Saturday, May 9, 2026

Myths of the Bench Press - Rob Wagner








This article will investigate the misconceptions and misguided advice often given for the bench press. 

A bench press in a gym is as common as a wart on a toad. I have been to gyms with no power racks, chin bars, or platforms but I have never seen a gym without a flat bench. 

It has become the primary upper-body exercise of most individuals who lift weights and it has plenty of merit in being that when it is performed correctly.

When talking about lifting, how many times have you asked or been asked, "How much do you bench?"

The difficulty with discussing the bench press is that there is an abundance of thoughts and beliefs on or about bench pressing that just aren't right. The fact that so many people practice the lift allows for a lot of variations and interpretations. Unfortunately, many of these variations are biomechanically incorrect and can be hazardous to your shoulder health. So, let's look at some of the misconceptions about this lift and try to shed some light on how to correct this information. Hopefully, I will get you started on a more righteous path of bench pressing . . . 




MYTH #1 - The Bench Press is a Pec Developer.

Well, this is only half a myth, since it does develop the lower pecs. However, the efficiency of how the lift is performed can limit the pecs involvement. (McLaughlin, 1984). This exercise is often demonstrated in magazines and training tapes with lifters lowering the bar with the upper arms at 90-degree angles (a T position) away from the sides of the body. This style of benching places most of the stress on the shoulder joint. 


How many people do you know with a shoulder issue from benching? The lowering of the bar in this fashion places greater rotational forces (torque) on the shoulder. Over time this pattern of movement can create mayhem on the shoulder specifically in the rotator cuff muscles (supraspinatus havoc, infraspinatus harm, teres-minor damage and subscapularis destruction). 
To really use the pecs to their fullest, I suggest keeping the elbows closer (less than 90 degrees) to the body on both the descent and ascent of the lift. 

A simple demonstration is for you to raise your arm straight out to the side so that it is parallel to the floor. Now try to flex your pec without bringing your arm across your body. It's not easy, is it? But if you think about it this is the same position that is advocated for benching.

Now lower the arm to 45-degrees from parallel and flex the pec in the same manner. Bit of a difference, huh? By keeping the elbows in versus out our arms are less externally rotated and the distance between the muscles' points of origin and insertion are at a more optimal range allowing the pecs to be more functional. 


This position also allows the triceps to play a bigger role in your bench as well. The triceps primary role is to extend the forearm. When you bench and your arms hit the 90-degree position the triceps can no longer extend the forearm because your hands are stuck on the bar. The only way the triceps can work in this position is to slide the hands outward. By placing the elbows in a less-than-90-degree angle the triceps can work more efficiently through a larger range of motion since the upper arms aren't at 90-degrees. 

So, how do you get the arms at less than 90-degrees. 
Let's look at Myth #2.


MYTH #2 - Lower the Bar to the Nipples or Slightly Lower.

Why the nipples? Is it because it's the only landmark that people with no muscle could think of? Bringing the bar to this landmark (she had landmark nipples) will give you that "T" arm angle. When the bar comes to the chest the forearms need to be almost vertical to the floor for the most effective force development (Mclaughlin, 1984 - the whole book is here if you'd like to read it, see end of article. There are citations noted in this article. I'll just put them at the bottom if you wanna check any out, not going do them like a university paper here). 

The landmark that I prefer to use is the xiphoid process, the little piece of cartilage that extends off your sternum (breast bone) at the top of your abs. For most individuals and some herd-members lowering the bar to this region will keep the elbows in and ensure that the forearms are in a vertical position. This area is typically the highest part of your torso when you are on the bench. This helps to reduce the range of motion that the arms must travel, in turn reducing shoulder torque. Initially you will feel a little awkward and weak, but stay with this for about 4-6 weeks and you will see the results.


MYTH #3 - Keeping Your Feet on the Bench Protects the Back and Develops Greater Pressing Power.

Note: here's a related article, written by a chiropractor named Ken:

After exhausting several databases I found no research on back injuries and the bench press. (This was a while ago. I had no trouble now and neither will you.) They can occur to the lower back area when a lifter starts to raise the bar and simultaneously lift his butt off the bench (and sometimes it takes a while for the damage to be shown, a couple months or years or decades, eh). 

This raising of the butt also raises the ribcage creating a position much like a decline bench press. It is in this position you can hyperextend the lower back and possibly injure yourself. This type of injury is NOT THE RESULT OF BENCHING, it is the result of benching in this way. (Don't blame the bench press, look at your performance of it first.)

Fitness experts (that term sure is defined differently now) advocate the maintenance of a neutral arch in the back on squats and other standing exercises, but why is it they never mention this when mentioning lying exercises. Besides them typically being idiots (that hasn't changed), they must assume that lying is a safe position regardless of the exercise.

Just like all other exercises you need to have a proper posture on the bench. Place both feet flat on the floor about shoulder-width apart. The feet can be either directly under your knees or slightly out in front of them. 

When you lie back flex your glutes and hams; you will notice that you will feel yourself pushing down through your feet when you do this. Tighten the low back as well and hold the neutral posture of the spine, think about getting your butt and shoulders close to each other. 

You will also want to pull the shoulder blades together and keep the upper back tight as well.

Finally, keep the head on the bench. Lifting the head has been shown to decrease pressing power. Your feet are flat on the floor and your shoulders and butt are on the bench with a small arch under your low back. The bottom of your rib cage should be elevated.

Now try to lift your butt off the bench. If you can, move your feet away from the knees until the butt stays on the bench when you try. Once you are in a position where you can't lift the butt you have injury-proofed the lift in this regard. 

By maintaining this posture we eliminate the opportunity for the low back to hyperextend.

Keeping the feet up can actually limit your power since the ability to balance and stabilize the torso on the bench is compromised. I have found that when athletes keep their feet on the floor and maintain the proper posture the weight actually feels lighter to them. I don't know if this is a reflex mechanism of pushing with the feet of if the whole body tension increases the excitability of the nervous or muscular systems involved in the benching motion. In any case keep the feet on the floor and maintain your posture.


MYTH #4 - Wide Grip Works the Outer Pec and Narrow Grip the Inner Pec.

The typical belief is that the wider the hands the more you will hit the outer pec and the narrower grip will hit the inner pec. Well, there is a major problem here. The Pectoralis Major has two portions: a lower, the sternocostal head and an upper, the clavicular head. 

There are no "inner and outer" pecs, anatomically speaking. 

Let me define a narrow and a wide grip. In two separate studies researchers determined narrow grip as the distance between your acromion processes (slide your hand down your trap and the bony bump you hit is the acromion). 





They then applied this measurement to the hand spacing (distance between index fingers) on the bar. Wide grip was two times the narrow grip distance. Both groups of researchers found that grips that were 1.65 to 2 times their narrow grip were the most effective strength-wise. 

The way you can determine your grip is to measure the distance between your acromion processes. Now measure the distance between your index fingers when you bench. Divide your benching grip-distance by the acromion distance and if your number is between 1.65 and 2.00 you are in an optimal position. 

In the research, the activation of the upper and lower portions of the pec muscle are affected by different hand spacing. In one study it was found that the wider grip placed more stress on the sternocostal head than the normal grip. The narrow grip seemed to activate the clavicular head more effectively than a wide grip. The narrower grip also activated the triceps more than the wide. 

There's some dissected views of human carrion ,er, anatomy (I do hope my punctuation doesn't offend anyone) and that dead meat can be funny to see. 
What we are, once we aren't
A tragic fact and it's understandable why we human-mammals have come up with all manner of afterlife beliefs, the idea of a soul, our greatness as a species and the lot of it. Whatever works and whatever gets us through the night is bloody fine by me.





MYTH #5 -  Incline Bench Press Works the Upper Pec and 
Decline Works the Lower Pec Better Than Flat Bench.

This would be true if you compared the decline BP to Incline BP but the research, all praise the fucking research, has actually shown that decline and flat stimulate the sternal head in similar fashions. Two researchers from that citation list at the end of this article reported that the decline BP activated the muscle in the clavicular head as effectively as the incline BP. 

Now that I have cleared that up, why can you decline more than you flat bench? 

Well, it probably has to do with your technique on the BP. Think about your bar placement when you decline. Is it lower than the flat bench? Think back to Myths #2 and #3. The technical recommendations I provided in those areas will raise the rib cage up similar to the decline position. This reduces the distance that you have to lower and press the bar. 


MYTH #6 - When You Bench, Put the Bar in the Palm of Your Hand.


Left, Julius Maddox
Right, Andrey Smaev
I'd write "Click to Enlarge" here
but we may have reached that limit.


Well, I am not a big person and my palm is about 3.5 inches from top to bottom. The bar diameter is a little over one inch, so where does it go? Folks with sore wrists will appreciate the forthcoming information. 

Don't place the bar at the top of the palm; instead, place the bar as close as possible to the heel of the hand. Besides the obvious reason of taking stress off the wrist, placing the bar near the heel of the hand has some function behind it. 

The heel of the hand is formed by the ends of two forearm bones: the radius and the ulna. The ulna is on the pinkie side. When you press on the area covering the ulna you initiate an extension reflex (pushing). This reflex is there so that when this portion of your hand comes in contact with a force the triceps will contract. Think about your hand and where you place it when you fall down (back around the bottle?) or when you push someone away from you (odd how those two go together, rhymes with whatever). You don't use your fingers or thumbs; you use the heel of your hand. You stinking heel! Perhaps the energy of all things is centered around a balance of positive and negative; we all have our roles to play, the babyface at times and the heel at others. To me, a life obsessed with this "positive" energy is much like living in a gated community, something of a lie that limits our experience. But hey, do any of them words also rhyme with "whatever" . . . 

By placing the bar over this point it can aid in stabilization and possibly force production of the arm during the benching movement. 




When it comes to "false grip" (thumb under the bar alongside the fingers) or closed grip, I think you have to let comfort be the guide. If you are a competitive lifter some federations won't allow the false grip so they make the choice for you. The key on bar placement, not to be confused with the key-on-bar placement, such a strange language, often not well suited to the oral form
 of communication and so easily misunderstood, now degrading to an even more primitive point - a simple thing to be accomplished over time considering we were designed to be easily manipulated by others. I don't wanna be left out and will rhyme "hand" with "pander" for 200 and take drawers number two, 'cause they're the cleanest at this particular moment. These rather sciencey and far from saucy articles, eh? No matter, there's babies in this bathwater, as they say in France.




The key on bar placement in the hand is to try to get that bar situated over the ulnar portion of the hand (remember that section of the wrist on the pinkie 
side?). You will that rotating the elbows inward away from 90-degrees will allow you to get the bar in that position more effectively.




MYTH #7 - When You Bench, Just Push the Bar Up Towards the Ceiling. 


Oh, if only it was that easy. 

Have you ever noticed that where you finish a rep changes during a set? A lot of this has to do with the bar path you are using. In the 1980s Tom McLaughlin did extensive research on the bench press. He spend a good portion of this research on the kinematics of bar paths of powerlifters. (I believe no shirts were used in any of this research but would have to check that book of his linked to at the bottom).

One of the things that he found was that novices press differently from the world-level competitors by pushing the bar more vertically at the start of the ascent and then moving it towards the head. The experienced competitors initially moved the bar horizontally towards the head and then it went vertical as they came to lockout. 

Another study has shown that lifters don't use the same bar paths all the time - the Wilson '89 one cited. He found that 10 elite powerlifters had different bar paths on 80% of 1RM weight when compared to a 100% 1RM lift. So, what does this mean? There is an effective bar path to follow and to develop consistency attention needs to be focused on this movement at all intensity levels. 

The bar path suggested based on the research would be to start the bar off the chest by pressing it slightly towards the head, not towards the feet. Allow the bar to arc ever-so-slightly back towards the head and as the elbows start to rotate out press straight up. This motion towards the head will be aided by pushing your feet into the floor since they are pushing the body in that direction. 

Now, what about developing the consistency on the bar paths? 

Have you ever tried to throw some balled up paper into the trash or what they will call the "recycling" in the future . . . without looking? It's not easy. Now how about when you do look? You're probably ready to bet people in the office on how many you'll make. It's easier because your eyes are telling the brain how far away the can is and how big the opening is, and then this info is being processed to generate the right force and direction of the paper.

Have you ever thought about where you are pushing the bar when you bench? It's no different than looking at the trash can (also known as lifting in front of a mirror as an elder gentleman ba dum sss). CREATE a focal point on the ceiling that you will push the bar to. To find this point, take an empty or lightly-weighted bar and do a technically correct rep. Find the point on the ceiling where the completion of your rep occurs. Now, when you press the bar up look at that spot and press the bar to it. Do this with every rep. Once you develop the habit you'll find it hard not to practice. 


MYTH #8 - All Good Bench Pressers Have Short Arms. 

I tells ya, Buddy, the way "myth" and "dick" rhyme
it was hard not to. 

The research shows that the best predictors of bench press ability in men is a combination of arm size (not length), percent bodyfat, and chest circumference. It would be expected that short-armed people would be better pressers since they would move the bar a shorter distance. If you think about it though, we all have the ability to make our arms shorter . . . 

Shrug your shoulders up and you raise the arms up your legs (they appear shorter vertically). The same holds true if your arms are in front of you. Pull the shoulder blades back and the arms come closer to your chest. Try it and I'll write this while you do: if Wesley Snipes had a rifle named after him that became standard military issue, the command on a parade square might be "shoulder blades" . . . 

You done doing that? I am. Now, when you're on the bench let your shoulders drop back to the bench. Remember when I talked about posture in the bench press and the shoulder blades being pulled back? This, along with dropping the shoulders will reduce the distance you move the bar (as it will reduce the distance a shorter-armed lifter will move the bar too, no? For the love of God don't let them short-armers see this!). 

The key is you have to keep the shoulders back the entire time. Typically, most lifters will raise the shoulders off the bench surface to assist in the lockout. Avoid this and simply press the bar to lockout using the arms. Using this approach can allow everyone to be a better bench presser. 

Keep patience in mind when you change techniques on any lift and allow yourself four to six weeks to adapt. 

Let's review what we covered:

 - the bench is a great upper-body exercise when performed correctly.

 - maintaining proper foot placement, posture, hand placement and spacing, and arm angles can ensure the greatest development from the muscles involved.

 - to increase your benching performance remember to use the proper bar paths and to make those arms short. 



Click to ENLARGE
Note: The McLaughlin book is available to read in its entirety. 
It's in many parts.  




Enjoy Your Lifting!


Oh YES! 
Should be a true life-changing event to view.
2025. Echoing the Canadian comedy classic SCTV, crosscutting between original, low-budget TV ads to tell the sinister tale of two restaurants battling it out in the fictional town of Westbridge County, Alberta.


13 comments:

  1. Now here’s a mouthful with a Peter Piper intro. A typical bench-bozo aiming to impress the beach-bimbos doesn’t think too much about form or technique. He plops himself down on the bench, brain less-engaged than a toddler’s sodden diaper-fill, all the while wondering if, well, this-and-that crap these near-people think about while lifting halfheartedly. Drifting off into the usual music he works out to, the reps pile up and the set is soon done. Matter of fact, a good time was had by all and come to think of it, who gives a fuck what he does!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nice! Are people afraid to converse with me or am I just a complete asshole?
      Either way, I could give a fuck.
      Now then . . . the true Zen master will not differentiate between
      a straight conversation with a normal fucking person and
      cutting off their own hand with a saw.
      Life's like that, eh.
      EXPERIENCE is the only thing, the rest
      is crap and illusion.

      Hand me that axe, Eugene.
      Fucking hell, ya heel, it's getting
      hard to tell if I've gone mad lately, eh.

      Hopefully, the answer is Yes.

      You're all fucking crazy already and don't know it.
      Or maybe . . .
      not.

      Delete
    2. Well, Buddy . . . it sure can be a boring slog through the years with a standard view of yer life&death conundrum.
      It would seem most people believe the bullshit they've been taught and continue to promote it, but
      who gives two shits what anyone else thinks, right?
      Show me the fucking way to go home already.

      Delete

    3. Obviously this is ALL lonely me, you fucking moron.

      Ya know, what really makes me puke deep down in the supposed-"soul" is the fucking cunts who spout all this bloody shite about past views, perceptions and philosophies, usually Greek or Roman.

      Pups, cunts with little fucking experience in anything spouting crap about the Stoics and applying it to this current abomination of a society based on cash.

      Please, do pull a Senaca or Cicero and piss off. Grab your hemlock and shut the fuck up.
      I do enjoy the possibility that some people may "get a laugh" from this crap but
      I ain't kiddin'.
      Fuck you, fuck life, and fuck living.
      Three more months to go for me
      and I'm finally out of this shite.

      Bored to death with all of it for years.
      Quite the silly deal, isn't it just.
      Cunts. Boring cunts.
      But not "boring" like that, eh.

      Delete
    4. Aw, shucks, what a great loss.
      Yeah!
      Will you be videotaping your last sleep?
      Please do.
      I'm an influencer who could use that footage!

      Delete
    5. Hey Mate . . . I ain't all that great with video and hate the amateur crap; however, I am a cinephile and have been since I was sixteen. I will consider its potential humor and get back to you. Who the fuck wants to watch some bozo go to sleep forever and no longer exist in any way. You are sick in the head, my Friend.

      Now then, I'll get back to the real deal here that's lifting-related, ya fuckin' tiresome mental stiffs.
      Yeah, I DO mean you, idiot.

      Delete
    6. No worries, Pal . . . the folks in charge will remove this by noon tomorrow anyhows, eh.

      Delete
  2. On a side note of much more interest . . . all these authors and all their work . . .
    without the add-ons and bringing them back into the glorious-yet-tragic light of the internet
    would be forgotten. So don't give me fucking grief about respect . . .
    this shit will all DIE without add-ons making it somewhat more interesting to current lot of bozos who lift.

    Yeah, right . . . straight-out transcribing of this stuff ain't the answer at all
    when it comes to making this "quaint" training crap palatable to newbies.

    You're all fucking morons and can't see the plan, can ya now.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Well, I has to agree, Matey. All this shite, these down-south archives in some texass museum, the coldness and worthlessness of "historians' presentations, the sadly-lacking copy-and-paste lazy tragedies of trash like conner heifer-whatever cows, the whole fucking lot of it WILL NOT BE OF ANY INTEREST TO PEOPLE UNDER THE AGE OF NEAR-DEATH.

    Whatever . . . I should fucking care what happens to all this stuff from the past and how it's presented?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Aw, come on now. Your life looked at is much more than just whoring to get by and get "ahead," getting back-pats, creating a legacy to be remembered by fellow halfwits and all that! Isn't it?

    Well . . . ISN'T IT?

    Hahaha . . . what a fucking pile of shite it we all are.
    Ego--pig fuckers at the trough of remembrance.
    It's actually can be seen as a horror . . .
    the horror . . .
    the whoring . . .
    and we call this human LIFE at its FINEST.

    Pardon my ignorance and lack of social grace.
    Now go fuck yourself in that corner of your room
    and please do wear a duncecap.

    Was I good?
    Is this okay by you?

    Fucking humanity . . . why couldn't I have been born a worm.
    I mean, in the end they win and enjoy what's left of us
    sans bullshit and human-construct illusions, no?

    Whatever.
    Rhymes with forever and never.

    ReplyDelete

  5. Well then . . . I guess this is the result of staying awake for two days and nights writhing with the real writing.
    Always a pleasure to converse with the readership.

    ReplyDelete
  6. This is a great article on the finer points of bench press techniques and proper form. It's from reading articles like this on the blog that has helped me refine my bench press form over the years. I do everything listed in this article. I used to bench with a 24 inch grip but it strained my chest too much and did absolutely nothing in the way of increasing my military press. Whenever I bench now I use my military press grip which is approximately 21 inches and it feels better.



    ReplyDelete

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