If you can't feel the long head of your tricep, it's because your arm isn't behind your body or overhead-the only two positions that fully stretch this specific muscle. You're probably doing endless sets of cable pushdowns, feeling a burn in the outer part of your arm, but the back of your tricep-the part that adds real mass-feels completely asleep. It’s frustrating. You see people with massive arms and assume they have better genetics, but the reality is they just understand one simple piece of anatomy that you don't yet. The long head of the tricep is the only part of the muscle that crosses your shoulder joint. This means that to activate it properly, your elbow has to be in a specific position relative to your torso. Standard pushdowns, where your elbows are pinned to your sides, almost completely ignore it. The fix isn't more weight or more reps; it's better angles. Once you learn to put your arm in the right position, you will finally feel that deep stretch and contraction you've been searching for.
Your tricep has three parts, or “heads”: the lateral head (the visible horseshoe on the side), the medial head (deep, underneath), and the long head (the large mass on the back of your arm). The lateral and medial heads attach to your upper arm bone, the humerus. This is simple. When you extend your elbow, they work. This is why you feel pushdowns so strongly in your lateral head. But the long head is different. It attaches way up on your shoulder blade, or scapula. This is the entire secret. Because it crosses the shoulder joint, its ability to activate depends on your shoulder position. To put the long head under maximum tension, you must create as much distance as possible between its origin (the shoulder blade) and its insertion (the elbow). This only happens in two ways: when your arm goes overhead (like an overhead dumbbell extension) or when your arm goes behind the plane of your body (like a proper incline kickback). The number one mistake people make is thinking all tricep exercises are created equal. They spend 90% of their time on pushdowns, which give you about 10% of the possible long head stimulation. The second mistake is ego lifting. The long head responds to a deep stretch and controlled contraction, not sloppy, heavy reps where your shoulders and chest take over.
Stop guessing and follow this exact three-exercise sequence. For the next 8 weeks, make this your dedicated tricep workout, twice per week. You will have to use lighter weight than you're used to. This is the point. We are targeting a specific muscle with perfect form, not just moving weight. If you weigh 180 pounds, you might be using as little as a 20-pound dumbbell. That's fine. Focus on the feeling.
This is your primary mass builder. The deep stretch at the bottom is where the growth happens.
How to do it:
Weight and Reps: Choose a weight you can control for 10-12 perfect reps. For most men, this is a 25-45 pound dumbbell. For most women, it's 10-20 pounds. Do 3 sets.
Forget the sloppy, standing kickbacks you see people doing with their whole body. Using an incline bench locks you into position and forces the long head to do all the work against gravity.
How to do it:
Weight and Reps: This exercise is impossible to do heavy with good form. Use very light weight. Most men will use 10-20 pound dumbbells. Most women will use 5-10 pounds. Do 3 sets of 12-15 reps.
We finish with cables because they provide tension throughout the entire range of motion, especially at the top where dumbbells can lose tension.
How to do it:
Weight and Reps: The goal here is a burn. Choose a light weight on the stack that allows you to complete 15-20 reps. The last 5 reps should be a serious struggle. Do 3 sets.
Your ego is going to take a hit. The weights you use for these exercises will be 40-50% lighter than what you use for pushdowns or close-grip bench presses. This is not a sign of weakness; it's a sign you're finally doing it right. You have to earn the right to go heavy by first mastering the mind-muscle connection.
Pushdowns and close-grip presses are excellent for the lateral head, which creates the defined 'horseshoe' shape. Overhead and behind-the-body movements are for the long head, which builds overall mass. A complete tricep routine includes exercises for both, not just one or the other.
For isolation exercises targeting the long head, feeling the muscle work is more important than the weight on the bar. Use a weight that allows for 10-15 perfectly controlled repetitions, where the last 2-3 reps are a genuine struggle. If you can't feel the muscle, the weight is too heavy.
Train your triceps twice per week for optimal growth. One session can be part of a push day, focused on heavy compound lifts like the close-grip bench press. The second session should be this isolation-focused routine. Always allow at least 48 hours between sessions for recovery.
If you feel a pinching pain in your shoulder, your form is off or you have a mobility restriction. The most common cause is letting your elbows flare out too wide. Try using a single dumbbell for one-arm overhead extensions, which allows a more natural arm path. Lower the weight by 50% and focus on control.
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