenezer Samuel, C.S.C.S.

There's more to know about landmine training than the fact that barbells can (and should) be turned on their sides for your workouts. Here, Samuel breaks down everything you need to know about landmine training, from the right way to set up in a pinch to the best landmine exercises for your full-body workout.

The most important tool for landmine exercises is a barbell, which you'll need whether you have access to a landmine attachment or not. These attachments allow you to slide one end of the barbell into them, and provide an axis for movement as you hold onto the other end with one or both hands. Some landmine attachments are connected to squat racks, while others are free-standing or slot into the center holes of weight plates.

You don't need a landmine attachment to perform landmine exercises, however. All you need is wall with a corner. Stick one end of the barbell into the corner, and you can prop up the weight without pushing the bar forward. For your paint job's sake, make sure to put a towel or some other buffer between the barbell and the wall.

Once you have your barbell in position, you can add weight plates to the exposed end of the barbell for load. Depending on the exercise, you'll either hold the barbell sleeve in one or both hands or use other tools to manipulate your grip.

The landmine's biggest benefits are that it's a versatile piece of equipment that allows you to perform a wide range of exercises in novel ways, especially compared to the standard variations you've likely learned through traditional strength training practices.

This is because of the unique position of the barbell in relation to the floor, which changes something called the force curve, according to Samuel. Standard free weight exercises (think bench press, squat, and deadlift with barbells or dumbbells) are on a constant position on this curl, since you're lifting the weight straight up and down on a linear path. As Samuel points out, a typical barbell deadlift at 135 pounds will continue to present that same challenge throughout the lift. When you change the length of the lever, as you do with the landmine by raising one end of the barbell off the floor, you change its position on the force curve.

"The landmine weighs the most when the load is closer to the ground because the barbell lever gets more of a challenge from gravity," says Samuel. "As you lift that weight farther and farther up, it actually gets increasingly lighter because the lever gets shorter."

This unique setup introduces stability and balance challenges, compared to typical barbell exercises. You can more easily work unilaterally (on one side of the body at a time), and you can perform overhead and explosive movements without putting the same level of strain on your shoulders and back as you would with traditional barbell movements.

Start your landmine practice with this tough five-exercise workout from Samuel. The routine is designed to check every box you'd want in a training session: a pushing movement (chest and shoulders), a pulling movement (back and biceps), a hinge (glutes), a knee-dominant move (quads), and a core movement. Perform each exercise for three to four sets of 10 to 12 reps.

Brett Williams, a senior editor at Men's Health, is a NASM-CPT certified trainer and former pro football player and tech reporter. You can find his work elsewhere at Mashable, Thrillist, and other outlets.

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Best Landmine Exercises to Build Muscle and Boost Barbell Workouts

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