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Plank Cross Knee Drive
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Home ›
Quadriceps ›
Plank Cross Knee Drive
Plank Cross Knee Drive
QuadricepsBodyweightIsometricCalisthenics
Your Goal General Fitness
Sets
2–3
Reps
10–15
Rest
60s
How To Perform
1
Get into a forearm or high plank with elbows under shoulders.
2
Keep your body in a straight line from head to heels — no raised hips or sagging.
3
Brace your core as if you're about to take a punch.
4
Squeeze your glutes and keep your legs straight.
5
Breathe steadily — don't hold your breath.
Pro Tips
Squeeze your glutes hard during the hold — it keeps your hips from sagging.
Push the floor away with your forearms — activates the serratus anterior.
Progress by extending hold time in 5-10 second increments rather than switching to harder variations too soon.
Overview
A abs movement using bodyweight that loads the abdominals through its full range, with Glutes picking up the supporting work. One of the more effective exercises for building size and strength in this area.
Muscles Worked
Abdominals
75%
Glutes
42%
Shoulders
32%
Transverse Abdominis
22%
Common Mistakes
Raising the hips too high — your body should be in a straight line, not an inverted V.
Holding your breath instead of breathing steadily.
Letting your hips sag toward the floor as fatigue sets in.
About Training Your Quadriceps
The quadriceps are the four large muscles on the front of the thigh that straighten the knee and drive almost every lower-body movement. They are among the biggest and most powerful muscles in the body, so training them hard pays off in strength, size, and athletic performance.
Squat and lunge patterns are the foundation of quad development — back squats, front squats, leg presses, split squats, and step-ups all load the quads heavily while also recruiting the glutes. Leg extensions isolate the quads directly for extra volume and a strong contraction. For most lifters, anchoring leg day with a heavy compound squat and finishing with lunges and extensions builds the most complete thighs.
Keep the knees tracking over the toes, descend to at least parallel where mobility allows, and control the lowering phase. Beginners should master bodyweight and goblet squats before loading a heavy barbell.