Exercise
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Oblique Twist "Wood Chopper" (LF Cable)

BackAbs
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Workout Center

The oblique twist wood chopper with cable is an intermediate core exercise performed with a cable machine that targets the oblique muscles through a diagonal rotational movement pattern. The low-to-high cable angle creates a woodchopping motion that develops rotational power, stability, and oblique definition. This dynamic compound exercise combines spinal rotation with slight extension, creating a powerful core strengthening movement that mimics natural functional movement patterns.

Muscles Targeted

  • Primary: External obliques, internal obliques, rectus abdominis
  • Secondary: Transverse abdominis, serratus anterior, latissimus dorsi
  • Tertiary: Shoulder stabilizers, core stabilizers, hip stabilizers

Starting Position

Stand perpendicular to a cable machine with your feet shoulder-width apart, knees slightly bent. Grasp the cable handle with both hands at approximately hip height, with the cable coming from the low pulley on the same side of your body. Your arms should be extended but with a slight bend at the elbows. Keep your core engaged and chest up with proper posture throughout the setup.

Execution Steps

  1. Initiate the movement by rotating your torso, pulling the cable handle diagonally across your body
  2. Rotate toward the opposite side of your body from where the cable originates, bringing the handle up and across toward your shoulder
  3. Follow the diagonal path in a smooth arc-like motion, rotating your torso maximally
  4. Achieve full contraction at the top of the movement with the handle positioned near the opposite shoulder
  5. Control the eccentric as you slowly resist the cable's pull back to the starting position
  6. Return to starting position with controlled movement
  7. Repeat for the desired number of repetitions on one side, then switch to the opposite side

Form Cues

  • Rotate from the core: Initiate the movement from your obliques and core, not your arms
  • Follow the diagonal path: Move in a smooth diagonal pattern from low to high, mimicking a woodchopping motion
  • Maintain stability: Keep your feet firmly planted—avoid excessive shifting or turning
  • Full range of motion: Achieve maximum rotation in each direction for optimal engagement
  • Control both phases: Both the pulling and returning phases should be deliberate and controlled

Common Mistakes

  • Using arms instead of core: Pulling primarily with your arms rather than rotating from your core reduces oblique engagement. Focus on core rotation.
  • Incomplete rotation: Not rotating fully reduces the range of motion and stimulus. Rotate maximally to each side.
  • Turning at the hips: Rotating at the hips rather than the torso reduces oblique engagement. Maintain hip position while rotating the torso.
  • Using momentum: Jerky, explosive movements reduce control and engagement. Move deliberately and smoothly.
  • Elbows flaring: Allowing elbows to flare outward during the movement shifts emphasis away from the obliques. Keep elbows relatively close to your body.

Variations

  • High-to-low cable woodchopper: Starting from a high pulley and rotating downward, emphasizing lower obliques
  • Single-arm cable woodchopper: Using one arm at a time, increasing stability demands
  • Landmine woodchopper: Using a landmine-loaded barbell instead of cable machine
  • Medicine ball woodchopper: Using a medicine ball instead of cables for different resistance profile
  • Half-kneeling cable woodchopper: Performing in a half-kneeling position for increased core stability demands

Tips for Progression

  • Increase weight gradually: Add weight to the cable stack when completing all reps with good form
  • Increase reps: Progress to 12-15 reps per side before adding significant weight
  • Slow tempo: Increase time under tension by slowing the rotational movement
  • Increase volume: Add sets or total reps across your training session
  • Progress to unilateral variation: Use single-arm variation for greater instability and core demands

Training Notes

Include oblique twist wood choppers with cable in your core training 2-3 times per week as a rotational exercise. They work best for 10-12 reps per side with moderate weight and controlled tempo. Rest 60-90 seconds between sets. This intermediate variation is excellent for developing rotational core strength, oblique definition, and functional power essential for athletic performance and sports that require rotational movements.

Exercise Details

Body Parts
Back, Abs
Category
Workout Center
Last Updated
December 2020