Landmine Kneeling Squeeze Press: Form, Muscles Worked, Sets & Tips
Master the Landmine Kneeling Squeeze Press for upper-chest growth and shoulder-friendly pressing. Learn proper setup, step-by-step form, sets by goal, common mistakes, FAQs, and recommended gear.
Landmine Kneeling Squeeze Press
This press rewards control more than max load. Keep your ribs stacked over your hips, squeeze the bar end like you’re trying to “crush” it, and press up-and-forward along the landmine path. Done right, you’ll feel a strong chest contraction without excessive shoulder strain.
Quick Overview
| Body Part | Chest |
|---|---|
| Primary Muscle | Pectoralis major (upper/clavicular emphasis) |
| Secondary Muscle | Anterior deltoids, triceps, serratus anterior, core stabilizers |
| Equipment | Landmine attachment, barbell, weight plate(s), optional knee pad/mat |
| Difficulty | Intermediate (coordination + core control + consistent squeeze) |
Sets & Reps (By Goal)
- Hypertrophy (chest focus): 3–5 sets × 8–12 reps (60–90 sec rest)
- Strength emphasis: 4–6 sets × 4–8 reps (90–150 sec rest)
- Muscle endurance / pump: 2–4 sets × 12–20 reps (45–75 sec rest)
- Warm-up / activation: 2–3 sets × 10–15 reps (light, strict tempo)
Progression rule: Add reps first while keeping the same squeeze and ribcage position. Then add a small amount of weight. If chest tension drops and shoulders take over, you progressed too fast.
Setup / Starting Position
- Set the landmine: Anchor the bar securely. Load a plate near the pressing end.
- Kneel tall: Knees down, toes tucked or untucked for comfort. Squeeze glutes lightly to keep hips stacked.
- Brace the trunk: Ribs down, abs on. Avoid leaning back as the bar gets heavier.
- Hand position (the “squeeze”): Place both hands on the bar sleeve/end and press your palms inward.
- Start at chest height: Elbows slightly tucked. Wrists neutral. Bar angled up-and-forward.
Tip: Use a knee pad/mat so you can stay tall and stable without shifting around.
Execution (Step-by-Step)
- Lock in your squeeze: Before pressing, squeeze the bar end hard with your palms (constant pressure inward).
- Press along the arc: Drive the bar up and slightly forward (not straight overhead).
- Keep ribs stacked: Don’t flare the chest or arch the lower back to “finish” the rep.
- Reach smoothly: Near the top, think “reach forward” slightly to let the shoulder blade move naturally.
- Lower with control: Bring the bar back to the start position slowly while keeping the squeeze and tension.
Pro Tips & Common Mistakes
Pro Tips
- Squeeze first, press second: The squeeze creates pec tension—don’t let it fade mid-set.
- Stay tall: Glutes lightly engaged, ribs down. A stable torso makes the press more chest-driven.
- Use a slight forward reach: At the top, a small reach helps serratus and keeps shoulders moving well.
- Tempo wins: 2 seconds down, 1 second up is a great default for chest focus.
Common Mistakes
- Over-arching the low back: Usually from going too heavy or trying to press “too vertical.”
- Elbows flaring wide: Reduces chest feel and can irritate shoulders—keep a modest tuck.
- Losing the squeeze: Turning it into a normal landmine press often shifts work to delts/triceps.
- Rushing the bottom: Bouncing off the start position removes tension and control.
FAQ
Should I feel this more in my chest or shoulders?
With a solid inward squeeze and a tall torso, most people feel strong tension in the upper chest plus support from the front delts and triceps. If shoulders dominate, lighten the load, keep elbows slightly tucked, and increase the squeeze.
Is the landmine squeeze press shoulder-friendly?
Often yes, because the landmine uses a more natural pressing angle than a strict overhead press. But “shoulder-friendly” doesn’t mean “pain-proof”—avoid pinching, keep reps controlled, and don’t flare elbows hard.
How heavy should I go?
Choose a load that lets you keep the squeeze and maintain a stacked torso. If you have to lean back or lose control to complete reps, it’s too heavy for the chest-focused version.
Can I do this without a landmine attachment?
If needed, you can wedge the bar into a stable corner with protection (towel/rubber), but a proper landmine attachment is safer and smoother. Make sure the setup is secure before loading plates.
Where should my hands go?
Keep both hands together on the bar sleeve/end and press your palms inward the whole time. Think “crush the bar end” to keep the chest engaged.
Recommended Equipment (Optional)
- Landmine Attachment (Barbell Landmine) — the safest, smoothest way to anchor the bar for landmine pressing
- Olympic Barbell (7 ft / 20 kg) — standard bar length works best with landmine attachments
- Bumper Plates Set — durable plates that load easily and protect floors
- Workout Knee Pad / Thick Exercise Mat — improves comfort and stability in tall kneeling
- Wrist Wraps (Optional) — helpful if wrists fatigue during hard squeezing sets
Tip: If any tool changes your form or causes discomfort, simplify—lighter load + clean reps beats “gear-assisted” compensations.