…are far more effective for glute activation than banded side steps or clamshells.
Because they load the glutes in a lengthened position.
So the key is to get a nice stretch in the glutes to create:
✅ Hip Internal Rotation
✅ Hip Flexion
So that way you can use the glutes in their role to contract and create:
✅ Hip External Rotation
✅ Hip Extension
Here’s my all-time favorite glute activation drill that uses this exact principle 👇
Split-Stance RDL with Rotation
It’s highly effective AND adjustable to your hip mobility.
Start with just body weight - you’ll feel it immediately.
✅ How to do it:
•Slight split stance: 90% weight on front leg
•Back toes lightly touching for balance
•Knees bent ~15–20%
•Slight torso rotation toward front leg (zipper line toward stance leg)
•3-point (tripod) foot contact
Now, slowly hinge forward over that front leg
👉 Keep the same knee bend and heavy on front leg
👉 Stop when you feel a 3/10 stretch in the glute. Don’t go down more than this
👉 Push your foot through the earth to come up rather than trying to just stand up or lock out your knee
🔁 Repeat.
Done right, this will light up your glute like few other exercises.
Even just bodyweight is enough if your mechanics are dialed in.
I have never had someone not feel their glutes a lot if they do this properly.
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This is a key missing piece to many people’s hip mobility work.
There are two primary phases to muscles: Concentric (shortening) actions and eccentric (elongation) actions.
It’s common to see concentric hip mobility-focused work where people are doing exercises actively working against resistance to get into a given range of motion.
There's lots of information on what to do if you have tight hip flexors, but what a lot of it misses is the difference when issues are only on one side: