Unilateral Kettlebell Bottoms Up Dead Clean
Cues de entrenamiento
Stand with feet hip-width apart and hold a single kettlebell in the bottoms-up front rack position with one hand. Hinge at your hips to lower the kettlebell toward the floor, keeping your back flat and core engaged, then drive through your glutes to return to standing, maintaining control and stability throughout. Switch sides as needed to work both arms and legs equally.
What this exercise is for
Unilateral Kettlebell Bottoms Up Dead Clean is a hinge-focused single movement in the KB Pro library. It is categorized primarily under glutes work and is best treated as a intermediate-to-intermediate skill anchor rather than filler volume.
The movement uses compound mechanics and tends to load the full body chain most directly while forcing side-to-side control through unilateral loading. In practice, that means it fits best when you want a movement with a clear role inside the session rather than something ambiguous or redundant.
How to program it
- Use Unilateral Kettlebell Bottoms Up Dead Clean when the session needs an obvious hinge slot rather than more generic conditioning work.
- Because it is unilateral, it works well when you want left-right balance, trunk engagement, or a lighter bell to feel more demanding.
- Unilateral Kettlebell Bottoms Up Dead Clean behaves like a compound exercise, so pair it with movements that do not compete for the exact same fatigue profile.
- For most athletes, the main question is not whether Unilateral Kettlebell Bottoms Up Dead Clean is “good,” but whether it makes sense for the format and the skill ceiling of the day. KB Pro tags it as intermediate, which is the right starting point for deciding where it belongs.
Best use cases
- Hinge development inside balanced full-body sessions
- Glutes accessory work when a session needs more specific stress
- Single-side loading or anti-rotation challenges
- Exercise-library reference when choosing substitutes inside the generator
Skill and coaching notes
This movement is tagged at the intermediate level, so the useful question is whether the athlete can keep positions clean under fatigue, not just whether they can complete a single rep.
If you are programming for general training rather than testing, keep Unilateral Kettlebell Bottoms Up Dead Clean in a role that reinforces glutes work without forcing sloppy compensations from heavier or more technical lifts in the same session.
The cues on file reinforce the main coaching priority: Stand with feet hip-width apart and hold a single kettlebell in the bottoms-up front rack position with one hand. Hinge at your hips to lower the kettlebell toward the floor, keeping your back flat and core engaged, then drive through your glutes to return to standing, maintaining control and stability throughout. Switch sides as needed to work both arms and legs equally.
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