The clean and press is a two-part
weight training exercise whereby a loaded
barbell
A barbell is a piece of exercise equipment used in weight training, bodybuilding, Olympic weightlifting, weightlifting, powerlifting and strongman, consisting of a long bar, usually with weights attached at each end.
Barbells range in length ...
is lifted from the floor to the shoulders (the clean) and
pushed overhead (the press). The lift was a component of the sport of
Olympic weightlifting
Weightlifting (often known as Olympic weightlifting) is a competitive strength athletics, strength sport in which athletes compete in lifting a barbell loaded with weight plates from the ground to overhead, with the aim of successfully lifting t ...
from 1928 to 1972, but was removed due to difficulties in judging proper technique.
Movement
Clean phase
In the
clean movement, after taking a
big breath and setting the back, the lifter jumps the bar up through triple extension (in very quick succession) of the hips,
knees and then
ankle
The ankle, the talocrural region or the jumping bone (informal) is the area where the foot and the leg meet. The ankle includes three joints: the ankle joint proper or talocrural joint, the subtalar joint, and the inferior tibiofibular joint. The ...
s. When the legs have driven the bar as high as possible, the lifter pulls under the bar by violently shrugging (contracting) the trapezius muscles of the upper back ("traps") dropping into a
deep squat position and spinning the hands around the bar so the
elbows are extended in front.
At the same time, the arms are brought up with the elbows extended in front of the chest so the bar may now lie across or "rest" across the palms, the front of the
shoulder or
deltoid muscles, and the
clavicles. At this point the lifter should be in a
full squat position, with his buttocks on or very close to the heels, sitting erect with the bar resting comfortably across the deltoids and fingers. By keeping a rigid torso and maintaining a deep breath hold the bar bends over the lifter's clavicle.
Press phase
Once the bar is on the anterior deltoids, the lifter proceeds to the
press, pushing the bar overhead and locking it out with completely extended arms.
Jerking movements, bending of the legs, excessive backward leaning, or displacement of the feet are prohibited.
Removal from the Olympics
By the 1950s, lax enforcement of the rules in international competition had allowed the press phase of the lift, by rule an upright, rigid body movement performed by the shoulders and arms, to evolve into a "layback" movement that utilized the larger muscles of the legs, hips, and torso, enabling the lifter to "cheat" to lift more weight.
Historian John D. Fair wrote: "The rules had been clear about maintaining a vertical position and disallowing bending of the legs since the 1930s, but much depended on how these movements were interpreted and the political dispositions of officials and juries."
In 1964, Olympic weightlifting referee George W. Kirkley wrote that the "clause of the rule which defines the permitted lean-back as 'not exaggerated' is in my view a weak spot, because it is virtually impossible to get any universal agreement of interpretation as to what constitutes 'exaggerated.'"
After World War II, the situation was compounded by
Cold War
The Cold War was a period of global Geopolitics, geopolitical rivalry between the United States (US) and the Soviet Union (USSR) and their respective allies, the capitalist Western Bloc and communist Eastern Bloc, which lasted from 1947 unt ...
tensions: in 1956,
Bob Hoffman, coach of the U.S. Olympic weightlifting team, accused international judges of pro-Soviet, anti-American bias, disqualifying legal American presses and allowing rule-breaking Soviet ones. Fair, however, while acknowledging the Soviet role in the erosion of press form, wrote that "the twin trends of loose pressing and lax officiating were well in place" before the Soviets entered international competition. The
International Weightlifting Federation resolved the situation by removing the clean and press from the Olympic weightlifting program after the
1972 games in Munich.
See also
*
Clean and jerk
The clean and jerk is a composite of two weightlifting movements, most often performed with a barbell: the clean and the jerk. During the ''clean'', the lifter moves the barbell from the floor to a racked position across the deltoids, without rest ...
References
External links
Olympic Press Techniques: The Way They Did It Before 1972
{{DEFAULTSORT:Clean And Press
Weight training exercises
Weightlifting