Strength training
How to select appropriate accessory exercises for improving the sticking point phases of competitive lifts effectively.
This evergreen guide explains how to identify, select, and integrate targeted accessory exercises that strengthen the specific sticking point phases in key lifts, maximizing transfer to competition performance.
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Published by Paul Johnson
July 15, 2025 - 3 min Read
Accessory work often gets undervalued, yet it is the strategic engine behind overcoming stubborn sticking points in lifts like the squat, bench press, and deadlift. The first step is to diagnose the exact phase where your bar slows, whether it’s the early descent, mid‑pull, or late lockout. A precise diagnosis informs the choice of exercise, load, and tempo. Start with video analysis or a coach’s eye to map where the sticking point sits in relation to joint angles and bar speed. Then confirm by testing small modifications to range or grip to see whether the sticking phase shifts. Finally, prioritize accessory moves that directly enhance force production, bar path, and structural stability around that phase.
Once you’ve pinpointed the sticking region, you need a framework to choose the right accessories without overcomplicating training. A practical approach is to categorize exercises into three roles: strength builders, motor pattern shapers, and positioning optimizers. Strength builders increase absolute force capacity in the critical range; motor pattern shapers improve the neural timing and coordination that drive smooth bar movement; positioning optimizers refine joint angles and proximal stability to ensure efficient leverage. This framework helps you avoid interchangeable filler work and keeps your program aligned with the sticking point you’re targeting. It also clarifies how to sequence exercises for balanced progress.
How to tier accessory work into a cohesive program
For the initial phase of choosing exercises, start with input from science and field experience. Prioritize movements that load the same portion of the range of motion where the bar struggles. If the sticking point occurs near the bottom of the squat, for example, choose variations that strengthen the bottom position microcycle, such as paused squats or tempo squats that emphasize control and force generation in that range. Be mindful of individual anthropometrics; a lifter with longer limbs might need different levers or stances to reproduce the sticking environment. The goal is to accumulate robust training stimuli without derailing technique or recovery capacity.
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Practical choice becomes a matter of alignment and progression. Start with a conservative volume and density to avoid overtraining, then progressively overload the chosen accessories. If you notice the sticking point holding firm after several weeks, consider alternating to a complementary exercise that trains the same force vector from a slightly altered angle or tempo. For example, if paused squats help but progress stalls, move to front squats or safety bar squats to engage the same musculature from a different posture. Keep a training log to track how each variation shifts bar speed, joint feel, and the rate of perceived effort, ensuring you’re moving toward the targeted phase effectively.
Refining exercise selection through feedback and monitoring
A well‑rounded accessory plan respects training boundaries while supplying adequate stimulus to the sticking phase. Begin by mapping the weekly distribution so that heavy primary lifts and high‑quality accessories don’t clash in a single session. Split sessions by muscle groups and movement patterns when possible, preserving fresh alignment and technique for the main lifts. Use lower reps with higher loads for the strength builders and contrast training or dynamic effort days for motor pattern integration. In addition, incorporate mobility and thoracic work to enhance posture and bar path. A disciplined approach to scheduling prevents bottlenecks and helps maintain consistent progress over time.
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Another essential consideration is exercise specificity. Choose accessories that yield transferable gains to competition lifts rather than purely aesthetic improvements. For example, reverse hypers can support posterior chain integrity without taxing the lower back during heavy pulls, while floor press variants can simulate the bottom position of the bench press without engaging the same leverage demands as a full range. The objective is to engineer micro‑cycles where the accessory work feels like a natural extension of the sticking point mechanics, so gains in control and force production translate to the platform.
Avoid common pitfalls when deploying sticking point accessories
Feedback loops differentiate effective programs from generic ones. Regularly review video footage and velocity metrics to verify that the accessory work moves the bar more rapidly through the sticking point. If speed or control doesn’t improve, reassess load ranges, grip width, or tempo and adjust the accessory mix accordingly. Solicit coaching insights and athlete self‑awareness to detect subtle shifts in technique that may undermine progress. It’s common for lifters to overemphasize heavy loading at the expense of technique, so balance intensity with repetition quality. A diagnostic mindset keeps you aligned with the specific sticking region you aim to improve.
Consider recovery and nutrition as part of exercise selection. If you’re stacking heavy accessories alongside demanding primary lifts, fatigue can mask real gains and exaggerate sticking points. Plan deload weeks or light accessory blocks after peak cycles to allow tissue remodeling and CNS recovery. Prioritize protein intake and sleep consistency to support muscle repair and motor learning. The right recovery foundation ensures that the selected accessories contribute to stable, long‑term improvements in the sticking phase rather than short‑term spikes of performance that fade quickly.
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Putting it all together for lasting improvement
A frequent mistake is chasing novelty at the expense of specificity. Lifters try new, flashy movements that don’t align with their exact sticking region, wasting effort and time. Another pitfall is neglecting grip, stance, and pelvis mechanics, which can distort bar path even when the lifting plan is technically sound. Maintain a clear, periodized progression where each accessory variation serves a distinct purpose: to increase force production in the precise range, to refine motor timing, or to stabilize the joints and spine. By guarding against aimless exercise shopping, you keep the program efficient and effective.
Finally, individual differences determine how you should deploy accessories. Some athletes respond best to tempo adjustments, others to higher training density or to eccentric emphasis. Listen to your body’s signals, and don’t be afraid to pause an accessory if it’s inflaming joints or triggering technique breakdowns. Use autoregulation to adjust daily intensity and leverage a flexible plan that still adheres to the sticking point objective. Consistency beats intensity in the long run, and principled variation prevents stagnation.
To translate accessory work into competitive improvement, integrate assessment checkpoints every cycle. Re‑test your sticking point after a block of focused accessories, comparing bar speed, control, and force production to baseline. If you’ve moved the sticking region, continue refining the corresponding accessory mix; if not, reassess diagnostic assumptions and consider minor alterations to stances or cues. Maintain clear records of what worked and what didn’t, then adapt the plan with evidence rather than impulse. The aim is a smooth, powerful execution through the sticking phase that carries over to meet competition demands.
In the end, the best accessories are those that reliably strengthen the exact phase where your lift grinds to a halt. A disciplined selection process, grounded in biomechanical reasoning and tailored to your biomechanics, builds resilience and efficiency in the sticking region. By combining targeted strength work, motor pattern refinement, and precise positioning, you create a robust platform for progress. Stay curious, measure carefully, and adjust thoughtfully. With patience and consistency, accessory training becomes a faithful ally in achieving peak performance on the platform.
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