What Exactly Is the Good Morning Exercise?
The Benefits of Doing Good Mornings
What Muscles Does the Good Morning Exercise Work?
How To Do the Good Morning Exercise Correctly
Tips for Proper Form
Variations For Good Mornings
How to Add Good Mornings to Your Exercise Routine
A good night’s sleep, a fresh cup of coffee, a few sun salutations before you start your day—all of these can set you up for a good morning (and a great day), but that’s not the kind of good morning we’re talking about.
We’re diving into the simple good morning exercise that targets your hamstrings, glutes, core, and low back to make you a stronger, more durable athlete and human. Whether that means crushing your next Peloton ride, completing a hilly half marathon, or giving your kids a piggyback ride without worrying about your low back pain acting up, adding good mornings to your exercise routine can help.
What Exactly Is the Good Morning Exercise?
Although it might appear that you’re simply bending forward from the waist, there’s a lot more going on when you do a good morning. “Good mornings target the hamstrings and they're an excellent way to stretch, warm up, engage, and strengthen the hamstrings by only using our body weight,” says Peloton instructor Rad Lopez. (Of course, you can also do them weighted. More on that later.)
Good mornings target your entire posterior chain, or the muscles along the back of your body, including your erector spinae, hamstrings, and glutes, as well as your core. They also give you a chance to practice your hip hinge, which is an essential movement pattern, whether you’re doing deadlifts with a heavy barbell in the gym or lifting a 40-pound bag of dog food off the floor.
What's the Difference Between Good Mornings and RDLs?
While good morning exercises engage the same muscles as Romanian deadlifts (RDLs), there are a few key differences between the two moves. Both feature a hip hinge, but to do an RDL, you hold the weight in your hands with your arms at your sides or just in front of your thighs. With a good morning, however, the weight is placed higher, across your back or at your shoulders.
Intrigued? Check out Peloton’s selection of bootcamp, lower body, or full body strength workouts to fit some good mornings—along with a healthy dose of posterior chain work—into your next workout.
The Benefits of Doing Good Mornings
No matter if you’re an experienced weight lifter or you’re new to strength training, good morning exercises have some serious upsides. And the good news is, you don’t have to load up a heavy barbell to reap the benefits; they can be done with bodyweight alone as part of your warm-up or strength routine.
“Understanding that this move is used to fire up and wake up the hamstrings is important. If your hamstrings are strong, warmed up, and well stretched, naturally your lower body and muscles, in general, are going to perform more efficiently,” Rad says.
Improved Strength
Good mornings are an excellent way to develop strength in multiple areas, including your hamstrings, low back, glutes, and core. That strength translates to better performance and a lower risk of injury in your endurance workouts, such as cycling, running, rowing, or any other form of cardio.
Enhanced Posture
Many of us are guilty of sitting (or standing) in a forward-leaning position for significant portions of the day. When we’re typing, texting, driving, cooking, or even doing workouts like cycling or rowing, our posture often suffers, sometimes leading to chronic back and neck pain if you let it go for too long.
But exercises like good mornings are an excellent antidote. By engaging the posterior chain, they can help get your spine back into proper alignment and improve posture.
Better Movement Quality
No matter what you’re training for, good morning exercises help you dial in your hip hinge and improve your lower body flexibility. The ability to brace your core and safely bend forward to pick something heavy up off the ground is a skill that will serve you both in and out of the gym.
What Muscles Does the Good Morning Exercise Work?
As a compound movement, good mornings offer a lot of bang for your fitness buck. In other words, unlike isolation exercises (think biceps curls or triceps dips), which target only one muscle at a time, a compound movement recruits multiple muscles or muscle groups.
Hamstrings
Good mornings target your hamstring muscles, an often overlooked part of lower body strength, especially if you’re a cyclist. Cycling tends to build your quadriceps, which is great—however, if you don’t have the hamstring strength to match, you risk developing muscle strength imbalances that can lead to injury.
Back Muscles
Muscles like the erector spinae, which run up and down the length of your spine, can become weak and overstretched if you tend to sit in a forward-hunched position. Good morning exercises work to counteract that. That means less lower back pain, better posture, and less postural fatigue during long rides, which translates to improved comfort, higher efficiency, and faster times.
Glutes and Core
Good mornings develop your glute and core muscles, which are key players in endurance sports like cycling, running, and rowing. Strengthening these muscle groups can reduce your risk of injury while making you more efficient, which means faster times with less effort.
How To Do the Good Morning Exercise Correctly
If you’re only just waking up to the importance of this key move, we’ve got you covered. Here’s a step-by-step guide to doing a good morning with perfect form.
Stand with your feet shoulder-width apart and your knees slightly bent.
Hinge forward from your hips while keeping your core engaged, pushing your hips back while keeping your back flat. Hinge forward until your upper body is parallel (or almost parallel) to the floor.
Slowly return to your starting stance by pushing your hips forward and coming back to a standing position.
Tips for Proper Form
Good morning exercises may look intimidating, but they’re actually not hard to master, especially if you keep certain form tips in mind, Rad says.
Don’t Lock Your Knees
By keeping a slight bend in your knees, you avoid putting unnecessary stress on your knee joints.
Maintain a Neutral Spine
Excessive rounding or arching of your lower back can lead to low back pain, especially under load, so keep your neck, upper back, and lower back in alignment and maintain a flat back throughout the movement.
Engage Your Core
To protect your core, keep it braced, as if you were preparing to receive a punch, throughout the exercise.
Variations For Good Mornings
Barbell Good Morning
With your hips about shoulder width apart and your knees slightly bent, rest the barbell on your upper back, against your trapezius muscles.
Continue through the move as described above, hinging forward and coming back to standing.
Dumbbell Good Morning
With your elbows fully bent and your palms facing your shoulders, rest a dumbbell on top of each shoulder. Or, if using a single dumbbell, place it at the base of your neck and hold it with both hands.
Continue through the move, keeping your feet shoulder width apart and bending your knees slightly while hinging forward, and then returning to standing.
Banded Good Morning
Using a heavy-duty loop band, stand on the band with your feet about hip width apart, and your knees slightly bent. Rest the top of the band along the back of your neck.
Grasp the band at about shoulder level and pull up slightly to decrease the tension on your neck.
Hinge forward from your hips and continue as above.
Single Leg Good Morning
Start out doing this move with bodyweight only to make sure your form and balance are dialed in before adding a barbell, dumbbell, or band.
Standing with your feet hip width apart and keeping your hips level, bend your knee on your non-working leg so that your foot is just slightly off the ground.
With a mild bend in your working knee, hinge forward from your hips until your torso is parallel to the floor or very close to it.
Slowly and with control, return to standing and place both feet on the floor.
To make this move harder, keep your non-working foot off the floor between repetitions.
How to Add Good Mornings to Your Exercise Routine
If you’re going to add good mornings to your routine, make sure you warm up before you dive in. That means getting your heart rate slightly elevated with some light cardio, —such as a quick spin on the bike, an easy jog, or walking—for five to ten minutes.
It’s also a good idea to do at least one set of good mornings with bodyweight or very light weight before adding moderate or significant weight in your subsequent sets. This gives you a chance to make sure your form is solid before you add intensity, which helps to ensure your muscles are fully warmed up. And that means you’ll feel better during your hard sets while reducing your risk of injury.
But make no mistake: You don’t need to add weight or complete an intense strength training session to get a lot out of a set of good mornings. These exercises can also be a great way to get your body ready for your cardio workout, Rad says. Whether you’ve got a long endurance ride or a HIIT session on the schedule, you won’t regret starting with your posterior chain fired up.
This content is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute individualized advice. It is not intended to replace professional medical evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment. Seek the advice of your physician for questions you may have regarding your health or a medical condition. If you are having a medical emergency, call your physician or 911 immediately.
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