Hybrid Hamstrings Workout
Template
| Parts | Exercises | Sets | Reps/Duration | Rest Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Warm-Up | Light Mobility - Joint # | 1 - 2 | 5 - 30 | none - 2 min |
| Warm-Up Set/s | 1 - 2 | 1 - 8 | 1 - 3 mins | |
| Main | ||||
| Hamstring Hip Hinge / Isolation Exercise (1-2) | 2 - 4 | 4 - 12 / near failure | 2 - 5 mins |
Workout Sample 1
| Parts | Exercises | Sets | Reps/Duration | Rest Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Warm-Up | Light Mobility Drill | 1 | 5 - 30 | none - 2 min |
| Warm-Up Set | 1 | 1 - 8 | 1 - 3 mins | |
| Main | ||||
| Stiff-legged Deadlift | 2 | 4 - 12 / near failure | 2 - 5 mins | |
| Nordic Curls | 2 | 4 - 12 / near failure | 2 - 5 mins |
Workout Information
Description:
This is a hybrid hamstrings workout routine that draws from both bodyweight and free weight training. It is designed to primarily build and strengthen the hamstrings — the three-headed muscle group on the back of the thigh (biceps femoris, semitendinosus, and semimembranosus). The hamstrings produce both hip extension and knee flexion, and are best targeted through exercises that load them under stretch.
Romanian deadlifts and stiff-legged deadlifts are the primary compound movements for hamstring development. The stiff-legged variation uses near-locked knees throughout, preventing the hamstrings from slackening at the knee and placing them under a greater stretch. Nordic curls provide intense eccentric knee flexion, loading the hamstrings from the fully lengthened position. Dumbbell leg flexion provides isolated knee flexion stimulus without the hip extension component.
Most importantly, this routine prioritizes stimulus and fatigue management, ensuring you can recover for the next training session while removing unnecessary work and further limiting fatigue.
Warm-Up
To properly warm up for this routine, you simply need to warm up the muscles around the hip, knee, and ankle joints by moving them around with intent or doing some named mobility movements. Then, do some warm-up sets for the main exercise. For example:
Light Mobility Drill: Hip Circles -> Standing Hip Openers -> Knee Circles -> Ankle Circles for a round or two with enough reps for you to feel them working.
Warm-Up Set/s: You can either do an easier variation or modified version of your first exercise, or do your exercise with some reps far from failure.
Just make sure that whatever you do is just enough to work and warm up your muscles, not tire them, so you can perform your best in your working sets.
Exercise Selection
| Category | Movement | Target | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hamstrings-biased Hip Hinge | Hip Extension | Hamstrings, Gluteal Muscles | |
| Hamstring Isolation | Knee Flexion | Hamstrings |
Exercise Order
Lead with the compound hip hinge exercise — it requires the most energy and loads the hamstrings through the greatest range of motion. Isolation work (dumbbell leg flexion or Nordic curls) can follow after the main compound sets.
That said, these are guidelines — your needs and preferences always take priority.
Sets
The template recommends 2 to 4 sets per primary exercise. Leaning toward the higher end — 3 to 4 sets — tends to be more beneficial if you are relatively new to training. Research shows that less-trained individuals voluntarily activate a smaller percentage of their available motor unit pool — even at maximal effort — leaving more motor units unstimulated per set.
Additional sets provide more high-effort recruitment opportunities before fatigue accumulates and begins limiting motor unit recruitment. As neural efficiency improves with training, each set becomes more effective at reaching higher-threshold motor units, and 2 to 3 sets may be sufficient.
Proximity to Failure
While it is okay to go until failure — especially when you're new to training and haven't yet developed a feel for what near-failure actually is, making it useful to calibrate — it's generally recommended to use it sparingly and instead leave 1–2 repetitions in reserve (RIR).
This matters most when you have more exercises later in the session. Fatigue from going to failure on an earlier exercise carries over and reduces execution quality in the exercises that follow, reducing how effectively you can train them. Leaving 1–2 RIR on earlier exercises means you arrive at each subsequent one with more capacity. If you only have one exercise in the session, this concern does not apply and you can push closer to or until failure more freely.
Progression
Once you can consistently reach the upper end of the rep range across all sets with standardized technique and ROM, it's time to progress.
For free weight exercises, add weight in small increments. The right amount scales with your current strength level — the more weight you're already lifting, the larger the increment will naturally feel appropriate.
For bodyweight exercises, the approach depends on whether the exercise allows external loading. Pull-ups, chin-ups, and dips can all be loaded with a dip belt and weight plates — if this is available to you, it's the recommended path. It replicates free weight progression exactly while keeping the bodyweight movement pattern intact: the mechanics of a bodyweight exercise with the measurable overload of free weight training. Add reps first while staying within the range, then attach weight once you consistently hit the top end.
For bodyweight core exercises and other movements where external loading is impractical, progress by moving to a harder variation.
Training Frequency
Depending on your recovery rate, you can perform this routine 2-3 times per week.