This is what it looks like when you drown on land
This, of
course, was a crushing blow to my pride, and I resolved that, immediately after
that show, I was going to master the continental and never let this happen
again. …and then I blew out my ACL and
meniscus on the third event. Turned out
it would be another 9 months before I could even ATTEMPT a continental
again. And then, to make matters even
more interesting, I found myself signed up for a show that had a max weight
axle press as the first event. I now had
3 months to try to teach myself how to continental enough weight to be able to
match how much I could press, at least if I had any hopes of not embarrassing myself
come competition day.
The frequent
readers of my blog know the outcome, but for those of you just tuning in; I
ended up hitting a 270lb press and was able to continental 300lbs double
overhand.
For the first time ever, I was able to continental MORE than I could press. With that, I will share what I did in the 3 months leading up to the contest, so that those who are in a similar position can attempt to do the same. But first…
For the first time ever, I was able to continental MORE than I could press. With that, I will share what I did in the 3 months leading up to the contest, so that those who are in a similar position can attempt to do the same. But first…
WHY THE CONTINENTAL?
I mean, it just seems so unsafe compared to traditional weightlifting technique
Most folks
who see a continental for the first time all have the same initial question:
why? And usually the follow-up is; “isn’t
that dangerous?” To answer the latter:
yes. The continental isn’t a “safe”
movement at all, and with a mixed grip especially it carries a risk of bicep
tears among other issues. However, the
reason strongman competitors use it is because it’s the only practical option
to get an axle from the floor to the chest.
The axle is
different from a barbell. Most people key
in on the wider diameter, which is true, but there are 2 other significant
factors at play here. An axle has zero
flex, which becomes very apparent when you compare it to a whippy weightlifting
barbell, and makes cleaning it significantly more difficult. The most significant factor though is that an
axle doesn’t have rotating collars, and when the weight is clamped on tight
(or, in the case of some competitions, welded to the axle) there is limited
opportunity to get any spin out of the axle on the second pull of the
clean. Whereas a barbell will allow you
to get your wrists back and your elbows high, attempting to do the same with an
axle will just result in the weight getting ripped out of your hands. You can observe this here, with accomplished
weightlifter Misha Koklayev
Keep in
mind; if an Olympic caliber weightlifter can’t clean a heavy axle, you probably
have no chance. Any weight you CAN clean
is simply not that heavy, and it means you’re limiting yourself from REALLY putting
up some heavy poundage if you only press what you can clean.
As a note;
the thick diameter of the axle typically results in needing to pull with a
mixed grip and then flip your hand through out the pull, as seen here
However, in
my instance, I’ve got long fingers, a strongish grip, and I’m still not
pressing monster weights, so you’ll see me using doubleoverhand throughout my demonstration.
THE TRAINING
Onto HOW I
went about bridging the gap and building my continental. As I’ve written about in the past;
proficiency is best gained through frequency.
The more often you train something, the faster you get better at
it. Many mistake this for rapid strength
gains, but what we’re observing is the ability to better recruit the strength
that is already available. If you are
already strong and simply uncoordinated, this will work for you. If that’s NOT the case, you may need to spend
more time hitting the iron.
In the first
month and a half, I’d train the continental 3x a week in the following manner.
-On my press
day, I would do all of my warm-ups and my top workset out of the rack. After that, I would put the axle on the floor
and continental it up for any/all backoff sets.
I mainly did this because I trained first thing in the morning, and didn’t
want to piss off my neighbors by making a lot of noise. If you’re so inclined, you could continental
all of your warm-ups. If you were as bad
at the start as I was, you most likely CAN’T continental the weight you will
use on your topset (yet), and that’s ok.
This is just practice.
-On my squat
day, after my squat workout, I would work up to a max single or triple on
continentals. Yes, this means you will
train the continental in a fatigued state, and therefore not be able to move as
much weight as if you were fresh. This
is by design. If you can get good at the
continental when you are fatigued, you’ll be even better when you’re fresh. Additionally, you don’t want to detract from
your strength work by exhausting yourself with lightweight technique work. Just work up to 1 topset here.
-On a third
day, independent of any lifting, I’d perform a triple of continentals, every
minute on the minute (EMOM) for 10 minutes.
It looked like this.
I started
off incredibly light at first, at 156lbs.
This was a weight I could easily power clean, but the point was to learn
the technique, so I focused on making sure I was only using the
continental. In full disclosure, I
completely lifted this idea from Brian Shaw in an issue of “Power” when he
described how to improve log cleans, and I had used it for that purpose in the
past, so I figured “why not?”
I initially
started with a thumbless grip for this workout until I reached about
196lbs. After that, I switched to full
grip. I think it’s a good idea to use
that approach, as it did develop a fair amount of grip strength, but your
mileage may vary.
Since I have
a unique assortment of bumper plates, I tried to make as small an adjustment as
possible on this workout without using any metal plates. It ended up going 156, 173, 186 and 193.
For the next
month and a half, the training went in this direction.
-Still the
same approach on press day. I only used
the continental on the back off set, but that had grown heavier as the months
progressed.
-I had now
eliminated the max continental from the squat day, primarily because weights
were getting heavier and it was beating me down to keep training it so
frequently.
-The EMOM
workout transition to doubles for the first 2 weeks (ended up at 206lbs). After that, I would simply work up to a max
single on continentals for the next 4 weeks.
I was no longer in a fatigued state here, so weight was really getting
pushed, and I was learning how to get better at moving heavier weights.
It’s a
simple approach, but it paid off well.
The EMOM workouts drilled technique and improved my conditioning, the
training under fatigued forced me to perfect my technique so I couldn’t just
muscle up the weight, the heavier fresh work got me used to lifting heavier
weights, and the frequency gave me the ability to cram in a lot of practice in
a short period of time. I went from a
continental of essentially zero to 300lbs, with some room in the tank for maybe
a little more.
Hopefully
that helps, and feel free to leave a question or a comment if you have
something to say.
Hey Emevas,
ReplyDeleteCool article as usual. It's nice to see how other people overcome their weaknesses, especially if the reader has a lot of weaknesses themselves. I've noticed myself making fewer excuses in my training since finding your site here, for which I thank you. Always look forward to your posts!
Thanks man. Happy to hear you've gotten something out of this experience. Writing in the blog has forced me to overcome some of my own weaknesses as well. Having to look into my own training has really opened my eyes. Thanks for reading!
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