Sumo Deadlift Mistakes to Avoid
Hips shooting up first — the sumo requires pushing the knees out and extending the legs. If your hips rise before your chest, your setup is wrong or it's too heavy.
Not pushing knees out — the wide stance demands active knee drive over toes. Knees caving turns it into a weird wide-stance conventional.
Stance too wide — wider isn't always better. Your shins should be roughly vertical at the start. If your hips are already at the bar height, you've gone too wide.
Grip too wide — hands should be inside the knees, about shoulder-width. Wide grip with a sumo stance creates an inefficient setup.
Sumo Deadlift FAQ
Sumo vs conventional deadlift?
Neither is objectively better. Sumo: more quad/adductor, less range of motion, more upright. Conventional: more hamstring/back, longer range, more hip hinge. Your body proportions determine which suits you — long torso/short arms favors sumo, short torso/long arms favors conventional.
Is sumo deadlift cheating?
No — it's a legitimate competition lift in powerlifting. It's not easier, just different. The reduced range is offset by the hip mobility and adductor demands. Both are hard.
How wide should my stance be?
Wide enough that your shins are roughly vertical at the start. For most people, that's about 1.5-2x shoulder-width. Experiment — everyone's ideal width is different based on hip anatomy.
Do I need good hip mobility for sumo?
Yes — significantly more than conventional. The wide stance with knees pushed out demands good hip external rotation. If the position feels forced, work on hip mobility (pigeon stretch, 90/90s) before going heavy.