Hypertrophy: Triceps — Long Head Stretch and Training Science

Category: muscle-specific Updated: 2026-04-01

The tricep long head is only fully stretched when the arm is overhead (shoulder flexed). Overhead extensions produce greater long head CSA than pushdowns alone. The long head comprises ~55% of total tricep mass — overhead extension programming is the bottleneck for tricep size (Kholinne et al., 2018 — PMID 29892590).

Key Data Points
MeasureValueUnitNotes
Tricep long head: proportion of total tricep mass~55% of total tricep cross-sectionKholinne 2018: long head is the largest tricep head; dominates the back-of-arm appearance
Long head stretch requirementshoulder flexion >90°arm overhead positionLong head crosses the shoulder joint — it is only maximally lengthened when the arm is elevated overhead
Overhead extension vs. pushdown: long head activationhigherin overhead positionOverhead extension places long head at 2-joint stretch (elbow flexed + shoulder flexed); pushdown does not
Lateral head emphasiselbows tucked, straight bartechnique variableLateral head: best activated with narrow grip and elbows tucked close to body during pushdowns
Volume requirement: tricep development10–18sets/week direct + indirectPressing exercises contribute 6–12 sets/week indirect tricep stimulus; 4–8 sets/week direct may be sufficient
Cable overhead extension: stretch position advantageconstant tension at stretchvs. dumbbell overheadCable overhead extension (cable from below) maintains tension at the overhead stretch; dumbbell loses tension at top

The triceps brachii is a three-headed muscle that extends the elbow and, for the long head, also contributes to shoulder extension. At approximately 60% of upper arm cross-sectional area, the triceps is actually larger than the biceps — making tricep development the primary lever for arm size, not bicep development as commonly assumed.

The three heads: long head (~55% of tricep mass, origin at infraglenoid tubercle of scapula — crosses the shoulder joint); lateral head (~30%, origin at posterolateral humerus above the radial groove); medial head (~15%, origin at posteromedial humerus below the radial groove). All three insert on the olecranon process of the ulna via the common tricep tendon.

Tricep Exercise Comparison

ExerciseLong HeadLateral HeadMedial HeadStretchLoad PotentialOverhead?
Cable pushdown (rope)LowHighHighNoneModerateNo
Cable pushdown (straight bar)LowHighHighNoneHighNo
Overhead cable extensionHighModerateModerateMaximumModerateYes
EZ-bar skull crusherHighModerateModerateGoodHighYes (lying)
Dumbbell overhead extensionHighModerateModerateGoodModerateYes
Dip (close grip)ModerateHighHighModerateHighNo
Close-grip bench pressModerateHighHighModerateVery highNo
KickbackModerateModerateModerateLimitedLowNo
Reverse-grip pushdownLowLowHighNoneModerateNo

The Overhead Difference

The long head’s origin at the scapula means it crosses both the elbow and shoulder. Only when the arm is overhead (shoulder flexed >90°) and the elbow is flexed is the long head simultaneously stretched at both joints. This two-joint stretch produces the passive tension and mTOR signaling characteristic of stretch-mediated hypertrophy. Pushdowns, dips, and close-grip presses — regardless of load — do not achieve this position.

Landin et al. (2017, PMID 28270880) reviewed long head function and confirmed that overhead positioning is required for maximal long head activation. Programming that excludes overhead extensions systematically undertrains 55% of the tricep mass.

Volume Distribution Between Compound and Direct Work

The bench press and overhead press provide substantial tricep stimulus as primary contributors to elbow extension against load. Most bench-focused programs already stimulate the lateral and medial tricep heads adequately via pressing. The gap is almost always the long head — because pressing doesn’t reach the overhead stretched position. Even with heavy bench volume, adding 3–4 sets of overhead extensions per session directly addresses this gap and produces meaningful additional long head hypertrophy.

💪 💪 💪

Related Pages

Sources

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is the tricep long head important for arm size?

The tricep long head comprises approximately 55% of total tricep mass (Kholinne et al., 2018, PMID 29892590). It is the dominant contributor to arm thickness when viewed from behind and to the horseshoe shape visible from the side. Neglecting long head-specific training by only doing pushdowns (which do not stretch the long head) leaves the largest tricep head understimulated. Overhead extensions specifically target the long head's stretched position.

Should you do overhead extensions or pushdowns?

Both, with overhead extensions prioritized for long head development. Pushdowns effectively target the lateral and medial heads but do not place the long head in a stretched position. Overhead extensions (cable, dumbbell, EZ-bar) stretch all three heads simultaneously, with the long head receiving the greatest stretch-position stimulus. A complete tricep program includes at least one overhead extension movement per session alongside one pushdown variation.

What is the best overhead extension exercise for tricep hypertrophy?

Cable rope overhead extension (cable from low pulley, facing away) provides the best combination of constant tension and long head stretch. Dumbbell overhead extensions (single or double arm) are effective but lose tension at the top of the movement. EZ-bar overhead (lying or standing) allows heavier loading. Skull crushers (lying tricep extension to forehead) combine overhead extension with heavy loading and are a staple in advanced tricep programming. The most important factor is the overhead arm position, not the specific implement.

How much direct tricep work do you need if you bench press regularly?

Bench press and overhead press contribute significant indirect tricep stimulus — approximately 6–12 sets/week equivalent depending on volume. For most trainees targeting arm development, 4–8 additional direct tricep sets/week (2–4 sets × 2 sessions) is sufficient to produce hypertrophy beyond compound pressing contribution. Advanced trainees with arm specialization goals may need 10–15 direct sets/week. The key is including at least one overhead extension in the direct tricep work to address the long head.

← All hypertrophy pages · Dashboard