Cable Woodchop
The cable woodchop trains the obliques and deep core through controlled rotation. Constant tension makes it excellent for power development and anti-rotation control.
Muscles Worked
Primary Muscles
- Obliques
Secondary Muscles
- Rectus Abdominis
- Serratus Anterior
- Glutes
How to Perform
- 1
Setup: Set the cable high or low and stand sideways to the stack.
- 2
Brace: Lock ribs down and keep hips square.
- 3
Chop: Pull the handle across the body in a smooth diagonal path.
- 4
Control: Rotate through the torso, not the arms only.
- 5
Return: Resist the cable back to the start.
Common Mistakes
Using Arms Only
The torso should drive the rotation.
Hips Twisting
Keep hips square for core focus.
Overextending
Stop before the lower back arches.
Going Too Fast
Control builds strength and stability.
Training Notes
Cable Woodchop is most effective when the ribs stay down and the pelvis stays neutral. Breathe steadily and avoid holding your breath for too long. A strong brace should feel like 360° tension around the midsection, not a hard crunch.
Use slow, controlled reps and prioritize alignment over range. If the lower back arches or the hips rotate, reduce the range and build control first. A small, precise movement often trains the core better than a large, sloppy one.
For programming, 2–4 sets of 8–15 reps or 20–40 seconds work well depending on the exercise. Keep rest short and focus on quality. Core work pairs nicely at the end of a session or between heavier sets as active recovery.
If you feel the hip flexors more than the abs, reduce range or change the angle. Focus on exhaling as you finish each rep—this helps the ribs come down and increases abdominal tension. Small tweaks in posture can dramatically improve the core stimulus.
Pair Cable Woodchop with anti‑rotation or anti‑extension drills to train the trunk in multiple planes. A balanced core routine usually includes flexion, rotation control, and stability under load. Progress by adding time or slower tempos rather than chasing maximal load.
Keep the neck relaxed and the gaze neutral—tension in the neck often means the core has disengaged. If you need a regression, shorten the lever arm or add a support. Consistent, clean reps build endurance that carries over to every lift.
Think “ribs down, belt tight” at the start of every rep. This simple cue keeps the lumbar spine from over‑arching and makes the core work harder without adding load.
Progress by lengthening the lever or adding a slow pause at the hardest point. These changes increase difficulty without compromising form.
A balanced core routine is about quality, not exhaustion. Stop sets when posture starts to break and you’ll build strength that transfers to every other lift.
If you train core frequently, keep individual sessions shorter and focus on perfect reps. Small, consistent doses outperform one long session once per week.
Programming & Progression
A strong core routine balances flexion, anti‑extension, and anti‑rotation. Pick one from each category and cycle them across the week. Keep sets short and crisp to avoid turning core work into sloppy cardio.
When the goal is endurance, prioritize time under tension with clean breathing. When the goal is strength, use a heavier lever and fewer reps. Both approaches are valid, but keep posture locked in either case.
If low‑back fatigue builds quickly, reduce range and add a short pause instead. Small, precise reps train the deep core and transfer better to heavy lifts.
Think “brace and breathe” on every rep. If you can’t keep the same posture, shorten the range and slow down until control returns.
Pro Tips
Try Both Directions
Train left and right equally.
Use Moderate Load
Quality rotation beats heavy weight.
Add a Pause
1-second hold improves control.
High vs Low
High targets obliques, low hits hips too.
Variations
Low-to-High Woodchop
Upward diagonal path.
High-to-Low Woodchop
Downward diagonal path.
Kneeling Woodchop
Less lower-body involvement.
Band Woodchop
Portable alternative.
Alternatives
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