To my fans
of my usual half-cocked philosophical rantings, I promise I’ll return to that
soon, but today I’m going to actually discuss training absent of any bizarre metaphors. I realize what a wild departure that is, but
hey, maybe this lifting blog can actually be about lifting? On that note, this blog just hit over 1
million views yesterday, so thank you to all my readers that made that
possible.
I want to
discuss this most recent training cycle because, to date, I feel it is the most
successful one I’ve had. For background,
I signed up to compete as a middleweight (231lb limit) back around April. This was right before I competed in the
Empire Classic Competition as a 200lb athlete, and also before my annual
completing of the Murph hero WOD, so I had to do those 2 things first before I
could start training for a competition to be held on 28 Jul. Once Murph was over, I had about 2 months to
train for the comp…and I weighed 189.8lbs.
I wanted to gain some quality weight to not get completely blown out of
the water, and I also needed to get strong enough to handle the weights 1
weight class higher.
The fun part
of the story is that, 2 weeks out from the comp, they ended up increasing the
lightweight cap to 200lbs, so I dropped a class and completely blew it out of
the water since I had been training to go 1 class higher, but the motivation to
compete up a class inspired the most effective training cycle and nutrition approach
I had ever run. Here are the details and
what I took away from it.
Oh yeah,
also, in the end, I weighed in at 202lbs in the morning before I started
dropping a few pounds to easily weigh in the day of the comp. And I looked
pretty big compared to last year.
Left is August of 2017, right is Jul 2018. Also, left is DisneyWorld, right is Disneyland, for those that want to question the angles
TRAINING PLAN
PHILOSOPHY
Based off my previous posts, none of this should surprise you
I took a
page from the Barbarian Brothers here that “there is no such thing as overtraining;
only undereating”. I wanted to add some
quality mass, not just eat more food and get fatter, so I decided to really up
the volume to force my body to grow and then eat enough to make that
happen. I found all sorts of places to
sneak volume into the program, and very slowly upped my calories with quality
sources. I started by upping my post
training meal with 1 extra cup of frozen fruit and added half an avocado to my
daily intake. When I needed more, I
threw a slice of sourdough bread into my post training meal. When that stalled, I added 3/5 of a serving
of Masstech as my pre-training meal. And
through out, I would eat slighter larger portions of meat at meals. That was enough to get me to the end of the
training cycle.
THE TRAINING PLAN
Yeah pretty much this
I’ll try to
get as detailed as possible without getting super dry. For my readers, if you have questions, please
leave comments.
The overall
structure of the plan was ala 5/3/1: a press day, a squat day, a bench day, and
a deadlift day.
PRESS DAY
I went with
the traditional 5/3/1 approach for my press work (as in, the reps and sets from
1st edition). However, after
I completed my topset of the day, I would do something similar to a joker set, where
I’d hit a heavyweight 3 weeks, trying to go from a single to a triple, before
upping it 10lbs and doing it all over again.
After THAT set, I’d take the weight I did for the very first workset and
do that for as many reps as possible.
For all of these sets, I was using a log and doing viper press away, so
I’d viper press the first rep, then just touch and go the rest of the reps, all
strict press without leg drive.
After all
THOSE sets and reps, I’d take the topset weight again and do some push
presses. Usually 4-5 sets of about 5
reps. As the comp got closer, I’d go
even heavier, and start dropping the reps to triples.
I was
cleaning the weight off the floor for every set, so this hammered the hell out
of my back. In addition, I was using
giant sets with all of these presses to get in my volume. At the start of the training cycle, it was
press/chins/pull aparts for the first half and press/rows/reverse hypers for
the second, but as things moved along, weights got heavier, and my limbs
started to get beat up I switched the chins and rows for reverse
hyperextensions, and started focusing on hammer curls in case the clean came
down to that. Up until the weight was
lowered, my biggest concern was being able to clean the MW weight, as I ended
up being able to strict press it for a single.
SQUAT DAY
Warning: training plans from this guy are insane
At the
beginning of the cycle, I was trying to continue my ROM progression with a
chain suspended buffalo bar, but it fizzled out and I had to get creative. With
weight gain being the goal, and high rep squats helping there, I decided to
bite the bullet and steal from Jon Andersen’s “Deep Water” training protocol
for the squat.
This boiled
down to 10x10 squats to start. Jon
recommended using 70% of your 10rm to start with, but that just wasn’t
happening for me, so I stole from Jim and using a training max instead of a
true max, and that made it more viable.
From there, I worked on bridging the gap between my TM and my real max,
and once I was able to get 10x10 doing that, I focused on getting it done with
2 minutes of rest between sets, and THEN on getting the 100 reps in 9 sets, and
then in 8. This meant light weight, so
my joints didn’t get beat up, but it also improved the holy hell out of my
conditioning and made me tough.
During the
first half of the cycle, I was still using supersets here, alternating between
bodyweight dips and log cleans with the squats, but toward the end things got
too intense and I had to just focus on the squats.
BENCH DAY
Oh, how silly of me: clearly strongman don't bench
Like the
press day, went traditional 5/3/1 with a FSL back off set, but no joker
set. Once I was done with that, I went
with axle strict presses for 4-5x8-10, as I wanted to keep upping my strict
press strength while also keeping the ROM necessary with a straight bar rather
than a log.
Stuck with
giant sets here again. For the first
half, it was Bench/t-bar rows/pull aparts and then press/sandbag bearhug and
carries/lateral raises.
On those
sandbag carries: I had a hussafel stone carry in this comp, and had never done
that before. I didn’t have a proper
stone to train with, so I took an Ironmind sandbag, put 5 50lb bags of
playground sand in it, and would pick it up as a bearhug and carry it across my
garage. It wasn’t much distance, but I
figured it’d get my back strong and get me used to holding something tight to
my body. Initially, I started with a
keg, and would load it by throwing sandbags from my weightvest onto the top as
a means of scaling the progression, but worked up to the sandbag pretty
quickly.
DEADLIFT DAY
Pictured once again in my stylish NEVERsate tanktop: it gives you at least 3 reps
No shock to
anyone that I was using ROM progression deadlifts here. I used a texas deadlift bar, and attached
chains to it to create a somewhat different training effect. However, instead of my usual single topset
with rest pausing on this one, I started including a dropset at the end as
well.
Once I was
done with that, I’d do the car deadlift simulator (2 barbells in a corner with
some plumber piper handles). I’d do 2
heavy sets, then a 3rd heavy set that included a dropset at the end,
staying in the 6-10 rep range through out the training cycle.
I’d finish
the day off with some bodyweight or weighted dips and pull aparts, and also
include some standing ab wheel.
STONE DAY
Calm down for a second
Calm down for a second
Since I had
an atlas stone medley in this comp, I decided to actually learn how to do
stones, since I could finally train for it.
I took out my Stone of Steel and did stone over bar, since I don’t have
platforms to train on. I’d work up to a
top single or triple, and after that hit a backoff set of 4-7 reps to get in
more volume. I went to a Kaz seminar
where he said “if you can get strong at stones, you can be strong anywhere”,
and that seemed like a good idea.
After this,
I’d do some prowler work to get blood flowing and a little more lower body
volume.
WHAT’S NEW?
The above
was pretty standard training for me (4 days of lifting, 1 day of events), and
though the volume within the lifting days was slightly more than normal, I didn’t
feel it was enough to gain the amount of mass/strength I needed. I needed to do something more drastic to get
drastic results. So I added in a front
squat workout between my bench and deadlift workout, typically benching Thursday
mornings, Front squatting during my lunch break on Fridays, and deadlifting
Saturday mornings. The front squat
workout was my standard dropset/rest pause sorta workout, where I’d start with a
weight I could manage for about 5-6 reps, rest for 12 deep breaths, go again to
try for half as many reps as before, repeat until I was down to 1 rep, then
strip off a 45lb or 25lb plate per side (whichever was the final plate on the
bar) and repeat until I got back down to 1 rep on that set. It was tough, but didn’t leave me limping
like back squats did.
In addition,
I started doing a daily set of dips and chins.
I’ve done daily training before, and always ended up blowing out my
elbows, so this time I exercised extreme diligence in ensuring I was staying in
sub max territory. Basically, I did dips
until I felt myself starting to struggle, then I stopped the set. Once I found that number, I stayed there for
a week or 2 and then would do 5 more reps the next time. Hold for a week or 2 and repeat. In full disclosure, this practice started
with 100 push ups a day the week I was going to do Murph, since I was visiting
my in-laws and had gym access, but I kept it up. Chins were similar in approach.
Those 2
additions seemed to be incredibly helpful toward reaching my goals, as now I
had an opportunity to get a lot of volume in over the week, yet it didn’t cost
me as much time as a full on dedicated additional training day.
-Once again,
effort is the most important factor in training. And by this, I don’t’ mean my usual “try hard
and you’ll succeed” (despite the fact that is true), but more that, in a
training plan, degree of effort applied needs to remain consistent, if not
escalated, in order to get results. The
reason I bring this up is because, with this style of training, I had
accumulated a LOT of fatigue, and my ability to lift big numbers in training was
significantly diminished. In truth, I
was basically surviving many of my training sessions, and I saw previously
accomplished PRs slip by me, as it appeared my strength was diminished. Throughout the training though, I never
phoned it in. I went into everyday with
the plan to execute to the best of my ability, and if my ability that day was
to do less than I had done a month ago, I still crushed it. This leads to my next point.
-You don’t need to set PRs in training to set them in competition. I saw
numbers regress on my deadlift workouts, since I was absolutely hammering the
crap out of my back with log cleans, sandbag carries, front squats, atlas
stones, and reverse hypers. I started to
doubt myself, and thought that I might actually be getting weaker. Then, I had a few days off, felt good, and set
a lifetime deadlift rep PR. After that,
I decided to just ride out the wave fully, and with a week off before my
competition, I showed up and absolutely smoked everything. I only managed to hit 6 reps of 225 on the
log in training, and I hit 8 reps like I was sleep walking, shutting it down
only because I had already won the event.
Car deadlift was a breeze, I launched the throwing implements, I once
motioned 4 out of 5 stones, etc. I spent
the majority of the training cycle UNDER fatigue, but that just meant that,
once I recovered from it, I was insanely strong.
-You don’t need a ton of food to grow. Once again, I went with my approach of “eat
to support training, not the other way around”, and as such I didn’t start
eating more until I started feeling hammered from training. And what I made were very small changes. A cup of fruit, a slice of bread, half an
avocado, etc. People tend to go full
tilt right out the gate on the diet, and in turn end up putting on a ton of
fat, and then, on top of that, they grow accustomed to all these surplus
calories before they even really need it.
Then, when training DOES get hard, they up the calories from this
ridiculous baseline and get even fatter. This is what leads to disappointing weight
gain.
-Daily training is viable, but keep it submax. Additionally, sometimes, it’s going to feel
like you’re pushing it too much. Just
ride it out: it goes away. Rest seems to
be the worst thing.
-Getting stronger under fatigue means being stronger OUT of
fatigue. I keep saying this, and people
keep doubting it, and it keeps happening still.
-Fatigue makes you feel awful. That seems obvious, but up until this point I
couldn’t really appreciate it. I bring
this up because I started wondering if maybe I had done more harm than
good. I found myself one day at work
looking up the DeFranco “limber 11”, thinking that MAYBE it was time for me to
start doing some mobility work. And then
I took a week off during my vacation and felt the most limber I’d ever felt in
my life. I was beat down to a point I
had never felt before, and now I know what that feeling feels like, but your
first time diving into it, you just gotta trust the system.
-It is really really really REALLY hard to overtrain. I still haven’t done it.
Dude, you look like you've been mainlining crushed granite in this year's pic. Straight up awesome.
ReplyDeleteCan you talk a little more towards your approach for the press "joker" sets? Was the first single set some percentage over your top set or did you base it off something else?
Thanks for sharing all your thoughts on this. I'm sitting at 184 with one day left of my building the monolith template (of sorts) and though I've put pounds on in the last 5 weeks roughly, it's not as clean as I would have liked.
Appreciate the kind words dude.
DeleteThe weight was determined by need. I needed to be able to press 260lbs for the competition as a middle weight. I had pressed 225 in my previous comp, so I started at 235 for something heavier. I was able to hit a triple in that pretty early, so moved on to 245 until I hit a triple there. I then spent 3 weeks at 255 and 3 weeks at 265.
Congrats on making it through BtM. It's a great learning experience.
Thanks, and yeah BtM was an eye opener in some regards. I actually started it to jumpstart myself back into a full body template with 531 so I could train strongman events and heavy conditioning on a 4th day. I'm going to stick with my current plan through October where I have a first competition coming up, but I think I'll try something similar to your 5 day approach after that to see how it goes. I much prefer the standard 4-day split for the main lifts.
DeleteAwesome to hear you're gonna get your first competition in. Competing is a blast. Hope it works out well.
DeleteAwesome work, Emevas.
ReplyDeleteHow much time do you take off before the event? Do you make sure you're well rested and stuff?
Typically, I train up to the event, and then will take the week after as a lighter week. This time though, I had vacation planned around the competition, so I had a week off before this last one.
DeleteUnless it's a particularly heavy comp, I don't want to rest before it, because then it's like 2 weeks off of training with the week before and the week after.
Do you change anything event wise to make sure you're not pre fatigued from training?
DeleteOr is the event more like another training day?
Just another training day. All the training leading up to the competition should get me in good enough to shape to compete. If I'm not there by comp day, a week off isn't going to do anything.
DeleteThough comps last forever, they're not terribly exhausting. SOOOO much time between events. I'm be fatigued after the fact, but during, I feel good.
Ah, that makes sense.
DeleteTotally didn't think of the time between events.