Straddle Planche Training
The straddle planche is the first progression where your legs are fully extended. With legs spread wide to the sides, the body is held horizontal with a completely straight line from shoulders to hips. This is a major milestone in planche training and the point where most observers recognize the skill as truly impressive. It is also the progression where hip flexibility becomes a significant factor.
Understanding the Straddle Planche
The Position
- Arms fully locked, scapulae protracted and depressed
- Body completely straight from shoulders to hips
- Legs extended and spread wide in a straddle position
- Toes pointed, legs active and engaged
- Hips at shoulder height, body parallel to the ground
- Posterior pelvic tilt maintained
Why the Straddle Helps
Spreading the legs wide reduces the moment arm by bringing the center of mass closer to the hands:
- Wider straddle = easier: A wider leg spread reduces the effective lever arm more
- Narrower straddle = harder: As the legs come closer together, the difficulty approaches full planche
- This allows progressive overload: You can gradually narrow the straddle over time
Hip Flexibility Requirements
A wider straddle requires greater hip adductor flexibility:
- Minimum useful straddle: 90 degrees between the legs
- Ideal straddle: 120+ degrees for maximum mechanical advantage
- If flexibility is limited: The planche will be harder because you cannot spread the legs wide enough to reduce the lever arm significantly
Transitioning From Advanced Tuck
Method 1: Gradual Leg Extension
The most controlled approach:
- Start in an advanced tuck planche (flat back)
- Slowly extend one leg out to the side
- When stable, extend the second leg
- The transition should be smooth, not a sudden kick
- If you lose the position, return to advanced tuck and try again
Method 2: Straddle Planche Negatives
- Kick up to a straddle handstand (or use a wall)
- Slowly lower your body from handstand to horizontal
- Try to hold the straddle planche position as you pass through it
- Even 1-2 second holds during the negative build specific strength
Method 3: One-Leg Extensions
A bridge exercise between advanced tuck and full straddle:
- Hold an advanced tuck planche
- Extend one leg out to the side while keeping the other tucked
- Hold for time
- Switch legs
- This reduces the difficulty compared to both legs extended
Training Protocol
Phase 1: First Holds (Weeks 1-6)
Goal: Achieve a 3-5 second straddle planche hold
- Straddle planche attempts: 6-8 x max hold (even 1 second counts) (rest 3 minutes)
- Advanced tuck planche: 4 x 10-12 seconds (maintain strength) (rest 2-3 minutes)
- One-leg extensions from advanced tuck: 3 x 5 seconds each leg (rest 2 minutes)
- Straddle planche negatives from handstand: 3 x 3 negatives (rest 3 minutes)
- Pseudo planche pushups (maximum lean): 3 x 6-8 (rest 2 minutes)
- Frequency: 3-4 times per week
Phase 2: Building Hold Time (Weeks 7-14)
Goal: Achieve a 10-second straddle planche hold
- Straddle planche holds: 5-6 x 3-8 seconds (rest 3 minutes)
- One-leg extensions: 3 x 8 seconds each leg (rest 2 minutes)
- Advanced tuck planche pushups: 3 x 5-8 (rest 2 minutes)
- Weighted dips: 3 x 5-8 (rest 2 minutes)
- Total straddle volume target: 15-40 seconds per session
- Frequency: 3-4 times per week
Phase 3: Mastery and Narrowing (Weeks 15-24)
Goal: Achieve a 15+ second straddle planche and begin narrowing the straddle
- Straddle planche holds: 5 x 8-15 seconds (rest 3 minutes)
- Narrow straddle attempts: 3 x 3-5 seconds (rest 3 minutes)
- Straddle planche pushup attempts: 3 x 1-3 reps (rest 3 minutes)
- Total volume target: 40-75 seconds per session
- Frequency: 3-4 times per week
Hip Flexibility Development
Straddle Stretching Routine (Perform 3-4 Times Per Week)
Seated Straddle Stretch:
- Sit on the floor with legs spread wide
- Lean forward, reaching toward the ground
- Hold for 60-90 seconds
- 3 sets
Pancake Stretch:
- From the seated straddle, walk your hands forward
- Aim to bring your chest to the ground
- Hold for 60-90 seconds
- Use gentle rocking to increase range
Standing Straddle Good Mornings:
- Stand with feet wide apart
- Hinge at the hips, keeping back flat
- Lower your torso toward the ground
- 3 x 10 reps
Wall Straddle:
- Lie on your back with legs up against a wall
- Let your legs fall open into a straddle
- Gravity provides a gentle, sustained stretch
- Hold for 2-3 minutes
PNF Stretching for Faster Gains
Contract-relax stretching can accelerate flexibility development:
- Get into your straddle stretch
- Contract your adductors (try to squeeze your legs together) for 5 seconds against resistance
- Relax and gently increase the stretch
- Repeat 3-4 times
- Perform 2-3 times per week after your muscles are warm
Common Issues
"I cannot hold the straddle even for 1 second"
- Normal transition difficulty: The jump from advanced tuck to straddle is one of the largest in the planche progression
- Solutions: Focus on straddle negatives, one-leg extensions, and band-assisted straddle holds. Continue building advanced tuck planche hold time (20+ seconds)
"My legs sag below horizontal"
- Cause: Insufficient hip extension strength (glutes) or core strength
- Solution: Add reverse hyperextensions in straddle position. Practice hollow body holds in straddle position on the ground. Focus on squeezing glutes hard during holds
"I cannot spread my legs wide enough"
- Cause: Tight hip adductors limiting the straddle width
- Solution: Dedicate 15 minutes, 3-4 times per week, to the hip flexibility routine above. Flexibility gains typically take 4-8 weeks of consistent work
"I keep losing balance and tipping forward"
- Cause: Over-leaning or sudden weight shifts when extending legs
- Solution: Practice on parallettes for better control. Extend legs slowly, not suddenly. Place a mat in front of you for safety
Supplementary Exercises for Straddle Planche
Straddle L-Sit to Straddle Planche Transitions
- Start in a straddle L-sit on parallettes
- Lean forward while maintaining the straddle
- Attempt to lift the hips to planche height
- Even partial transitions build specific strength
Straddle Press to Handstand
- From a straddle stand, place hands on the ground
- Press up to a straddle handstand with control
- This builds the shoulder and pressing strength that directly supports straddle planche
Resistance Band Straddle Planche
- Loop a band over a pull-up bar and around your hips
- Practice the straddle planche position with reduced load
- Focus on perfect form and body line
- Gradually use thinner bands
Conclusion
The straddle planche represents a major achievement in your training journey. It requires the convergence of shoulder strength, core stability, hip flexibility, and months of progressive training. Most athletes spend 4-8 months developing a solid straddle planche, and this timeline is perfectly normal. Once you can hold a straddle planche for 10+ seconds with good form, you have earned a skill that places you among serious calisthenics practitioners. In the next lesson, we will discuss how to program your intermediate training effectively.
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