Bulletproofing the big three: a physiotherapist’s checklist for pain-free squats, benches & deadlifts
Week after week we meet lifters convinced the squat, bench press, or deadlift is “ruining” their knees, shoulders, or lower back. In reality, the culprit is rarely the exercise itself; it’s usually a subtle form breakdown that keeps funneling excessive force into vulnerable tissues, set after set.
To help you train pain-free, this article lays out a rapid check–screen–fix protocol you can complete in under five minutes at the gym. For each of the Big Three lifts, you will:
- Identify the specific joint-loading error we most frequently diagnose in the clinic.
- Run a quick 60-second self-screen to confirm whether the fault shows up in your own movement.
- Apply a targeted corrective drill to ingrain safer mechanics—along with pointers on Atlantis machines or specialty bars can make the fix even more effective.
The check–screen–fix framework
Think of this three-step loop as your five-minute insurance policy against chronic joint pain. It replaces guesswork with a repeatable process backed by research, so every session improves—not degrades—your movement quality.
1. Check – spot the red-flag pattern before it hurts
Start by knowing the most common overload errors for each lift: dynamic knee valgus in the squat, over-flared elbows in the bench press, and bar drift in the deadlift. Each has been linked to heightened joint stress in recent literature—for example, a Frontiers in Physiology study showed that wide-grip, elbow-flared benches spike glenohumeral and AC-joint forces compared with a moderate-narrow grip with scapular retraction (Noteboom et al., 2024). Flagging these patterns before they turn into pain lets you intervene early.
2. Screen – confirm the fault with a 60-second test
Next, run a quick screen that turns “I think” into “I know.”
- Squat: film five body-weight reps from the front; if the knee drifts inside the big toe, valgus is present.
- Bench press: slide a dowel under the bar at chest height; elbows that land outside the dowel cue excessive flare.
- Deadlift: chalk your shins; a clean shin means the bar drifted forward.
These low-tech screens mirror the assessments used in clinic and in sports-medicine research, such as the stance-width trials summarised in the International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy (Straub & Powers, 2024).
3. Fix – lock in a corrective drill right away
Correct-and-reload is the fastest way to rewire a motor pattern. Slot mini-band monster walks, paused close-grip benches, or trap-bar RDLs between warm-up sets, then return to your work weight. The CSEP-PATH Resource Manual highlights trap-bar and belt-squat variations for their lower spinal shear, and research from the University of Waterloo Spine Biomechanics Lab confirms that keeping the load centred—especially with a hex bar—cuts lumbar compression compared with a straight bar (McGill et al., 2014). Adjustable Atlantis machines or specialty bars lock those joint-friendly angles in place as you dial the load back up.
Make it a habit: weave this micro-routine into the first warm-up block of every training cycle. According to the CDC, just 24 % of adults meet combined strength and cardio guidelines; consistent, pain-free lifting is the surest way to stay in that committed minority (CDC, 2025). Spend the five minutes now, and you’ll spend far fewer weeks on the rehab table later.
Squat: keep knees and hips smiling
Common joint-stress error
Dynamic knee valgus—knees collapsing inward on the way up. Over time it spikes MCL strain and patello-femoral pressure. A 2024 clinical commentary in the International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy showed that a medium-width stance with toes just out reduces valgus forces compared with very wide “sumo” styles (Straub & Powers, 2024).
60-second self-screen
Film five body-weight squats from the front. If mid-patella dives inside the big toe on two or more reps, you’re exhibiting dynamic knee valgus.
Corrective drill
Mini-band monster walks (1 × 20 steps each way) activate your lateral glutes and teach the knees to track over the toes. Superset this before your warm-up sets.
Equipment upgrade
Driving knee-dominant volume without axial loading helps you retrain alignment while sparing the spine and hips; the Atlantis belt-squat or pendulum squat is one example that delivers this advantage.
Bench press: spare the shoulders
Common joint-stress error
Over-flared elbows (> 80 ° abduction) jack up glenohumeral and AC-joint shear. A 2024 study in Frontiers in Physiology found that a moderate-narrow grip plus scapular retraction slashed shoulder forces compared with the classic wide-grip setup (Noteboom et al., 2024).
60-second self-screen
Slide a dowel under the bench-press bar. If your elbow points land outside the dowel at chest level, you’re too wide. Switch to 1–1.5 × bi-acromial width and re-film.
Corrective drill
Paused close-grip bench (3 × 5, 2-sec pause) drives motor learning at the bottom where most strain occurs.
Equipment upgrade
A converging chest-press path and neutral-grip bar can lock your elbows into a safer arc even under heavy loads—options such as the Atlantis converging chest press or achieve exactly that.
Deadlift: protect the lower back
Common joint-stress error
Bar drift—the barbell slides away from your shins during the pull—forces the spine to round and cranks up shear on the lower back. Switching to a hex (trap) bar centres the load between your feet, keeps your torso more upright, and takes the extra stress off your lumbar spine.
60-second self-screen
Place chalk on your shins. If you finish a warm-up set without white marks on socks or skin, the bar travelled forward.
Corrective drill
Trap-bar Romanian deadlifts (2 × 8, slow eccentric) groove hip-hinge mechanics while teaching you to keep the load close.
Equipment upgrade
Centering the load with a hex-style implement reduces spinal shear while you refine your hinge mechanics; the Atlantis lever deadlift machine or trap bar are tools we particularly like for this
Why early physiotherapy pays off—today and years from now
- Durable pain relief and function gains. Meta-analyses show that multimodal physio maintains mobility and quality of life up to 12 months post-treatment.
- Lower re-injury and surgical rates. Correcting movement patterns early can delay—or prevent—the need for invasive knee, shoulder, or spine procedures.
- Cost savings for everyone. Musculoskeletal disorders affect 71 billion people worldwide, driving huge disability costs (World Health Organization, 2022).
- Movement literacy for life. You leave with screens and drills you can apply to any activity, not just the Big Three.
If you train in the east GTA, booking a trusted physiotherapist in Scarborough can fast-track the process.
Turning insights into action
Run today’s check-screen-fix drills in your next workout. Consistency is key.
If symptoms persist, a complimentary 30-minute movement assessment can fast-track a personalised fix—HealthMax Physiotherapy offers one at no charge.
Share your success: tag @AtlantisStrength and @HealthMaxPhysio so we can celebrate your bulletproof PRs.
Ready to lift without pain? We’ll see you in the clinic—then back on the platform, stronger than ever.
– Article written by the team at Health Max Physio.