Plank
An isometric hold that teaches the spine to stay neutral under load. The single best transfer from gym to deadlift, carry and run.

What is the plank?
A plank is an anti-extension isometric hold: forearms on the floor, body in a straight line from head to heels, abs and glutes contracted hard. The job is to resist the hips sagging or piking and to teach the deep core to brace under sustained tension. Working sets sit between 30 seconds and 2 minutes. Beyond 2 minutes the stimulus tails off and you're training endurance of a hold pattern, not core strength. Planks transfer directly to deadlifts, farmer's carries and running posture, and they're the safest entry point to serious core training.
How to do the plank
Common mistakes
- Sagging hips. Hips dropping toward the floor shifts load to the lower back. Squeeze the glutes hard to keep them stacked.
- Hips piked up. A high pike turns the plank into a rest position. The hips must stay in line, not higher than the shoulders.
- Holding the breath. Stopping the breath inflates the abs but doesn't build core control. Keep breathing through a tight brace.
- Chasing time over quality. Three-minute planks with mediocre form are a party trick. Stop at the first sign of form breakdown.
Variations & progressions
Knee plank
Same setup with the knees down. Reduces the lever and lets you focus on the squeeze without form breaking down at 20 seconds.
Weighted plank
Add a 10-25 kg plate on the upper back. Increases load while keeping the same anti-extension pattern. Best for sets of 30-60 seconds.
Side plank or Pallof press
Side planks load anti-lateral-flexion; the Pallof press loads anti-rotation. Both close gaps a front plank leaves open.
How to program it
Three protocols by goal. Pick one per cycle and aim for progression on load or distance.
| Goal | Sets × Distance | Load | Rest |
|---|---|---|---|
| Core stability base | 3 × 30-45 s | Bodyweight | 60 s |
| Strength endurance | 3 × 60-90 s | Bodyweight or +10 kg | 60-90 s |
| Heavy isometric | 4 × 20-30 s | +20-30 kg plate | 90 s |
Add the plank to your ZON program
Track load, distance and progression in one timeline.




