As much as I love the barbell, it can be very unforgiving on the joints. So the variety of angles you can get on gymnastic rings (or similar) is phenomenal for the health of your elbows.
When you look at how many different angles of pronation and supination there are, combined with elbow flexion and extension, it only makes sense that these angles have to be explored and strengthened. It's hands-down the best way to avoid an overuse injury.
The strength you'll build on the rings also carries over to all of your pushing movements, including bench and dips. So the ring push-up could be the supplementary exercise you've been missing to smash that personal best you've been chasing.
You'll also build core stability with ring push-ups, and they're certainly more fun to do than planks.
When you can comfortably hit twenty reps with the rings quite close to the floor, progress the movement by elevating your feet. These are a great drop set coupled up with bench press. A heavy bench press of five reps with a drop set of twelve ring push-ups is a great way to mix them together. Do three to five sets. With the ring push-up, it's quality AND quantity.
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