Front Plank Variation: Kettlebell Drag Thru

A brutal anti-rotation plank progression: hold a rigid high plank, reach under the body, and drag a kettlebell across without letting your hips sway.

Muscles Targeted

Obliques, transverse abdominis, serratus anterior, shoulder stabilizers, and glutes (to keep hips level).

Key Benefits

  • Spikes anti-rotation demand (no hip sway allowed)
  • Builds full-body stiffness in a high plank position
  • Trains shoulder control while the trunk resists twisting
  • Scales easily by stance width, weight, and tempo
If your hips move, widen your feet or lighten the kettlebell.

Equipment Needed

Kettlebell and a mat (or comfortable floor surface).

How to Perform Front Plank Variation: Kettlebell Drag Thru

  1. Set up in a strong high plank with feet slightly wider than normal.
  2. Place a kettlebell just outside one hand.
  3. Brace, then reach under your torso and drag the kettlebell across to the other side.
  4. Return the hand to the floor and reset your position before the next rep.

Programming Options

  • 6–12 drags total (3–6 each direction), 2–4 sets
  • Or 20–40 seconds of controlled reps
  • Rest 60–90 seconds between sets

Why This Variation Works

The loaded reach forces your trunk to resist rotation while your shoulders and hips stay stacked—excellent for athletes who need control under asymmetrical stress.

When to Use It

Core finishers, athletic stability training, and late-stage progressions when standard plank holds are no longer challenging.

Frequently Asked Questions

What’s the most common mistake?

Letting the hips twist or sag. Widen your stance and slow down until your torso stays still.

How heavy should the kettlebell be?

Use a load that challenges you but still allows a motionless trunk. Form matters more than weight.

How do I make it harder?

Narrow the feet, use a heavier kettlebell, pause after each drag, or slow the drag tempo.