Monster Walks

A banded walking drill that targets lateral hip strength and reinforces stable knees and hips while moving forward and backward.

Muscles Targeted

Glute med, glute max (support), hip external rotators, and trunk stabilizers.

Key Benefits

  • Builds lateral hip strength with movement
  • Reinforces knee tracking under band tension
  • Excellent warm-up before runs and lower-body lifting
  • Easy progression via band strength and placement
Stay in an athletic stance and keep tension the whole time—don’t let feet snap together.

Equipment Needed

A mini resistance band and a small open space.

How to Perform

  1. Place the band above the knees (easier) or at the ankles (harder).
  2. Set an athletic quarter-squat with hips back.
  3. Step forward with control while keeping band tension.
  4. Continue for a set distance, then walk backward the same way.
  5. Keep toes mostly forward and knees tracking slightly out.

Programming Options

  • 2–4 rounds of 8–12 steps forward + 8–12 steps backward
  • Or timed: 20–40 seconds each direction
  • Use early in a session as a prep drill

Why This Variation Works

Monster walks apply consistent lateral hip demand while you move, making it a strong bridge between static band drills and real-world movement patterns.

When to Use It

Use as a warm-up, running prep, or as part of a hip stability circuit when you want a low-impact but effective lateral hip stimulus.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I feel this in my knees?

No—this should feel like outer hip/glute work. Reduce band tension or move the band above the knees if needed.

How low should I squat?

A small athletic bend is enough. Going too low often shifts effort away from the hips.

What’s the easiest way to make this harder?

Use a stronger band or move the band lower (toward ankles) while keeping perfect control.