For some reason, curls are often tossed into the wimpy exercise
pile along with triceps kickbacks. Yeah, yeah, we should all be
doing weighted close-grip chin-ups, but let's set one thing
straight: every bodybuilder with big, muscular arms did curls to
help him build them. He did not just "stick to the big
compound movements" to get those sleeve cannons to explode.
That being said, there are a lot of good curling options out
there besides the standard EZ-bar curl. One of them is the drag
curl.
As T-Nation's Christian Thibaudeau demonstrates above, you
simply keep the bar in contact with the body at all times as you
lift it. The elbows should be kept as close to the torso as
possible. This is why it's called a drag curl: you "drag" the bar
up your body.
🔇
Squeeze extra hard in the peak contraction position, then lower
it the same way, keeping it in constant contact with the body.
NOTES AND VARIATIONS
pile along with triceps kickbacks. Yeah, yeah, we should all be
doing weighted close-grip chin-ups, but let's set one thing
straight: every bodybuilder with big, muscular arms did curls to
help him build them. He did not just "stick to the big
compound movements" to get those sleeve cannons to explode.
That being said, there are a lot of good curling options out
there besides the standard EZ-bar curl. One of them is the drag
curl.
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![]() |
simply keep the bar in contact with the body at all times as you
lift it. The elbows should be kept as close to the torso as
possible. This is why it's called a drag curl: you "drag" the bar
up your body.
🔇
Squeeze extra hard in the peak contraction position, then lower
it the same way, keeping it in constant contact with the body.