I know I’m
not the first person to write about transitioning from powerlifting to
strongman, nor am I the most qualified, but why not get some more data out
there. From my own observations, there are still folks not quite understanding
just what this transition entails, and what it is about the demands of
strongman that make it so that you can’t just train like a powerlifter if you
want to succeed.
Even Kaz took 4th in his first show and had to learn the events before he could dominate
Even Kaz took 4th in his first show and had to learn the events before he could dominate
For those of
you new to my blog, for a quick background, I competed in powerlifting from
2011-2012 for a total of 3 meets in the NASA unequipped category. I managed a 502 squat, 336 bench and 601
deadlift in my final meet as a 181lb competitor. 9 months later I would do my first strongman competition,
and after that I never looked back. I got bit by the strongman bug, knocking
out 8 contests in a 2 year span before being sidelined with an ACL rupture,
coming back a year later and getting in my 9th with my 10th
on the horizon.
Powerlifting
was a solid foundation to transition into strongman, but it has some holes in
it, both physically and psychologically, that need to be addressed if one wishes
to be a serious strongman competitor. They
are…
1: You need
to train events LIGHT and get faster
Ok, maybe not THIS light
Here is what
pretty much every powerlifter thinks when it comes to moving events; “If I can
move MORE weight than everyone else, that will mean that I’ll be able to move
lighter weight FASTER than everyone else.”
This is clearly the thought process of people that have never actually
been athletic, because everyone else knows that footspeed is a whole separate
trainable quality, and if you train to be slow, you will be slow.
Man, I wonder where all this misconceptions are coming from
Going too
heavy on events reinforces slow feet, and makes it so that, when the weight is
light, you’re still used to moving slowly with it. You end up plodding along clumsily, and
people significantly weaker than you completely blow you out of the water. What
you need to do instead is swallow your pride and use LIGHT weight. Like REAL light. Like “how the hell am I getting a workout”
kind of light weight. Keep an eye on
your footspeed, and only up the weight if you can maintain it. If not, keep practicing with light weight
until you can move light weight fast, THEN try to move heavy weight fast.
You KNOW you’re
strong because you came from powerlifting.
You don’t need to prove it by walking a 1000lb yoke 5’. Get under 300lbs and learn how to move
quickly. Once you can do that, the heavy
weight will move better.
2: You need
to work on your conditioning
If you sweat this much from SITTING, you need this
In
powerlifting, you literally get the lay down for 1/3 of a meet. You perform a
total of 9 reps over the course of a meet.
In general, it’s not the most physically taxing sport, and the trainees
are notorious for taking super long rest times between sets in training like it’s
some sort of badge of honor. Meanwhile,
if you bought into stupid internet memes, you’re probably also eating Wendy’s
5x a day and sweating pure Crisco.
Strongman,
at least at the local to national level, does NOT favor being fat and out of
shape. I know you can go watch WSM or
the Arnold and see some dudes pushing 4 bills, but that’s a whole different
competitive scene. At the level you’ll be
competing at, being out of shape is going to make you lose. I can’t count the times I’ve watched someone
literally give up in the middle of a medley simply because they ran out of gas
and didn’t have the conditioning to move on.
On the other hand, I’ve seen folks clearly lacking in the strength
department crush an event because they were in monster shape.
Yeah yeah "lol crossfit";, no way in Hell I'd ever want to compete in a medley against this guy
Those
lightweight events you were doing in step 1 can come in handy here. Consider working medleys and circuits into
your training and becoming effective in higher rep ranges. You don’t get away with walking with a sled
tied to your belt anymore; you need to actually push yourself to the point that
you feel like you wanna puke. Once again; you’re already strong, so don’t worry
about “losing strength” by taking the time to focus on bringing up your conditioning. Your numbers might take a slight dip while
your recovery gets impacted, but in the long run you’ll become significantly
stronger when you have a better baseline of conditioning.
3: Quit
worrying about your 1rm squat
You'll look less stupid in the long run...and the short run...just in general reallly
I know this
one may have offended some of you on a personal level, so feel free to take a
moment before reading on. The 1rm squat
might be the holy grail of powerlifting, but I literally cannot remember the
last time I’ve seen it in a strongman comp. That’s most likely because it’s a
really super boring event to watch, which is partially why powerlifting isn’t
on TV while strongman is. Anyway, the
point here is that your 1rm is really immaterial on the squat. You can keep the
deadlift; that shows up pretty regularly.
What you
NEED to focus on instead is getting good at squat reps. The reason is 2 fold. 1; once again, this is
a sport where conditioning matters along with being strong at multiple rep
ranges, and higher rep squats do a fantastic job of reinforcing that. Secondly, squats for reps DOES occasionally
show up as an event, and if you can’t go 5 reps without needing to sit down,
you’re going to get blown out of the water by someone better at high reps than
you.
Hopefully it's not this guy
As an aside,
some folks like to go completely off the reservation here and decide to do ZERO
back squatting once they transition to strongman. This is viable, but I would caution you that,
since the “squat for reps” event does occasionally show up in contests, you DO
want to maintain the shoulder mobility necessary to hold a bar in the squat
position. If I spend too long away from
having a bar on my back, my shoulders get pissed when I make my return. Easiest way to prevent that is to having back
squats at least somewhat regularly rotated into the training.
This post is going longer than I imagined and I still have LOTS to talk about, so I'm going to cap it here. Stay tuned next time when we discuss treating the powerlifts like assistance, the value of leg drive, technique and maintaining static strength. As always, if you have a question or comment, feel free to write your thoughts.
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