Reverse Nordic

A high-demand quad strengthening drill that loads the front of the thigh through a long range from a tall-kneeling position.

Muscles Targeted

Quadriceps (primary), hip flexors (support), and trunk stabilizers.

Key Benefits

  • Big quad stimulus without needing weights
  • Trains knee extension capacity through longer ranges
  • Great bridge toward higher-level knee-dominant work
  • Scales with range, tempo, and assistance
Keep a straight line from knees to shoulders—don’t break at the hips.

Equipment Needed

Knee pad/mat. Optional: band assistance or a support surface to regress.

How to Perform Reverse Nordic

  1. Start tall kneeling with glutes gently squeezed and ribs stacked.
  2. Lean back as a unit (knees, hips, shoulders stay aligned).
  3. Go only as far as you can control with clean form.
  4. Return to tall kneeling by driving the quads to bring you forward.
  5. Repeat for reps—stop before form breaks down.

Programming Options

  • 2–4 sets of 4–10 reps
  • Tempo option: 3 seconds back, 1 second forward
  • Regression: use band assistance

Why This Variation Works

Reverse Nordics place a large demand on the quads in a long-lever position, helping build strength and tolerance around the knee.

When to Use It

Quad-focused blocks, accessory work after lunges/split squats, or as a bodyweight quad challenge when equipment is limited.

Frequently Asked Questions

What if I feel it too much in the front of the hip?

Reduce range, slow the tempo, and focus on staying tall with ribs stacked. Band assistance can help.

Should my hips stay extended?

Yes—avoid sitting back. Think “straight line” as you lean.

How do I progress?

Increase range, add slow eccentrics, reduce assistance, or add load only once form is rock solid.