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Snatch Push Jerk
AKA Snatch power jerk, snatch push jerk behind the neck, snatch-grip push jerk




The snatch push jerk is a simple strength exercise for the snatch overhead position, and a common way to get a bar overhead for overhead squats.
 
Stand with the barbell behind your neck with your snatch grip. If you hold the hook grip overhead in the snatch, use it here; if you release the hook in the snatch, don’t use the hook.
 
Squeeze the upper inside edges of the shoulder blades together tightly as they will be overhead, brace your trunk, and ensure even balance over the whole foot.
 
Dip at the knees and drive hard against the floor with the legs as you would for a jerk to accelerate and elevate the bar maximally. As the bar leaves the shoulders, punch aggressively with the arms and sit into a partial squat while keeping your feet on the floor as you lock the bar out forcefully overhead.
 
Hold a moment before lowering to the shoulders and resetting for the next rep.
 
Notes
Any snatch pressing or jerking exercise is normally started behind the neck, so it’s usually unnecessary to specify behind the neck when prescribing such lifts. Because the bar and the trunk begin in the same place and orientation respectively that they should be in when the bar is overhead, the bar path should be perfectly vertical and the trunk should remain in the same orientation (inclined forward very slightly). Be cautious not to hinge at the hips when dipping.
 
Purpose
The snatch push jerk is primarily used as a way to get the bar into place overhead in preparation for overhead squats, but it can also be used to train and strengthen the proper overhead position for the snatch, especially when overhead squats or snatch balances can’t be done due to pain or injury, or to reduce loading on the legs.
 
Programming
If being used to secure a bar overhead for a subsequent overhead squat, the snatch push jerk will just be a single. If using it to strengthen the snatch overhead position, sets of 3-5 reps are suggested with weights starting around from 70% of the lifter’s best snatch or overhead squat. Generally this exercise should be performed following any snatch variants and possibly before clean variants depending on what the intended emphasis of the workout is.
 
Variations
The snatch push jerk can be performed by moving the feet from a drive stance to wider receiving stance as the athlete pushes under the bar, in which case it becomes a snatch power jerk.

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