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Overhand Tricep Stretching Single Arm
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HomeTriceps › Overhand Tricep Stretching Single Arm
Overhand Tricep Stretching Single Arm
Triceps Bodyweight Mobility/Flexibility Mobility / Stretching
Your Goal General Fitness
Sets
2–3
Reps
10–15
Rest
60s
How To Perform
1
Get into the starting position as shown, keeping your back straight.
2
Move slowly into the stretch until you feel tension — not pain.
3
Hold for 20-30 seconds, breathing steadily throughout.
4
Release gently and repeat on the opposite side if applicable.
5
Never force the stretch — ease in a little further each time you exhale.
Pro Tips
Stretch after your workout when muscles are warm — you'll get further with less risk.
Breathe out as you ease deeper into the stretch.
Consistency matters more than intensity — daily short stretches beat occasional long ones.
Overview

The Overhand Tricep Stretching Single Arm targets the triceps, with Anconeus picking up the supporting work, performed using bodyweight. It hits the muscle through a natural movement arc that allows good loading without excessive joint stress.

Muscles Worked
Triceps
75%
Anconeus
42%
Forearms
32%
Common Mistakes
Forcing the stretch too aggressively — pain means you've gone too far.
Holding your breath instead of breathing steadily through the stretch.
Rushing through it — each position needs time to release properly.
About Training Your Triceps

The triceps brachii makes up roughly two-thirds of the size of your upper arm, which means that if your goal is bigger arms, the triceps deserve more attention than the biceps. As the name suggests, it has three heads — the long, lateral, and medial heads — and its primary job is to extend the elbow, straightening the arm. The long head also crosses the shoulder joint, so it is involved in pulling the arm down and back.

Because the three heads have slightly different functions, varied exercise selection produces the most complete development. Heavy compound pressing such as the close-grip bench press and dips trains all three heads under significant load and builds raw size and strength. Pushdowns with a rope or bar isolate the lateral head, which gives the arm its width when viewed from the side. Overhead extensions — where the arm is raised above the head — place the long head on a deep stretch and are essential for filling out the back of the arm and creating the horseshoe shape.

Triceps respond well to a mix of rep ranges. The heavy presses can be trained in the 6 to 10 range, while cable and overhead isolation work is best in the 10 to 15 range with strict form. Like the biceps, the triceps recover quickly and tolerate being trained a couple of times per week, especially when some of that volume comes from your pressing work for chest and shoulders.

A frequent error is letting the elbows drift and flare on extensions and pushdowns, which turns the movement into a shoulder and chest exercise. Keep the upper arms relatively fixed so that only the forearm moves, and lock out each rep fully to maximise the contraction at the medial head. On dips and close-grip presses, keep the elbows tucked rather than flared to protect the shoulders and bias the triceps.

Developing the triceps not only adds the majority of your arm size but also directly increases your pressing strength on the bench and overhead press. A balanced arm routine gives the triceps at least as much attention as the biceps. Build yours around the popular triceps exercises listed below.

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