When debating the push press vs military press for athletes, the answer is clear: the push press is superior for developing explosive power, allowing you to move 20-30% more weight and directly translating that force into your sport. You're likely here because you've been grinding away at strict military presses, getting stronger in that specific movement, but not feeling any faster or more powerful on the field or court. It’s a common frustration. You see your numbers on the bar go up, but your performance in the game stays flat. That’s because you’re training pure strength, but as an athlete, you need power. Power is strength expressed quickly. The military press builds the engine, but the push press teaches the engine how to redline. It integrates your lower body and core into an explosive, full-body movement that mimics the exact mechanics of jumping, throwing, and hitting. The military press isolates the shoulders and triceps, which is useful for building muscle mass and raw pressing strength, but it actively disconnects the kinetic chain that athletes rely on. For an athlete, choosing the military press as your primary overhead lift is like practicing a golf swing with your feet bolted to the floor. You might develop strong arms, but you lose the rotational power that actually drives the ball. The push press is the full swing.
Your athletic ability isn't generated in your shoulders; it's generated from the ground up. The secret is a concept called "triple extension": the simultaneous, explosive extension of your ankles, knees, and hips. Think about it: when you jump, you extend all three. When you sprint, each stride involves triple extension. When a lineman fires off the line, it's triple extension. This is the universal power source for almost every sport. The push press is a direct, loaded drill of this exact movement pattern. The slight dip and explosive drive up uses your legs and hips to generate immense upward force, which you then transfer through your core and into the barbell. You are training your body to function as one powerful, coordinated unit. The military press, by its very definition, forbids this. It forces you to keep your knees and hips locked, isolating your upper body. This creates strong shoulders but teaches your nervous system to *not* use your lower body during an overhead push. It builds a disconnect. For a bodybuilder, this isolation is great for targeting the deltoids. For an athlete, it's a critical mistake. It's training a bad habit. Imagine a 200-pound football player who can military press 185 pounds. That's strong. But that same athlete can likely push press 225-245 pounds. That extra 40-60 pounds isn't just a number; it represents the force generated by his hips and legs-the same force he uses to tackle an opponent. By only training the military press, he's leaving all that power on the table.
This isn't about choosing one lift and abandoning the other. It's about using the right tool for the right job at the right time. This 8-week protocol is designed to build your explosive power with the push press as the primary lift, while using the military press as a targeted accessory to build foundational strength. For all lifts, use a weight that allows you to maintain explosive bar speed on the push press and good form on the military press. If the bar slows down, the weight is too heavy.
Your first two weeks are all about motor learning. The goal is perfect form, not heavy weight. You will perform both lifts in the same session. Start with the push press while you're fresh.
Now that the movement pattern is ingrained, we chase power. We increase the weight on the push press and focus on maximal bar speed. The military press remains a secondary, strength-building exercise.
In this final phase, we push the intensity on the main lift and transition the military press to a higher-rep, muscle-building role. This is where you'll see the biggest translation to athletic performance.
When you start this protocol, your brain will fight you. The first few sessions of push pressing will feel awkward, uncoordinated, and clunky. You'll feel like you're just heaving the weight up. This is a normal part of the learning process. Don't get discouraged.
While the push press can build muscle, its primary benefit is power development. For pure shoulder hypertrophy (size), the strict military press is superior because it creates more time under tension and better isolation for the deltoids. Use the push press for power and the military press for size.
For athletes, the barbell push press is generally better for developing maximal power, as it allows for the heaviest loads and best mimics bilateral force production (like a jump). Dumbbells are excellent for identifying and correcting strength imbalances between your left and right sides and improving stability.
The push press can be safer for the shoulder joint than a heavy, grinding military press. The leg drive helps the bar bypass the initial, most vulnerable range of motion. However, proper form is critical. Never dip forward; always dip straight down to protect your lower back.
For most athletes in-season, performing this overhead pressing workout once per week is sufficient. In the off-season, you can increase the frequency to twice per week, separating the sessions by at least 72 hours to allow for full recovery and nervous system adaptation.
The push press involves one dip and drive. The push jerk involves a second dip under the bar to catch it with locked arms. The push press is a strength-power movement. The push jerk is a more technical, speed-dominant Olympic lift. Master the push press first.
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