Core & Anti-rotation

Hanging Knee Raise

Lower abship flexorsforearm/grip Strength/neural
i.

How to Do It

Hang from a pull-up bar, shoulders lightly packed, legs straight. Brace the core and raise the knees toward the chest by curling the pelvis up (posterior tilt), not just flexing the hips. Pause briefly, then lower the legs under control without swinging. Keep the movement deliberate and the grip secure. Repeat for reps.

ii.

Why It Works

Trains the lower abs and hip flexors through hip flexion with a pelvic curl; controlling the eccentric without swinging builds anterior-core strength and control, plus grip endurance from the hang.

iii.

Hockey Transfer

Builds the lower-core and hip-flexor strength used in the knee-drive recovery of the stride and in maintaining a stable, braced pelvis; the grip demand supports stick control in battles.

iv.

Coaching Cues

  • "Curl the pelvis, not just the hips"
  • "no swinging, control down"
  • "shoulders packed"
v.

Common Mistakes

Swinging or using momentum; only flexing the hips (no pelvic curl); dropping the legs fast

vi.

Progression / Regression

Progression

straight-leg raise or add ankle weight

Regression

bent-knee tucks or lying leg raises

vii.

Primary Muscles

Lower abship flexorsforearm/grip
viii.

Energy System

Strength/neural

Ready to train?

Put it to work
on the ice.

This exercise is part of a fully periodized 12-week off-ice program — built by a sport scientist who coaches at the national level.

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