There are certain muscle groups that the majority of men love to train over others, namely the so-called “vanity” muscles: chest, bicep, abdominal and shoulder muscles.
While working on those areas contributes to your overall strength, there are other muscle groups that men are just as likely to ignore. Doing so can lead to muscle imbalances and, in some cases, make you more predisposed to an injury. In addition, they may make the vanity muscles look less chiseled.
If you want to maximize strength and build a body that’s sculpted all over, here are five muscle groups, courtesy of dailyburn.com, that guys should not neglect while at the gym.
Glutes
While women may love to work on their glutes, many men do not share the feeling. And if they do consent to a leg day? Most fail to work enough on the muscle group to do any real improvement.
Your gluteal muscles are the largest muscle group in your body and ignoring them will lean to a loss of strength when doing squats and sprints. If you have weak glutes you may also experience lower back pain and hip stiffness.
How to Strengthen It: One-Legged Hip Thrusts
How to: Using a bench, come to a bridge position with your upper back on the bench, arms laying horizontally along the length of the bench, and both feet planted on the floor, knees at a 90-degree angle. Lift your left leg, keeping it bent at a 90-degree angle, until your shin is parallel to your right thigh. Keeping your right leg bent but relaxed, and your left leg lifted, lower your hips to hover just above the floor. Then, push back up, driving through the right heel while clenching the right glute. Complete two to four sets of six to 10 reps on each leg.
If you feel the burn in your hamstrings, rather than your butt, while doing this move, your hammies are likely compensating for your too-weak glutes. Any hamstring activation will lessen as your glutes become stronger. Since this move works with a light load (just your bodyweight), you can complete it five or six times a week without overtraining.
Adductors
Adductor-focused exercises tone the inner thighs, an area that many guys ignore completely. However, your body needs strong adductors to help your thighs move laterally and to perform just about any leg movement both in and out of the gym.
While squats can strengthen your adductors, to really zero in on your inner thighs you should perform lateral lunges and exercise band movements in which the thighs move together against resistance.
How to Strengthen It: Lateral Lunges
How to: Stand with your feet together, back straight, with a dumbbell in each hand. Bending your right leg and keeping your knee joint aligned above your ankle, step to the right to come into a side lunge. Squeezing the glutes and inner thigh, return to standing. Repeat on the opposite side. Perform three to four sets of five-high weight reps on each leg once a week and two to three sets of 10 to 12 medium-weight reps on each leg once a week.
Upper Back
Daily life — sitting, typing and texting, for example — can take a toll on your upper back. Plus, many men worsen imbalances by overdoing it with the push-ups, bench presses and other front-focused exercises.
A weak back — especially if you have a strong chest — can leave you bent over and that hunched posture can actually make your pecs look smaller. It’s a good idea to incorporate back exercises into your routine every time you head to the gym.
How to Strengthen It: Seated Cable Row
How to: Sit at a seated cable station. With your feet on the platform and your knees slightly bent, grasp a V-bar with your palms facing each other. Then, keeping your back flat, pull the bar toward your torso until your hands are just in front of your chest. Slowly extend arms, and repeat. To properly engage your back muscles, focus on pulling your shoulder blades into each other. Perform three to four sets of five high-weight reps once a week, and two to three sets of 10 to 12 medium-weight reps once a week.
Calves
Underdeveloped leg muscles — aka chicken legs — plague many guys. But your calves are a functional muscle and the weaker they are, the less volume your legs can handle.
How to Strengthen It: Standing Dumbbell Calf Raises
How to: Stand on the edge of a low platform or step, your weight centered on the balls of your feet and your heels hanging over the platform’s edge. Holding a dumbbell in each hand, raise your heels as high as possible, pause, and then slowly lower yourself to return to the starting position. Make sure to keep your legs just slightly bent throughout the movement. Aim for four sets of 15 to 20 reps with heavy loads. Perform each exercise two to three times per week for optimum leg strength.
Forearms
There’s a reason grip strength is a key indicator of a guy’s overall power, as the stronger your grip is the more you can accomplish in your workouts.
How to Strengthen It: Palms-Up Wrist Curls
How to: Sitting on the edge of a flat bench, hold a light-to-medium weight dumbbell in each hand so that your forearms are resting against your thighs and your palms are facing up. Your wrists should hang over the edge of your thighs. Then, slowly curl your wrists up and toward your forearms as far as possible. Pause, then return to start. Perform three sets of 20 to 30 reps of each exercise once per week.
(Photo courtesy of dailyburn.com)









