The Pros and Cons of Incorporating Cleans into Your Workout
Multi-joint Movement Involves Many Muscle Groups
While the clean is not a simple lift to master, it offers benefits for many trainees. Let's take a look at some of the pros and cons of this exercise, and then you can decide for yourself if it's right for you.
Pros of the Clean
The clean is a complex, multi-joint movement that requires you to simultaneously engage the large muscles of your thighs, glutes, lower back, upper back, and shoulders. In addition, your biceps, forearms, calves, and chest receive somewhat less direct stimulation via the clean. With all of this muscle moving at once, you can work up to using some fairly massive weights on the clean, and it provides a quick, efficient workout for your whole body. Done for high reps, the clean will also have you huffing and puffing, meaning that it works your heart and lungs, as well.
Aside from providing solid full-body exercise, the clean can be useful for people who want to participate in Olympic weightlifting. The clean is essentially the first half of the clean and jerk, one of two competitive lifts used in Olympic lifting, meaning that the clean is a great choice for a lifter that's having trouble with the first part of his lift. For other athletes, such as football players, the clean can be used as a strength builder and an overall conditioning tool.
Cons of the Clean
While the clean offers many benefits, it also has its drawbacks. Chief among them are that it is a technically challenging lift and requires a lot of practice before a lifter can safely start piling on the weight. In addition, the clean involves high-velocity muscular contractions and extreme body positions while the trainee is subjected to the forces of a heavy barbell. These attributes make the clean much more likely to cause injury than traditional bodybuilding or powerlifting exercises performed with controlled movements.
Aside from the difficulty and injury issues, the clean also fails to provide targeted work for any particular bodypart. So, while it can help you gain strength in general, it won't do a whole lot to increase the size of your quadriceps, for example.
---
All in all, the clean is an exercise well-suited to those who want to move a lot of weight and hit a lot of muscles all at once, or for those whose sports goals would directly benefit from the movement (like Olympic weightlifters). Because of the difficulty in mastering the clean and the potential for injury, it is essential that you have a competent, experienced coach teach you how to do the exercise properly if you want to incorporate it into your routine. As with any other exercise changes, you should also check with your physician to make sure that you don't have any special conditions which would make the clean especially dangerous for you.
Sources:
"Clean," ExRx.net
"Olympic Weightlifting," Queensland Weightlifting Association
Mehdi, "The Ultimate Beginner's Guide to Power Cleans," StrongLifts.com
Published by Adam Hughes - Featured Contributor in Arts & Entertainment and Sports
I was raised in central Indiana, where I now live (again), work, and play. I'm a chemist and mathematician by training and a software engineer by trade. I love to write and am continually amazed by the sim... View profile
- Reaching Bainbridge Island: Pros and Cons of Ferry or CarPros and cons of taking the Seattle ferry over to Bainbridge Island, Washington or if detouring through Yakima and Tacoma make more sense.
- The Pros and Cons of Teaching English (EFL) to Children in ThailandMany westerners coming to teach English (EFL) in Thailand don't always consider the pros and cons.
- Why Buy an Old House? 10 Pros and Cons to Buying an Old HouseAn article outlining the pros and cons of buying an old house instead of a new one.
- Pros and Cons of Working as a Freelancer or Independent ConsultantMost people have at least toyed with the idea of working for themselves as a freelancer or independent consultant. The image of freedom and more time and money is common, but there's also a downside to working for you...
The Pros and Cons of Being Treated at a Teaching HospitalA teaching hospital is a hospital that affiliated with a university medical school and provides the clinical training of the medical students of that university. What follows ar...
- The Pros and Cons of Video Blogging
- Pros and Cons of Social Media
- Affordable Hawaiian Real Estate - the Pros and Cons of Owning a Hawaii Leasehold P...
- Leg Extensions in Strength Training: Pros and Cons
- Evening Workouts at the Gym: Pros and Cons
- 10 Tips Regarding the Pros and Cons of Being Your Own Boss
- Morning Workouts at the Gym: Pros and Cons



