Good Mornings: Strengthen Hamstrings & Spinal Erectors

Build Your Posterior Chain Engine
Good mornings create powerful hamstrings and steadfast spinal erectors. They anchor a complete strength system. I program them with squats, hinges, carries, and easy cardio. This mix builds durability and performance.
I teach anatomy through cues, not jargon. I cue ribs down, brace, and push hips back. I cue big toes rooted. I cue shins near vertical. These simple cues keep tension in the right places.
| Muscle | Role | Simple Cue |
|---|---|---|
| Hamstrings | Hip extension | Hinge until tight, then drive floor away |
| Spinal erectors | Isometric support | Chest proud, ribs stacked |
| Glutes | Lockout | Squeeze at full stand |
| Lats | Bar control | Pull bar to back, armpits tight |
I integrate good mornings into a weekly framework. I pair them with squats or deadlifts on alternate days. I add light zone 2 cycling for recovery.

Technique, Cues, and Progressions
Perfect form protects your back and boosts strength. I teach slow tempos and tight bracing. I set safety pins at belly-button height for confidence.
Beginners need short ranges. Intermediates chase consistency. Advanced lifters manage tempo and load waves.
| Level | Variation | Sets x Reps | Rest | Tempo |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beginner | Banded or PVC hinge | 3 x 10–12 | 60–90s | 3-1-1 |
| Beginner | Goblet good morning | 3 x 8–10 | 90s | 3-1-1 |
| Intermediate | Barbell good morning | 4 x 5–8 | 2–3m | 3-1-1 |
| Intermediate | Safety bar good morning | 3 x 6–8 | 2–3m | 3-1-1 |
| Advanced | Cambered bar or chains | 5 x 3–5 | 3m | 2-1-X |
Cues keep you safe. I coach eyes down 2–3 meters. I coach push hips back not down. I coach keep abs tight like a cough.
I compare similar lifts for clarity. Romanian deadlifts allow more load and grip work. Good mornings challenge torso control more. Both build hinge strength. I rotate both across weeks.

Programming and Load Progression
Smart programming drives progress without overuse. I plan around movement patterns, not body parts. I keep volume recoverable.
| Day | Main Lifts | Accessory | Conditioning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mon | Back squat 4×5 | Split squats 3×8 | Zone 2 bike 12 min |
| Wed | Bench 4×6, Row 4×8 | Face pulls 3×12 | Walk 20 min |
| Fri | Good morning 4×6–8 | Hamstring curl 3×10, Plank 3x30s | Sled drag 6x40m |
| Sat (opt) | RDL 3×6 | Goblet squat 3×10 | Hike or cycle 30–45 min |
I load the lift off a known anchor. I start at 25–35% of back squat one-rep max. I progress by reps first, then weight.
| Week | Sets x Reps | Load Guide | RPE |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 4 x 6 | 30% Squat 1RM | 6 |
| 2 | 4 x 7 | Same | 6–7 |
| 3 | 4 x 8 | Same | 7 |
| 4 | 4 x 6 | +2.5–5 kg | 6 |
| 5 | 4 x 7 | Same | 6–7 |
| 6 | 4 x 8 | Same | 7 |
I use the Strong app to log sets and RPE. I use a Garmin watch to check warm-up heart rate. Zone 2 sits at 60–70% max.
Accessory balance prevents plateaus. I add hamstring curls, reverse hypers, glute bridges, and plank variations. I stretch calves after.

Recovery, Mobility, and Fuel
Recovery locks in progress. I treat it like training. I schedule it, track it, and keep it simple.
| Mobility/Prep | Dose | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Hamstring sliders | 2 x 10 | Posterior chain activation |
| Hip airplanes | 2 x 8/side | Pelvic control |
| 90/90 breathing | 2 x 5 breaths | Brace practice |
Nutrition supports tissue remodeling. For beginners, I set protein at 1.6–2.2 g per kg body weight. I maintain calories slightly above maintenance on lower days.
I log intake in MyFitnessPal. I aim for 7–9 hours sleep. I cap caffeine after noon. I hydrate to pale-yellow urine.
Supplements help when diet is solid. I use creatine monohydrate 3–5 g daily. I use vitamin D after a blood test confirms need. I avoid proprietary blends.
Easy aerobic work speeds recovery. I keep cycling at HR zone 2 for 15–25 minutes. I observe better leg freshness on Friday lifts.

Real Sessions, Outcomes, and Troubleshooting for long-term result interpretation
Real data builds trust. I track sessions and results with simple metrics. I prefer consistent habits over heroic days.
I measured back endurance with a Sorensen hold. I improved from 95 to 135 seconds. My VO2 max, from Garmin estimates, rose ~6% with added zone 2.
| Metric | Week 1 | Week 6 |
|---|---|---|
| Good morning 4×8 | 85 lb, RPE 7 | 135 lb, RPE 7 |
| Sorensen hold | 95 s | 135 s |
| Zone 2 cycle HR | 126 bpm | 119 bpm |
Client stories matter. Maya, 42, office professional, had nagging hamstring tightness. We used goblet good mornings for 4 weeks. She reported painless stair climbs and better deadlift lockout. Her quote: I finally feel my hips do the work.
Andre, 29, soccer coach, started at 30 kg for 4×6. After 8 weeks, he hit 55 kg for 4×6 at the same RPE. He also shaved 0.08 seconds off his 10-meter sprint. He said practice acceleration felt snappier.
- Plateau at same load: Add a rep per set next week. Then increase 2.5 kg.
- Low back pump: Shorten range. Slow tempo to 4 seconds down. Add bird dogs between sets.
- Motivation dip: Swap to safety bar for novelty. Keep volume identical.
- Overreaching signs: Drop one set per exercise for 7 days. Keep protein high.
- Injury flare: Replace with hip hinge pattern on cable. Seek clinician if symptoms persist.
- Warm-up flow, 6 minutes, zone 2 HR.
- Good mornings 4 x 6, RPE 6–7.
- Hamstring curl 2 x 12.
- Walk cooldown, 5 minutes.
I learned tough lessons. I once skipped the warm-up and strained a calf on sled drags. I now ramp every session. HIIT cut fat faster than steady cycling for me. However, zone 2 supported recovery better. I blend both across weeks.
I log food in MyFitnessPal. I track workouts in Strong. I monitor heart rate with Garmin. These tools keep efforts honest.
Keep perspective. Good mornings are a means, not the goal. Stronger hinges, safer backs, and better movement are the prize.





