Your hips are a pinball hammer. The kettlebell is the pinball. Pull your hips deep into the hinge (always while keeping the shoulders above the hips, and hips above the knees). As you “paint the fence” into the downward eccentric phase of the snatch, “pull the hammer back” by deeply hinging, then squeeze your glutes hard and fast, drive your feet into the floor, stand tall and “paint that fence”! The kettlebell will soar overhead.
Here’s a combination to help practice the “Miyagi Pinball”:
- Heavy dead swing x 5
- Snatch x 5 per arm *Remember to “Paint the Fence”.
- Heavy dead swing x 3
- Snatch x 8 per arm
- Heavy dead swing x 1
- Snatch x 10 per arm
Here’s why it works:
The kettlebell snatch is about efficiency. Shortening your arc means that you will have to project the kettlebell over a lesser distance to get it overhead. Shortening the arc also allows you to cut the kettlebell’s momentum as it approaches the lockout. This drastically reduces the risk of wear and tear on your shoulders. Using your hips to project the kettlebell will also keep your shoulders and back healthy, while cutting back on undue fatigue during high rep snatches.
Do you think any above would help you crush an RKC Snatch Test?
I do.
https://youtu.be/VRybp4KhA3Q
A fellow coach at MFF, Laura Smith had this to say about “Miyagi Pinball”:
“After Steve told me to “paint the fence” (karate kid style of course) I never had hand issues again. After months of my hands tearing every time I did a snatch test, this was life changing.”
There it is gang.
Try it and let me know what you think.
-Fury
Steve “Coach Fury” Holiner’s superhero headquarters is Mark Fisher Fitness in NYC. Fury’s a Senior RKC, a DVRT Master Chief, and an Original Strength Instructor. He is available for classes, semi-privates, instructor training and programming at MFF. Check out coachfury.com*,* facebook.com/coachfury Instagram @iamcoachfury and Twitter @coachfury for more info.