Set up for a Power Snatch

  • Begin with your heels hip width apart.
  • Bar is on the ground, arms are wide and hands are in a hook grip.
  • Shoulders are at or just over the bar.
  • Back is flat and tight.
  • Chest is up.
  • Core is tight.
  • Weight is in balls of feet.

Points of Performance for a Power Snatch

  • Push your knees back as you stand the bar up from the ground, keeping the hips and shoulders rising at the same rate.
  • From the mid thigh pull the bar into the body and aggressively jump, extending the hips, knees, and ankles (triple extension).
  • With a big shrug of the shoulders, elbows come high and outside the bar then back around while pulling yourself under to receive the weight.
  • Receive the bar in a partial overhead squat with the arms locked out over the middle of the body.
  • Drive through the heels back to a standing position.
  • The snatch is completed when the knees and hips are fully locked out and open at the top.

Tips and Tricks

  • The snatch consists of 3 “PULLS”:
    • Pull #1 from the floor to the top of your knees.
    • Pull #2 from the top of your knees to your hips.
    • Pull #3 is pulling yourself under the bar.
  • Breaking this movement down into each pull will help remove confusion of the complexity of this movement.
    • Example: remove the first pull and work on explosiveness and, more importantly, speed under the bar in a “hang power snatch”.
  • When the bar reaches the top of the knee your shins should be vertical and the hamstrings will be tight like rubber bands.
  • Work on actively externally rotating your shoulders when locked out overhead.
    • Your elbow pits will be facing up towards the sky.
  • Speed under the bar is the key.
  • The power from this lift is initiated in the hips.
    • Think about 2 speeds: slow and controlled off the ground and explosive from the top of the knees to the hips.
  • One continuous pull from the ground to overhead
    • Stopping or hesitating at any point in the lift is only going to stunt the momentum created from the floor.
  • Pull with long arms.
    • An early arm bend will only dampen momentum created from the floor.