drtbear1967
Musclechemistry Board Certified Member
by Michael Warren
Know the anatomy of the traps and you'll know the best and most effective exercises. The trapezius is made up of 3 regions: upper (shrug shoulders up), middle (squeeze shoulder blades together), lower (bring shoulder blades down). The upper region originates on the back of the skull and connects along the spine and ligaments of the vertebrae of the neck. It then inserts on the outer part of the clavicle. The upper trapezius works by: • Shrugging the shoulders upwards. Think shrugs.
• Extending the neck backwards. Think neck extensions.
• Rotating the shoulders upwards as you go past 90 degrees. Think laterals or overhead flyes.
The middle and lower trap originates along the mid spine and inserts along the outer to inner part of the shoulder blades. The lower trapezius works by: • Retracting the scapula. Think of squeezing the shoulder blades together during seated rows.
• Lowering the shoulders or scapular depression. Think of a reverse shrug using a lat pulldown.
Another point to consider is the muscle fiber makeup of the traps. They're made up of 45% fast twitch and 55% slow twitch muscle fibers. This means they should be trained with both heavy weight and low reps as well as lighter weight and high reps. Half the time you should be training traps with 6-12 reps at 60-80% of your 1RM. The other half you should be training traps with 12-30 reps at 50-60% of your 1RM (to near failure). Finally, regarding where trap activation is greatest on a deadlift, if you look at the deadlift as 3 different parts you'll see the beginning (floor to mid-shin), middle (mid-shin to mid-thigh) and end phase (mid-thigh to lock out). Upper traps are maximally activated during the middle phase. So rack pulls starting at the mid-thigh are a good addition to target peak upper trap activation.
Know the anatomy of the traps and you'll know the best and most effective exercises. The trapezius is made up of 3 regions: upper (shrug shoulders up), middle (squeeze shoulder blades together), lower (bring shoulder blades down). The upper region originates on the back of the skull and connects along the spine and ligaments of the vertebrae of the neck. It then inserts on the outer part of the clavicle. The upper trapezius works by: • Shrugging the shoulders upwards. Think shrugs.
• Extending the neck backwards. Think neck extensions.
• Rotating the shoulders upwards as you go past 90 degrees. Think laterals or overhead flyes.
The middle and lower trap originates along the mid spine and inserts along the outer to inner part of the shoulder blades. The lower trapezius works by: • Retracting the scapula. Think of squeezing the shoulder blades together during seated rows.
• Lowering the shoulders or scapular depression. Think of a reverse shrug using a lat pulldown.
Another point to consider is the muscle fiber makeup of the traps. They're made up of 45% fast twitch and 55% slow twitch muscle fibers. This means they should be trained with both heavy weight and low reps as well as lighter weight and high reps. Half the time you should be training traps with 6-12 reps at 60-80% of your 1RM. The other half you should be training traps with 12-30 reps at 50-60% of your 1RM (to near failure). Finally, regarding where trap activation is greatest on a deadlift, if you look at the deadlift as 3 different parts you'll see the beginning (floor to mid-shin), middle (mid-shin to mid-thigh) and end phase (mid-thigh to lock out). Upper traps are maximally activated during the middle phase. So rack pulls starting at the mid-thigh are a good addition to target peak upper trap activation.