Man of Honour
- Joined
- 5 Jun 2003
- Posts
- 91,822
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- Falling...
Some decent points, couple from me..
Slow down your negatives
Most microtrauma (and ultimately size) comes from the negatives portion of the lift.
Variation is the key
Nothing is going to keep working all of the time, your gains will diminish and stall the longer you keep doing the same thing. Some routines have a longer shelf life than others as they change the rep range or exercises as you progress. For example, don't flat barbell bench 3x10 for 12 weeks straight. Alter the rep range, change to close grip benching or DB benching, go into incline or decline.
Spot on. So many people over look negatives - it's just as important as the positive movement.
Variation is vital. I mix my incline, decline, flat, with DB and BB all the time for example. I mix t-bars, with BORs and cable row etc... you can do so many types of exercises. You've got to keep your body guessing.
Well from what I've seen 90%+ of people don't squat properly and are putting themselves at massive risk. Imho most people should either get some coaching to learn to do them properly or they just plain shouldn't be doing them.
Same goes for most compound exercises really. Some of the form I see in my gym is nothing short of comical, funny and downright scary!!
Tell me about it - however I do really like squats and DLs for core building and generally thickening of the body. They are both fantastic compound exercises if done properly. I'd like to think I do them properly...
I didn't get on with front squats the last time I tried them, i'll give them a go again soon enough.
They can be tough to get used to at first, I get a little bit of bruising on the shoulders, but I just use the "crossed arm" grip and just concentrate on the lift and worry about the bruises afterwards!
Definitely get more effect from them, especially as you can do them properly ATG.