When I think of snatching I think of a phrase I have heard
used amongst weightlifters: ballet with a bar.
The technical aspects of the lift, along with the fluidity required to
propel an extremely heavy object above one’s head while catching it in a rock bottom position with locked out arms is
nothing short of majestic every single time I see it. When executed efficiently and correctly I
dare say there is no movement in all of sports more captivating than the
snatch.
The clean? Eh. No finesse there. Just brute strength. Ugly.
Blah.
I kid, I kid. Kind
of.
Unlike the snatch, in my opinion, the clean is less about
technique and more about strength and determination. The weights are always heavier, which already
indicates a need for more strength and power to be produced. A mistimed snatch or poorly executed first
pull in the snatch often times means a missed lift, whereas the clean can
sometimes be saved by sheer grit and determination. As a result I believe many lifters
fail to hit arguably the most important of all positions in the clean: the power
position.
The power position in the clean – which I refer to as
Attitude Nation Step 1 as taught to me by Jon and Jessica North, but also
commonly used by many weightlifting coaches – is where the bar and body meet
upon the athlete completing the double knee bend and beginning the “finish”. The "finish" is the point which the hips will extend and the lifter will apply as much force to
the bar as possible to allow the bar to have maximum float time. This float time then allows the lifter to use
the bar for leverage, where he/she may then VIOLENTLY pull him/herself
underneath the bar. In a clean, this
point of contact occurs ideally at the high thigh (whereas in a snatch it would
be in the hips… there are people who are hip cleaners as well, such as Donny
Shankle, but they are a rare breed. I
agree with Jon North that hip cleaners are generally born not made and if you
are one of them, God bless you).
Finding that high thigh area in the clean requires patience,
and avoiding the urge to begin to extend the hips too early and therefore
contact the bar just above the knee or in the low thigh area. This lack of patience or poorly executed
power position will inevitably result in the bar looping away from the body and
forcing the athlete to chase the bar forward.
However being patient and allowing the bar to travel further
up the body before extending your hips through the bar (or vertically depending
on your style I suppose) will allow for optimal contact on the high thigh. Now the lifter can keep the bar close and
once fully extended may begin VIOLENTLY pulling their body under the bar. Assuming the lifter is accurately continuing
to pull (what Donny Shankle calls ‘pulling through the middle’ http://donnyshankle.blogspot.com/2013/07/keep-pulling.html)
it will be much easier to receive the bar with a vertical torso and properly
balanced feet.
Here are some photos from the one and only Nat Arem (check him out at hookgrip.com). Take a look
at the power position in each sequence and where the bar is contacting the
body.
Note the power position in frame #4 |
Note the power position in frame #5 |
Note the power position in frames #5 and #6 |
Note the power position in frame #5 ... and also keep in mind that is 519.2 lbs. |
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