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Kettlebell Situp Press
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HomeAbs › Kettlebell Situp Press
Kettlebell Situp Press
Abs Kettlebell Push Strength
Your Goal General Fitness
Sets
2–3
Reps
10–15
Rest
60s
How To Perform
1
Lie on the bench and grip the weight at chest level, elbows at about 45 degrees from your body.
2
Press upward until your arms are extended — don't lock the elbows fully.
3
Lower back down slowly until you feel a stretch in the chest.
4
Keep your feet flat on the floor and shoulders pinned to the bench.
5
Drive the weight up with intent on every rep — don't grind slowly.
Pro Tips
Exhale sharply at the top of each crunch — it forces a deeper contraction.
Add a pause at the top rather than bouncing through reps.
Reduce weight or reps before compromising form — the abs don't need heavy loading to grow.
Overview

This abs exercise using a kettlebell places direct tension on the abdominals, with Hip Flexors picking up the supporting work. The movement pattern makes it well suited for both beginners building a base and experienced lifters adding volume.

Muscles Worked
Abdominals
75%
Hip Flexors
42%
Obliques
32%
Common Mistakes
Pulling the neck forward with your hands — the abs should do the work.
Coming up too far — you're working the hip flexors, not the abs, past a certain point.
Moving too fast and losing the mind-muscle connection.
About Training Your Abs

The core is far more than a visible six-pack. It is a coordinated group of muscles that includes the rectus abdominis — the long muscle that creates the six-pack appearance and flexes the spine — the internal and external obliques on the sides that rotate and bend the torso, and the deep transverse abdominis that wraps around the midsection like a belt to stabilise the spine and protect the lower back.

Effective core training works all of these functions rather than relying on endless crunches. Flexion exercises such as crunches, sit-ups, and hanging leg raises target the rectus abdominis and are excellent for building visible abdominal muscle. Rotational and anti-rotation work such as Russian twists and cable woodchops develops the obliques and the ability to resist twisting forces. Bracing and isometric holds like the plank and its variations train the deep stabilisers that give you a strong, protected midsection during heavy lifts and everyday movement.

Because the core is involved in stabilising almost every compound lift, it already gets significant indirect work from squats, deadlifts, and overhead presses. Direct ab training a few times per week, with a mix of weighted flexion work in the 8 to 15 range and longer isometric holds, is enough for most people to build a strong, defined midsection. Adding resistance to ab exercises over time is just as important as it is for any other muscle.

The most important thing to understand about abs is that visibility is primarily a function of body-fat level, not the number of crunches you do. You can build thick, strong abdominal muscles, but they will only show when body fat is low enough, which is achieved through nutrition and overall training rather than spot reduction. There is no exercise that burns fat from the stomach specifically. Focus ab training on building and strengthening the muscles, and rely on a sensible diet and full-body activity to reveal them.

A strong core improves posture, protects the lower back, transfers force between the upper and lower body, and underpins performance in virtually every sport and lift. Train it deliberately using the popular core exercises below.

Popular Abs exercises:
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