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  2. These 5 Hip Extension Exercises Will Make Your Pedal ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/5-hip-extension-exercises-pedal...

    2. Deadlift. Why it works: This exercise targets the entire posterior chain and can be loaded and scaled as appropriate for your lifting level, Rothberg says. How to do it: Stand with feet hip ...

  3. 10 Best Exercises To Strengthen Your Hips as You Age - AOL

    www.aol.com/10-best-exercises-strengthen-hips...

    Quadruped hip extensions target the muscles of the glutes and hamstrings, improving hip strength and stability. Start on your hands and knees with your back flat. Lift one leg straight back behind ...

  4. Keep Your Hips Healthy With This 3-Move Mobility Plan - AOL

    www.aol.com/keep-hips-healthy-3-move-130000630.html

    Experts explain the new science behind one of your body's most important joints, and provide a 3-move mobility to plan to help keep your hips healthy.

  5. Hyperextension (exercise) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperextension_(exercise)

    A Roman chair helps to stabilize the legs up until the hip joints while performing low back extension. The torso from above the hip joints is flexed forwards and down towards the floor. The exercise is completed by contracting the back (erector spinae muscles) and raising the torso so the body is in a straight line from head to heels. The ...

  6. Roman chair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_chair

    If the pelvis moves during the exercise then the hip flexors will also be dynamic prime movers. [1] A common exercise using the Roman chair for targeting the abdominal muscles is the "Roman chair sit-ups". It is an old-school exercise known to strengthen the belly. It can also strengthen some secondary stabilizer muscles in the core.

  7. Squat (exercise) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squat_(exercise)

    The barbell back squat Bodyweight squat. A squat is a strength exercise in which the trainee lowers their hips from a standing position and then stands back up. During the descent, the hip and knee joints flex while the ankle joint dorsiflexes; conversely the hip and knee joints extend and the ankle joint plantarflexes when standing up.