Friday, December 28, 2012

Attack Your Weaknesses

For a long time I've neglected overhead pressing.  I had no problem believing that it was horrible for the shoulders and that I'd end up ruining my health by pressing overhead because I sucked at it and I just didn't want to do it.  Recently, instead of using a second bench press day each week with a focus on speed as many powerlifters do, I've chosen to use my second upper body day of the week to focus on overhead pressing, and my results have been tremendous.  Not only has it helped to increase my bench press, but it has built muscle in my entire upper body, made my shoulders actually feel more healthy, and increased my overhead strength itself.  
Badass Golden-Age Overhead Press


My mindset about overhead pressing changed one day in the spring.  I had just submitted my final project for Strength and Conditioning, which required me to write a 12 week program for an athlete.  I had included in my program the option for quarterbacks, pitchers, and other throwing athletes as well as athletes with pre-existing shoulder injuries to not overhead press.  Coach Klika, FDU's strength and conditioning coach asked me why I did this.  I explained that I know some athletes and coaches preferred not to overhead press because it can damage the shoulders and might cause more harm than good for athletes in these situations.  He then said, "Well, I might argue that throwing athletes and athletes who have had shoulder injuries should overhead press because it's the best way to add mass and strength to the shoulders."  This one statement changed my entire way of thinking.  Why shouldn't I overhead press?  Why don't people overhead press?  Because it's hard.  Because they suck at it, and who wants to do what they suck at?

I suck at overhead pressing...attack your weaknesses
I am one of these people.  I am terrible at overhead pressing, so I have made it a goal of mine to attack this weakness and make it my strength.  For today's workout I challenged the athletes I work out with to design their own assistance program, attacking their own personal weaknesses.  Remember, if you always do what you've always done, then you'll always get what you've always gotten. 

Foam Rolling
General Warmup
Dynamic Warmup

Shoulder Traction
Single Arm Band Rows
Pushups
Bodyweight Ring Rows
Scapula Pushups

Power
Single Arm Dumbbell Jerk--6x3 each arm

Strength
Push Press--4x6
*Worked up to 195 lbs for 5...gettin' stronger

Assistance
Back Down Overhead Set--Strict Military Press--1xFailure
*70% of heaviest set of the day (135 lbs)

A big strong man hittin some pull ups
Supplemental Lift
Pull Ups--3xSubmax

Single Arm Work
Single Arm Dumbbell Bench--3x15 each arm

Pulling
Single Arm Dumbbell Row--3x8 each arm

Conditioning/Muscle Building--3 Rounds
Bodyweight Ring Back Flys--10
Weighted Back Extensions--15
Sprinter Situps--12 each side

Gun Show--2 Rounds
Rope Curls--12
Rolling Triceps Extensions--12

Finisher
Dumbbell Farmer's Walks--3x1 Lap
*120 lb dumbbells

 

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Lower Body Training Under a Time Crunch

Dan Green is a MONSTER
Sometimes there's no way around it, you just don't have time to get everything done in the gym that you want to do.  Today was one of those days.  A good friend of mine was in town for only one more day so I had to see her, had to become once again gainfully employed, and had family things to do, so my time was limited.  Basically, I had to change the workout I had planned to do, but I still needed to get in a kickass lift.  Remember, when you're short on time, get your core lift done, it's the most important part of your lift and the reason you're there in the first place.  Then, when choosing your assistance exercises, choose lifts that give you the best training economy.  That is, the lifts that work the most muscle with the most weight for the most reps in the shortest amount of time.  When you're on a time crunch, you don't want to focus on isolation exercises that are going to take up time and only work one muscle group at a time.  

Heavy Olympic Squats
Right now in my training I'm experimenting with a number of different assistance exercises to build muscle and strength in my legs, because as my training partners and I agree, our legs are small and weak as shit coming out of football season.  So, with that in mind, after my core lift of speed deadlifts and the assistance exercise of pause squats which are staples of my dynamic effort lower body lifts during this cylce, I added in a couple classic bodybuilding exercises to add some mass and strength to my legs.  Instead of performing barbell step ups, which is a great single leg exercise, I decided that because I was short on time, I would use heavy leg press and Olympic style closed-stance squats as accessory work.  This workout was brutal, and my quads were killing me throughout.  With all my focus on the posterior train, I sometimes neglect my quads which I recently recognized, which is exactly what accessory training is all about.  This is a great workout for building a shit ton of muscle with very little time.  Crank it out and see if you can even stumble out of the gym after!

Foam Rolling
General Warmup
Dynamic Warmup

Bodyweight Squats
Band Good Mornings
Band Lateral Walks

Power
Broad Jumps--6x2

Speed
Deadlifts--8x2 at 65% of estimated 1RM from first month with no more than 30 seconds rest
*300 lbs for 8x2 with 30 seconds rest

Assistance
Pause Squats--6x3 at 55% of estimated 1RM
*195 lbs for 6x3 with 45 seconds rest in between

Pausing in the hole builds strength
in the stabilizer muscles of the squat
Supplemental Lift
Leg Press--50 total reps
*8 total 45 lb plates for 20, 8 total 45 lb plates + 2 25 lb plates for 2 sets of 15

Quad Work
Heel-Elevated Closed-Stance Squats--65% of back squat estimated 1RM for 3x8
*235 lbs for 3x8

Finisher
Heavy Lat Pulldowns--8
Band Good Mornings--15

**Finished with ab work later on in the day

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Floor Pressing and Four Ways to Increase Your Pressing Power

Board Press is one of many
partial movements to help build
pressing strength and  mass in the arms
No explanation of the workout today, just get after it and read these four reasons why your pressing power is weak or stalling.

1) Partial Movements:  In my experience, most regular lifters and athletes don't struggle coming off the chest in the bench press, they struggle in their lockout.  This may not be the case for all elite lifters and powerlifters, but in the case of the average gym goer or athlete lifting to build upper body strength, the problem is about halfway through the movement in locking out the weight.  Don't believe me?  Next time you watch someone fighting through a rep on the bench press, watch as the weight reaches their chest at the end of the eccentric portion, then flies off the chest only to immediately stall about halfway through the movement.  You will then see them kick and squirm and struggle to break past that sticking point, most of the time with no success, which will lead their spotter to have to pull the bar off their chest before they kill themselves.

I'm the exact same way.  When I fail on a bench press, it's not coming off the chest, it's in the lockout.  In order to strengthen the lockout portion of the bench press, it's important to use partial movements in your training.  My favorite partial movement is the floor press.  I use them as my core lift with a heavy barbell or sometimes with dumbbells as an assistance movement.  Other partial movements include board presses and pin presses.  Start incorporating partial movements in your training to build muscles in the triceps and strength in your lockout.

Band Triceps Extensions are a brutal
way to build size and strength
in the triceps
2) Triceps Strength: When was the last time you saw someone bench press a BIG weight who didn't have big pipes?  Massive horseshoe triceps aren't just for bodybuilders and guys who wan't to stretch the sleeves on their shirts.  If you want to build pressing power and avoid injuries in lifting or athletics, (ask Ray Lewis how serious a triceps tear can be) you need to give your triceps the attention they deserve.  The number of ways to build big, strong triceps is endless, but here are some of my favorites:  Band Triceps Extension, Dumbbell Rolling Triceps Extensions, Floor Press, Board Press, high rep Neutral Grip Dumbbell Bench Press, Straight Bar Triceps Extensions, Neutral Grip Band-Resisted Pushups, Diamond Pushups, etc.

Point is, train your triceps.  I have noticed a dramatic increase in my pressing strength since I began using a high volume of pushup variations and band triceps extension.  If your bench is stalled, the answer may be in building your triceps.

3) Bigger Back for a Bigger Bench?:  In their quest for a bigger bench and more pressing power, many people neglect their back.  The muscles of the upper back aren't as easy to see as the chest and triceps, and most normal gym goers who want to be able to answer the question "how much ya bench?" with an impressive number think the answer lies in pressing over and over and over.  The reality is, have an expansive and strong upper back is not only impressive to look at, but will help you in JUST ABOUT EVERY LIFT YOU DO.  The upper back muscles serve as a platform to you to press from, and a strong back can help to keep your shoulders healthy, which many aging lifters struggle to do.  To strengthen your upper back, do band pull aparts, band, ring, and cable face pulls, chest-supported rows, barbell rows, dumbbell rows, inverted rows, pull ups, lat pull downs, band pull downs, etc.

Build a stronger upper back keep your shoulders healthy so you can build a massive press for years to come.

4) Shoulder Strength:  Healthy shoulders aren't just important for comfortable pressing, the shoulder muscles play a huge role in moving heavy weight.  Many people think that only the chest and triceps are called into action when horizontal pressing, but the shoulders are actually as or more important than those other muscles in building a big bench.  Aside from the fact that big shoulders are impressive looking, building them through overhead pressing variations like the Klokov Press, Dumbbell Military Press, Push Press, Barbell Military Press, Lateral and Front Raises, and See-Saw Presses will help you blast through your bench press sticking point.


Foam Rolling
General Warmup
Dynamic Warmup

Band Pulldowns--2x15
Triceps Extensions--2x15
Klokov Press for upper body mass
and strength
Band Face Pulls--2x15
Pushups with Knee Tucks--2x10

Power
Full Body Plyo Pushups--5x3

Strength
Barbell Floor Press--3x3 at RPE 9
*Worked up to 310 for 3x3*

Assistance
Incline Dumbbell Press--2x15
*70 lb dumbbells, 1 minute rest

Supplemental Lift
Band-Resisted Chest-Supported T Bar Row--4x8

Muscle-Building/Conditioning
Standing Dumbbell Military Press--10
Weighted Pull Ups--8
Band-Resisted Knee Tucks--15

Gun Show #1
Band Triceps Extensions--100 total reps

Gun Show #2
Dumbbell Hammer Curls--2x12

Abs
Straight Leg Sit Ups--2x25


Monday, December 24, 2012

Christmas Eve Squatting!

It's a Christmas miracle!  I walked into my hometown's commercial gym today and there was a kid actually squatting in the squat rack!  Even better, by the time I had foam rolled, warmed up, and done the power segment of the workout, he was done squatting and the lone rack in my entire gym was all mine...
Santa squats heavy...do you?

As we all know, Santa Claus was a world-class squatter.  So, in the spirit of Christmas, what better way to celebrate then to do some heavy ass squatting!  Each week the workouts are getting more and more brutal, and this one literally left me hobbling out of the gym.  My whole posterior chain, (lower back, hamstrings, glutes, and upper back) and legs were completely shot.  My legs are still incredibly weak coming out of the football season, but I'm exposing my weaknesses every week and working my ass off to make them strengths, and slowly but surely I can feel myself getting stronger.  

If you want to get stronger, you MUST squat and pull.  Deadlifts and squats are two of the best exercises because they utilize a number of muscles, some of which are the largest muscles in the body, which in turn prompts the body to release more muscle-building testosterone in the blood.  Additionally, due to the number of muscles recruited to complete a squat or a deadlift, you can use more weight than just about any other exercise, allowing you to move more weight and increase strength.  It may be a joke, but if you want to get huge and be strong, you really do need to lift things up and put them down, and get your ass under a heavy barbell.  

Brandon Lilly heavy raw squatting
The focus of this workout was heavy squatting, lowering the number of repetitions from last week, but increasing the rate of perceived exertion, effectively making you lift more weight.  That's the goal, to each and every workout or each week lift more weight, increase the volume, or move the bar faster.  We're always finding ways to push the envelope and get stronger.  It may not always be pure maximal strength, sometimes we may try to increase the speed at which we move the bar, or our strength endurance by increasing the volume or repetitions.  

That's the purpose of the back down set of squats, to push our minds and bodies by using a single, higher repetition set of squats after our heavy squatting in order to increase endurance and size in the lower body and core.

Give this workout a try but keep in mind, if you can walk out of the gym after this one...you're probably doing it wrong.  

Foam Rolling
General Warmup
Dynamic Warmup

Band Resisted Lateral Walks
Bodyweight Squats
Glute Bridges
Duck Walks

Power
Full Squat Jumps--4x5

Strength
Back Squats--3x3 at 9 RPE
*Worked up to 325 for 3x3

Assistance
Back Down Set of Squats--1x10 at 70% of estimated 1RM
*245 for 10

Supplemental Lift
Block Deadlifts--3x3 at 80% of 1st month estimated 1RM
*360 for 3x3

Single Leg Work
Cossack Squats--3x10 each leg

Conditioning/Abs--3 Rounds
Snatch-Grip RDLS--10
Pull Ups--Submax
Hanging Knee/Leg Raise--Failure

Using a snatch grip will add muscle
and strength to the entire
upper back
Abs
Front Plank--3x1:10 

Friday, December 21, 2012

Dynamic Lower Body Training

Yes ladies and gentleman, there is a way to get in shape and build muscle other than Crossfit!  Just kidding Crossfitters, (sorta).  

Seriously, there are a number of ways to burn fat and build muscle and strength without using boring, slow, sustained cardio, or going to an incredibly expensive Crossfit gym.  Today's workout was a dynamic lower body day, and my first day back in my hometown's commercial gym.  The concept for this workout was stolen from powerlifter Brandon Lilly, (for those of you who read this regularly, can you tell he's a huge influence on me?) and I added my own twist to it.  As opposed to many powerlifters, who train their speed days by using accommodating resistance techniques such as bands and chains, Lilly uses bar weight, without chains and bands, but drops the intensity and uses shorter rest periods.

This has two effects.  First, it eliminates the need for bands and chains.  Many lifters don't have access to bands and chains, especially in commercial gyms, so why complicate things?  Also, many young lifters aren't strong enough to the point where they have maximized their strength with nothing but bar weight, so why add bands and chains if they have plenty of room to improve on their strength and technique with nothing but bar weight?  

Submaximal weight with
 maximal speed
Secondly, because the rest periods are so short, (you'll see what I mean in the workout write up) you can build endurance and work capacity while simultaneously improving power production.  Simply put, you're going to be sweating your ass off and getting in shape while you get stronger.  By the last set of deadlifts and squats, I felt energized and the bar was moving faster than it did on the first set.  Remember, lift the bar with bad intentions...THINK SPEED. 

I'm not saying don't lift heavy weights with normal rest periods, we only use this type of dynamic training once a week.  But you're missing out if you don't add this type of dynamic training to your program.  Give it a shot, and make sure have a bottle of water nearby.  

Nick Leonte after this workout--"I literally can't walk straight right now..." 

Embrace the Grind


General Warmup
Dynamic Warmup

Bodyweight Squats
Duck Walks
Lateral Walks
Good Mornings

Power
Broad Jumps--5x3

Speed
Deadlifts--8x2 60% of estimated 1RM
*30 seconds rest in between sets*
--275 lbs
Berea Barbell pause squats

Assistance
Pause Squats--6x3 50% of estimated 1RM
*Squat down to your lowest depth and sit in the hole for 3 seconds, then explode up*
**45 seconds rest in between sets**
--175 lbs

Single Leg Work
Goblet Reverse Lunges--3x10 each leg

Conditioning/Abs
Chest-Supported Rows--12
45 Degree Back Extensions--15
Hanging Leg Raises--Failure

Conditioning
Bounding Sprints--5


Thursday, December 20, 2012

Back To The Basics!

Overhead Pressing is badass
It's tempting to get caught up doing all kinds of crazy assistance work.  Bands and chains are all the rage these days, and they can without a doubt help improve strength and explosiveness in EXPERIENCED lifters if utilized PROPERLY in a training program.  However, people tend to overcomplicate their training programs, worrying and relying far too heavily on exercises that they often don't understand, just because they read about them in some drug store magazine or saw a professional athlete or roided up guy perform them on the Internet.  Without a doubt, the easy access to information in today' world of technology has been both extremely beneficial, and detrimental.  On one hand, there is a wealth of information at our fingertips whenever we want it, which allows us to be more educated than ever before, but at the same time, we have also lost touch with what worked for us in the first place.

With that in mind, today's workout brought it all back home.  All that was needed was a barbell, our own bodyweight, and a single resistance band.  We banged out this upper body session in about an hour and a half, resting very little between the bodyweight supersets.  My push press felt strong, and I was able to handle more weight than I have been.  I'm loving the overhead pressing for building strength and explosive power in the whole body, and the bodyweight supersets had me both gassed and feeling an incredible pump.  Don't neglect bodyweight training.  Too many people think because they can bang out a few pushups and pull ups that bodyweight training is no longer useful and they have to use weights to build mass and get stronger.  Bodyweight training is powerful beyond words.  It can help you build muscle, strength, athleticism, lose weight, and train even when you can't access a gym.  If you want to truly be strong, you better be able to handle your own bodyweight.  Get after it and let me know what you think.

If you want to see the workout of the day in the morning or ask questions of me or anyone else who trains with us regularly request to be added to the group "JMSB" on Facebook.

General Warmup
Dynamic Warmup

Bear Crawls
Crab Walks
Scapula Pushups--2x10
Pushups--2x10

Band Pull Aparts--2x20
Band Rows--2x10
Band Pull Downs--2x10
Band Triceps Extensions--2x10

Power
Jammer--4x5

Strength
Push Press--4x8 (Increase weight each set, should fail on 8th rep of 4th set)
--Worked up to a set of 8 at 187 lbs

Assistance
Wide-Grip Lat Pulldowns--3x12

Bodyweight Circuit #1--50 Reps of each in as few sets as possible
Pushup Variation (Do a different pushup variation each time)
Inverted Rows

Bodyweight Circuit #2
Dips--2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12
Pull Ups--2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12

Pull Ups are one of the best upper body
exercises you can do and you can do
them anywhere
Gun Show
2 Board Press--60% of Estimated 1RM Floor Press
2xFailure (Humbling)

Rehab/Abs--3 Rounds
Band Face Pulls--15


Choice Abs (Sprinter Sit Ups)--12 each side

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

You Better Pack Your Lunch!

Chad Smith of Juggernaut Training Systems
has squatted 905 lbs raw in competition
...humbling
It's easy to walk in the gym everyday and do what you're good at.  It's much harder to push yourself and attack your weaknesses.  Well, let's just say I think I can speak for everyone who was involved in this workout today when I say that we found our weaknesses, and we won't be walking for days because of it.  This workout was brutal from top to bottom.  I was encouraged when my squat mobility had improved greatly since the last time I free squatted, but when the weights started getting heavy I realized it had been a long time since I felt that unmatched sensation of having a few hundred pounds on your back, trying to snap you in half.  From there it just got more and more brutal with every exercise...

But it was fucking awesome!  This is what strength training is all about.  We fought through this workout even though we were all struggling and in pain the entire time.  Our bodies were screaming for us to stop but we kept pushing and we all got stronger for it.  If you only do what you're good at and never step out of your comfort zone you will never get better.  On a personal level, I have always sucked at squatting.  I hate squatting, I've never been good at it, and it hates me.  However, after today, I'm more motivated than ever to squat and to improve my squat because I hate being weak and I know that if I want to get stronger, I need to build up my weakest lift, and that is the squat.  Embrace the grind!

On another note, I'd like to once again reiterate that power training is to be done FIRST.  Power training, like jumping, med ball throws, and other explosive movements, are intended to be done at the beginning of a workout, when the body has the most energy.  The reason for this is that the goal of these movements is to improve rate of force development by moving the body or some sort of resistance as fast as humanly possible.  The goal is to increase the speed at which the central nervous system can activate the muscles and apply force.  As you fatigue, your body has less and less ability to produce force, and to produce force quickly.  I can't stand when people do box jumps for high reps near the end of their workout.  Power movements should not be used for conditioning.  It defeats their main purpose and is dangerous to the athlete's health.  Please understand the exercises you are implementing in your program before you do them.  This will help you achieve maximal results and even more importantly, keep yourself healthy in the long haul.

Finally, if you're going to try this workout, you better pack a lunch, because this shit isn't for the faint of heart.  Once again, the phrases, "I hate you Justin," "Fuck you Justin," and "I'm gonna' puke," were heard numerous times throughout this one.  Enjoy!

General Warmup
Snatch Grip Block Deadlifts were the death of me
Dynamic Warmup

X Band Walks
Fire Hydrants
Bodyweight Squats
Gate Progression

Power
Box Jumps--5x3

Strength
Back Squats--3x5 at 8 RPE (Leave two reps in the tank, so a weight you'd fail on your 7th rep for 5)
--Did 3x5 at 308 lbs (this was humbling)

Assistance
Block Deadlifts--3x3 at 75% of estimated 1RM from our first cycle of deadlifts
--Did 340 lbs for 3x3

Challenge
Snatch Grip Block Deadlifts--1x15 at 315 lbs
--This was a special challenge I saw on Facebeook from powerlifter Brandon Lilly.  Did 315 for 15 reps as my 3rd movement of the day, and it absolutely destroyed me.  By the end my lower back, glutes, and hamstrings were on fire, my grip was failing, and I could barely walk.

Single Leg Work
Barbell Step Ups--3x8 each leg
CJ performs barbell step ups
all while hating the air
I breathe

Muscle Building/Conditioning/Abs--3 Rounds
Glute/Ham Raises--12
Banded Close Grip Lat Pulldowns--15
Band Resisted Lying Knee Tucks--15

Abs--3 Rounds
Weighted Straight Leg Sit Ups--20















Monday, December 17, 2012

Good To Be Back Under a Heavy Bar

Klokov Presses are a brutal exercise
that will help you add size and
strength to the shoulders
and upper back
Now that our deload week is over it's good to be back lifting heavy again!  I decided to push the volume and intensity today because coming out of our back off week the body felt primed for a tough workout.  Not only was this workout brutal for the entire upper body, but it pushed us to be mentally tough as well, especially by the end where my grip was shot and the very last thing I wanted to do was farmer's carries.  Nothing special here just heavy weights and hard work and sometimes that's all you need.

General Warmup
Dynamic Warmup

Band Pull Aparts--2x15
Band Rows--2x15
Scapula Pushups--2x15
Pushups--2x15

Power
1) Drop Pushup Ups--5x3

Strength
2) Floor Press--3x5 at RPE 8
--Worked up to 295 for 3x5, had to fight out the last rep but I felt good so I decided to push the intensity higher than I had planned

Assistance
3) Neutral Grip DB Bench--2x15

4) Pendlay Rows--4x8

5) Klokov Press--3x6-8

6) Pull Ups--3xSubmax

Muscle Building/Conditioning--3 Rounds
7a) Band Triceps Extension--Failure
7b) Rope Biceps Curls--15
7c) DB Side Lateral Raises--15

Finisher--3 Rounds
8) DB Farmer's Carries--110 lbs

Floor Presses are a partial movement variation
of the bench press and help to improve
the lockout portion of the bench press
Did a lot of work today.  Sometimes you have to push the envelope and force your body and your mind to leave their comfort zones.  This was a very taxing workout on the upper body, but I felt good when it was over and I'm excited for the rest of this next 3 week cycle of training.



Below is the link for the JMSB group on Facebook.  If you'd like to see workouts posted over winter break or ask questions or leave comments for anyone in our group of lifters join us!

https://www.facebook.com/groups/570800456266724/




Thursday, December 13, 2012

An Examination of my Bullshit


Okay, so maybe the title of this article isn't entirely fair to myself.  Here I sit, at 9:45 am on a Thursday, with literally NOTHING on my agenda that I'm responsible for today.  I've been awake since 5:30, tossing and turning until the rising sun's light filled my room and I finally got sick of laying in bed analyzing my current training program in my head and hearing my roommate talk and mumble in his sleep.  As a graduate student, my schedule doesn't match up with my peers who are still completing their four years of undergrad.  My classes were short but intense, beginning in late September and finishing the first week of December.  Therefore, for the last week and a half my life has consisted entirely of eating, sleeping, training, and hanging out with friends.
While I've been living the dream these past couple weeks, I've had far too much time to reflect upon and analyze my current training schedule and philosophy.  I'm a bit of a perfectionist when it comes to training, and admittedly, I usually end up driving myself insane scrutinizing every single detail of what I do.  I spend countless hours on the Internet, reading articles, listening to interviews, and watching Youtube videos of the world's elite strength coaches and lifters.  My thirst for knowledge about the subject of strength and conditioning is unquenchable, but often leads me to drive myself insane trying to process the vast amount of information that I take in on a daily basis.  In order to combat my tendency to over complicate everything I do, I felt it would be therapeutic to take this opportunity to break down, for the benefit of both you as a reader and myself, what I and my training partners do, and exactly why we do it.

Some of the best advice I've ever heard came from Mark Bell of Supertraining Gym in California.  Bell is a world-class powerlifter who is incredibly generous with his knowledge of the sport of powerlifting and training in general.  If you search him on Youtube or Google, you will find more videos and articles of his and his member's training than you'll know what to do with.  In one of his videos, Bell said each and every day you train, you should have a goal and a focus going into the workout.  It doesn't matter what you're training for, how you're training or where you're training, you must come into the session with a specific idea in mind of what you want to accomplish with your workout, and how you're going to accomplish it.  Without an understanding of what you're trying to achieve, both short-term and long-term, one cannot expect to be able to take the proper steps to reach their goals.  

Now, how is this applicable to you?  Not everyone is an athlete.  My training partners and I are all current or former college football players.  We train with a specific purpose so that we may improve attributes that are necessary to be successful in our sport.  Some may go to the gym for general fitness purposes only, some aspire to be powerlifters, other want to be Olympic lifters, and even more just want to be strong because they're red-blooded Americans and want to look good for the opposite sex.  Whatever you're reason is for training, it's vital that you approach your training in a practical manner.  Blindly going into the gym without a purpose or goal isn't going to get you where you want to go, regardless of where that is.  With that in mind, here is a general breakdown of how and why we train.

1) Warmup--I'll classify both general and dynamic warmups into this one category.  I've written before about stretching before working out.  Studies have determined that it not only doesn't help to prepare the body to perform work, but that it is also detrimental to strength and power output.  So, instead of the classic static stretch, we perform two different warmups that total 15 minutes.  First, a general warmup is done with the purpose of raising the heart rate and getting blood pumping through the body to the muscles which prepares the body to perform more strenuous work.  Then, after five minutes of a general warmup, we perform a dynamic warmup.  Dynamic warmups are specific to the activity one is doing.  It involves performing movements that activate the muscles and central nervous system, preparing them to handle the training that will follow.  In just this 15 minute period, you can improve your numbers in the gym and your overall health.  I promise you, if you haven't experienced a gym-related injury yet, one is coming your way if you don't begin to warmup properly.  I'm not talking about going in and bench pressing 135, then 185, than 225 cold and calling that a warmup.  I mean taking the time to work on mobility and activation drills to properly prepare your central nervous system and muscles to perform work.

2) Power--Power is defined as force times time.  This may be the single most important concept in sports.  With the exception of long, slow athletic events such as cross country or long-distance swimming, most sports involve explosive movements, where the body must produce a great amount of force in a short amount of time.  Think about it, in football, each position, from offensive lineman to kicker, must be able to, in a very short burst, reach peak force production in order to be successful.  A lineman must come off the ball and with only a yard of space between him and his opponent, produce enough force to drive the defensive lineman off the ball.  A kicker must use their trunk musculature and entire lower body to quickly produce enough force to kick the ball as far as they can.  In soccer, an athlete may go from a dead stop to a full sprint in a matter of seconds, then have to bury a shot hard enough to beat the goalie.  In basketball athletes must be able to go from a complete stand-still to a maximal jump as fast as possible in order to pull down a rebound of shoot a ball over the hands of a defender.  These are just a few examples, but in each one, the athlete who is able to produce the most force the fastest, is most often successful.  This is known as "rate of force development," and is the pinnacle of what an athlete is striving to achieve and improve through their training. 

I say the pinnacle, because power can only be developed once a number of other criteria are met.  Because power is equal to force x velocity, power can only be achieved when an individual possesses a base of strength (aka force) production, and an ability to move that force quickly (aka velocity).  Therefore, everything we do is based on the idea that while our goal is to improve our power production, we must do so through training that focuses on improving our maximal force output, as well as our body's ability to produce force rapidly.

Now, how does this apply to the normal gym goer?  I haven't met many people, (guys mostly) who want to be weak and look weak.  Chances are, if you're going to the gym, your goal is to get stronger and get bigger.  So you may ask yourself, why do I care about things like "rate of force production," I just want to be jacked and be able to deadlift and bench press a ton of weight.  Well, first, if you want to build muscle, you need to get stronger.  Using the same stimulus over and over and over won't do.  Any gains you get in muscle size will stall as the body adapts to the training stimulus.  So, in order to continue to build muscle, you must manipulate the volume and intensity (sets/reps/weight/exercises) you are performing.  Inevitably, this means you have to lift heavier and heavier things for varying reps which will build muscular strength and size.  

So now you're using a program that varies the volume and intensity of training so that your able to avoid hitting a plateau where the body adapts to the exercise stimulus and your gains stop.  Great, but you're still failing on that 350 pound bench press you want to brag to your friends about, or you just can't seem to finish off that 500 pound deadlift you've been working for.  One of your problems may be that even though you have great maximal strength, your rate of force production isn't high enough to finish these movements with maximal loads.  Lifting weights is no different than a basketball player jumping, a soccer playing sprinting, or a football player trying to knock the crap out of his opponent, it all involves the body exerting force on an outside object.  In order to successfully complete these tasks, the body must be able to produce maximal force as quickly as possible.  Think about it, with no momentum, in order to deadlift 500 pounds, the body must be able to produce enough force to overcome that load.  However, if it takes too long to reach this peak force output, you're not going to be able to move that weight from point A to point B.  

If you've ever watched an Olympic lifter clean and jerk or snatch you understand what I mean.  Regardless of how heavy the weight is, the bar is ALWAYS moving quickly, or they won't make the lift.  A basketball player never jumps slowly, or there's no shot they're going to get higher faster than they're opponent to grab a rebound.  One of the most impressive things about world-class powerlifters like Brandon Lilly, is that even as the weights get heavier, they continue to move the bar with incredible speed an technique, even as they reach near maximal loads, (search Brandon Lilly's 815 pound deadlift on Youtube if you want to see what I mean).

So, how do you get over the top to pull that 500 pound deadlift you've been working at for years?  You focus your training on improving your body's rate of force development.  Using submaximal loads and explosive movements, you train your central nervous system and muscles to reach peak force production faster and faster.  Now, instead of being like a crappy car that needs 20 seconds to get from 0 to 60, you can reach your maximum strength output rapidly, which allows you to use the maximal strength that you possess to move heavy loads.  

3) Strength--I once read a great quote that said, "without strength, there is no power."  Strength is the foundation by which power is built.  I don't care how many power cleans you do at 135 pounds, how many box jumps you do, or how far you can throw a medicine ball, if you don't have a base of max strength, you are not going to be powerful.  While we work on a power movement at the beginning of each workout, the core lift of our workout is always designed to build pure strength.  The best lifts to achieve this are the bench press, the overhead press, the squat, the deadlift, the clean, and the snatch.  These lifts recruit more muscle fibers and muscle groups than any other.  Not only are they economical because they allow you to work so many muscle groups with one movement, but they allow you to use heavier loads because more muscles are involved, all of which means that the body will produce more testosterone which is the key muscle-building hormone.  Simply put, if you want to be strong and powerful, you need to be attacking heavy compound movements that tax many muscle groups at once and build your body's maximal force output.  There is a reason the squat is called "the king of all lifts" and the deadlift is known as "the greatest assessment of raw strength and power."

4) Speed--We improve the central nervous system's and muscle's ability to produce force quickly through the use of submax loads, at max speeds.  For example, we'll use between 50 and 75% of a person's one rep max or estimated one rep max.  Because the weight is lighter, the athlete is capable of moving the weight at a high velocity.  Essentially, they are focusing on moving the weight as if it were a maximal load, trying to apply as much force as they possibly can to a weight that is submaximal.  This teaches the central nervous system and the muscles to activate quickly and improves rate of force development.  There are numerous ways to improve rate of force development, one not better than the next.  Its all a matter of properly implementing a system that teaches athletes to produce velocity.  Some prefer Olympic lifts, others like basic jump training, right now, I am trying out a system of using submaximal weight on lifts like the push press, squat, and deadlift to improve speed and therefore, power output.  

5) Assistance--I need to make this very clear, assistance work is just that:  ASSISTANCE.  It assists your major lifts.  No, bicep curls, triceps kickbacks, and chest flys should NEVER be the cornerstone of your lifting.  These exercises are utilized after the main power, strength, and speed movements of the workout in order to build muscle and strength in specific muscles that will help boost core lifts, build up weaknesses, and avoid muscular imbalances.  Due to the nature of assistance exercises, I am not of the belief that people should do the same assistance work weak after weak for long periods of time.  I rotate my assistance work almost every workout, focusing on muscle groups that are important to improving our core lifts (squat, deadlift, bench press, overhead press) and to help improve weaknesses in myself and my athletes.  For example, most athletes are pressing dominant.  They spend their lives trying to build a big chest and neglect the upper back, biceps, and elbox flexors.  Simultaneously, most people squat but don't deadlift, because they have been told (incorrectly) that the deadlift will screw up their back forever, or just because the deadlift is just too damn hard.  Finally, many athletes do millions and millions of crunches and movements to improve abdominal strength and size, but neglect the all-important muscles of the lower back which are just as vital for spinal erection of stabilization.  These muscular imbalances not only lead to less than optimal strength output, but can also lead to injuries because the stronger muscles must pick up the slack for the underdeveloped muscles of the posterior chain.  So, with that in mind, my training partners and I do a ton of upper back work, (pull ups, band pull aparts, face pulls, rows of every conceivable kind, lat pull downs, etc) and glute, hamstring, and lower back work (Romanian deadlifts, snatch-grip RDLs, banded good mornings, barbell good mornings, speed deadlifts, glute/ham raises, back extensions).  These exercises serve as assistance to build up weaknesses and improve the muscles that perform work during our core lifts.  


Wrap Up

In approaching our workouts, we organize them starting with exercises that require the most energy and effort, and finish with less important assistance work.  We begin with activation, (warmup) then do a power movement, then a maximal strength movement, then speed, and finish with assistance and core work, which also serves as our conditioning.  This is a very basic and broad way to explain our training, and I could go on forever explaining exactly why we do things this way.  I'm not saying this is the best method, I'm not saying it's the only method.  However, it is a basic and effective template that I have utilized with personal success for some time now.  So maybe the title of this article is a bit unfair to me, because there is method to my madness. 

Everyone is different, and it's important to discover what works for you.  The key here is to take the time to break down your goals and what you need to do to reach those goals as I have done here.  Then, once you have established your long term goals, figure out the specific steps you need to take to reach them.  Remember, every workout you should have focus.  It doesn't matter if its to move submaximal weight as fast as possible, try a new lift that you think will build up a weakness of yours, get one more rep than last week, or hit a personal record on the deadlift or squat, just make sure you take the time to set a goal for that workout that will help you on your path to achieving your ultimate goal.  Embrace the grind, find your why, then focus on what you have to do to get there.  

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Deloading: Backing Off for Bigger Gains

For the longest time I resisted deloading because I absolutely hated the idea of taking a week to "back off" heavy training and allow the body to recover.  I always intended to give it a try but every time I'd step into the gym for a deload workout I'd end up letting my ego get the best of me and I'd get into a workout with too much volume and intensity to be considered a deload.  Now, as I try to increase my knowledge and understanding of strength training so that I can be well educated in as many techniques as possible, I realize that you can read about a concept as much as you want, but you'll never know what works for you and the athletes you train or train with until you actually try something.  With that in mind, this is the fourth week of our first post-season training cycle, and our first deload week.

Mark Bell is one of the strongest powerlifters
in the world--here he deadlifts 405
plus 80 pounds of chains--even the
best in the world don't train maximally
ALL the time, they train optimally
Deloading a concept by which you take a period of time to back off your normal training and allow the central nervous system and the muscles to rest and recover.  The idea behind deloading is that if you continue to tax the body and mind week after week by training with high volume and high intensity, you will eventually burn out, and no matter hard you work, your gains will plateau or actually regress.  Most people don't understand how important a healthy central nervous system is to strength gains.  Your central nervous system is responsible for coordinating all functions of the human body.  It is responsible for muscle activation, as well as operating the endocrine system which secretes hormones like all-important testosterone into your blood stream.  Overtraining and overworking the central nervous system will lead to negative consequences such as fatigue, loss of motivation, depression, loss in strength, loss in muscle and strength gains, etc.  So, you plan a period of rest every so often into your training cycles which allows the body and mind to recuperate and come back stronger for the next cycle of training.  As Bill Klika put it to me, "two steps forward and one step back is still a step forward."  

There is no one way to deload.  Search the Internet, read textbooks, look up weightlifting and strength and conditioning magazines, talk to coaches, etc.  and you will inevitably end up getting more opinions on the topic than you'll know what to do with.  Because there is no one agreed upon way to do this, the only way for me to learn what I like and what is best for the body is trial and error.  So, for this deload week, we utilized our main barbell lifts that we have been doing throughout the first cycle, (some would say take the barbell completely out of the equation) but cut the volume and intensity by nearly half, focusing on technique and speed.  We also cut the assistance work volume and intensity in half.  This is a perfect example of a time where body weight training is a great idea.  You'll notice the only thing not cut down, is our warmup.  During deloading it's still vital to properly warmup, and because the goal is active rest, a proper warmup may be the most important part of the lift.  

Our workouts are short, so far both have been under 50 minutes, warmup included.  We move quickly, we get a good sweat going, then we're out of there.  I believe this will allow us to work on general physical preparedness while not taxing the CNS and the muscles to a point where our recovery is jeopardized.  Remember, deloading is active rest.  Workouts should be short, you should NEVER go until failure, or be handling loads that are heavy enough to really tax the body.  Deloading is a recovery period and should be treated as such.  Check your ego at the door, this is about training OPTIMALLY not MAXIMALLY, get some good work in, then get out of the gym so that next week you can come back healthy and strong and ready to attack heavy weights.

If you've hit a plateau in your training and have been stuck in the same routine and lifting the same weight for a long time, or you just feel tired, beat up, or have lost the motivation to train, it may be time to deload.  Some believe you should take time off completely from lifting, others believe you should continue to do light work 2-3 times a week, and others like to still use barbell lifts but with light weights to work on technique.  Whatever you choose to do, begin to use planned periods of rest in your training, and you'll feel healthier and blast through plateaus like never before.  

Workout #1

General Warmup--Jogging, skipping
Dynamic Warmup

--Active/Dynamic Movements--4 each
--Groiners--2x10
--Walking Lunges--2x10 forward/backward
--Banded Good Mornings--2x10

Power
Backwards Underhand Med Ball Throws--2x5

Strength
Deadlift--3x5 at 60% 1RM
--Used 270 lbs and deadlifted conventional because I've been pulling sumo so much

Assistance
Snatch-Grip RDL--3x8
Using a snatch forces more activation and work by
the all-important upper back musculature
and improves grip strength

Circuit #1--2 Rounds
Goblet Squat--10
Inverted Row--10
Back Extensions--10

Circuit #2--2 Rounds
Reverse Lunges--10 each leg
Band Pulldowns--10
Sprinter Sit Ups--10 each side





Workout #2

General Warmup
Dynamic Warmup

--Banded Rows--2x15
--Band Pull Downs--2x15
--Band Pull Aparts--2x15
--Scapula Pushups--1x20
--Alligator Pushups--2x10 forward and backward

Power
Explosive Med Ball Chest Pass--2x3

Strength
Bench Press--3x5 at 60% 1RM
--Used 205 lbs

Assistance
Barbell Rows--3x8

Circuit #1--2 Rounds
Klokov Press (Behind the neck snatch grip press)--10
L-Sit Pull Ups--10
Anti-Rotation Press Hold--20 seconds each side

Circuit #2--2 Rounds
Rolling DB Triceps Extension--10
DB Hammer Curls--10
Band Pull Aparts--25

Friday, December 7, 2012

Mental Toughness Workout

After spending most of the day in bed feeling like I got run over by a Mack Truck, (my own fault) I finally mustered up the energy to go grab some food and get in my last heavy session of a 3 week cycle.  Next week will be a deload week, which I will explain and outline over a post or two next week.  It couldn't come at a better time either.  I feel like I've pushed the volume and intensity of my workouts to a peak over these last three weeks, and it will be beneficial for my training partners and I to back off for a week to allow the central nervous system and muscles to recover.  

World Class Powerlifter
Brandon Lilly
I was particularly proud of this workout because I ate nearly nothing all day and felt like absolute shit.  Again, this was entirely my fault, and moving forward, I won't let it happen again, but I felt good about the fact that instead of taking the whole day off and trying to get the lift in tomorrow, I sacked up and got it in anyway.  Surprisingly, despite only eating one meal and spending most of the day dead in bed, I actually had a pretty good lift.  Just goes to show, sometimes you need to push the mind and body to the limit to find out how far you're capable of going.  Listen to your body, but know the difference between a situation where you really need to back off your training and a when you can push yourself and develop mental toughness.   That's one of the great things about training, not only does it develop your body, but it allows you to develop so much more.  Toughness, determination, and perseverance can all be forged through long hours spilling blood, sweat, and tears in the gym.  These attributes will follow you and carry over to so much more than training.  So next time you really don't feel like lifting, or you haven't been eating right, or it would be so much easier to take a nap or go drink with friends, push yourself and see what you're capable of. 

Embrace the grind.

General Warmup
Dynamic Warmup

Active-Dynamic Warmup Series--4 each movement
Offset Band Pull Aparts--2x15
Terminal Knee Extensions--3x15 each leg
335 lbs + Light Green Band Tension

Power
Seated Tuck Jumps--3x3

Strength
Front Box Squats--8x3
--Worked up to 310 lbs for 3

Speed Work
Speed Deadlifts w/ Bands--6x3
--Used 75% of current estimated 1RM plus light green band tension

Conditioning/Muscle Building--3 Rounds
Pendlay Rows--8
Band-Resisted Glut/Ham Raises--8
Sprinter Sit Ups--12 each side

Finisher
Chain/DB Weighted Cossack Squats--2x6-8 each leg

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Ass-Kicking Upper Body Training



Single Arm DB Pressing w/a light object in
opposite hand to enforce technique
In my last post about upper body training I talked about the overuse of the barbell bench press for developing and displaying upper body strength and power.  Today was a prime example of a movement that kicks the crap out of the bench press in this department.  When putting this dynamic, repetition effort upper body training session, I realized that we hadn't done overhead pressing AT ALL yet.  Now, some will argue until their death that overhead pressing is bad for the shoulders and will cause or aggravate shoulder injuries, blah blah blah...I disagree.  I think the overhead press, and its many variations, are an excellent way to build strength and muscle mass in the entire upper body.  The overhead press has great carryover to the horizontal press as well, because people often forget how important a role the muscles of the shoulder are in having a strong horizontal press.  Need proof?  Look up any powerlifter who does overhead pressing, whether it be strict press, military press, push press etc. doesn't matter.  You will begin to realize that guys who have a strong overhead press almost always have a strong bench press as well.  However, guys who do no overhead pressing, but bench press frequently, won't necessarily have a big overhead press.  Basically, the overhead press helps the bench while the bench doesn't help the overhead press as much.

Mattera killing pull ups
However, you should be smart when implementing overhead pressing.  If a doctor has told you not to press overhead, for the love of God listen.  Mike Mancino has a potentially serious shoulder injury right now, and I would never want him to aggravate that by overhead pressing.  So, he did repetition method with banded barbell pushups.  That being said, I love overhead pressing.  There's just something badass and primal about throwing heavy weight over your head.  I had missed it, and today we cranked out push presses to develop full body power and strength.  The reason I like the push press as opposed to the military press is because the push press protects the shoulder because the shoulders don't actually begin to move the weight until its already moving due to the momentum developed by dipping through the hips and driving through the floor.  At this point, the shoulder is in a much safer position to push the weight overhead, as opposed to the military press where the motion begins in the rack position and is initiated entirely by the arms, upper back and shoulders.  Additionally, the push press, because it involves the legs and hips, allows the athlete to overload the muscles and use more weight.  This is a case where more weight is absolutely better.  It teaches the whole body to operate explosively as a unit, recruiting more muscle fibers to move heavier loads, which the body responds to by secreting more testosterone into the blood stream.  Remember, the more muscle groups involved in a movement and the more motor units used, the more testosterone the body releases, and the greater your gains.  This is why movements like the deadlift, the squat, the standing barbell overhead press, the bench press, the clean and jerk, and the snatch are the best movements for building strength, power, and mass.  They incorporate more muscle groups into one movement than any other exercise.  Throw some assistance work in at the end and you got a kick ass workout that had each and every one of us beat up, tired, but feeling great.  If you want to pack on muscle in the upper body and back it up with some serious strength...PICK UP A BAR AND PUSH HEAVY SHIT OVER YOUR HEAD!


General Warmup
Dynamic Warmup

Pushup w/ groiner--2x10
Banded Rows--2x20
Two-Way Band Pull Aparts--2x20
Banded Shoulder External Rotations--2x15 each arm
Scapula Push Ups--2x15

Power
Jammer--4x5 each arm

Strength
Push Press--4x8-12
--Finished with 176 lbs for 8

Assistance
Weighted/Body weight/Assisted Pull ups--4x8 (Varied Grips)

Muscle Building/Conditioning--3 Rounds
Single Arm DB Bench--12 each arm
Inverted Rows--15
Hanging Knee/Leg Raises--Failure

Finisher--3 Rounds
Farmers Walks--2 Laps w/ chains and dumbbells
A couple jacked up fingers couldn't stop Pis

Gun Show
Straight Bar Triceps Pushdown--3x15


Tuesday, December 4, 2012

The Truth About Stretching and HEAVY Pulling


One part of a single leg groiner, an excellent
active warm-up
For a long time conventional wisdom has suggested that athletes and lifters stretch before training or competing.  The idea being that stretching before rigorous activity prevents injury and helps improve overall performance.  However, there is a lack of scientific evidence to support such an idea, and elite strength and conditioning coaches now understand that there is not only no evidence to suggest that stretching before training prevents injury or improves performance, but that it can actually limit strength and power output.  Some studies have concluded that individuals saw a reduction in strength after just 30 to 60 seconds.  The reason this occurs, without getting too scientific, is that a stretched muscle needs time to take up the slack caused by stretching before it can reach peak contraction.  The longer and harder you stretch, therefore, the longer you have to wait before the muscle will be able to reach peak contraction again, (Heyward, 2010).

Now, how does this concept apply to you?  If you are an athlete who is at all interested in improving your strength and power, you should not stretch prior to training or competing.  You severely inhibit your strength and power output if you do so.  Instead, you should use a dynamic warm-up in order to properly prepare your body.  Regardless of what type of training you are doing, your warmup should be at least 15 minutes long and should include a general warm-up and a dynamic warm-up.  What you do is up to you, but the exercises should activate your central nervous system, (which is more responsible for strength and power output than your actual muscles themselves) and your muscles.  Begin with simply calisthenics like jogging, skipping, jumping jacks, etc.  This gets blood flowing, increases heart rate, and activates the central nervous system.  After 5 minutes of this general warm-up, go into a dynamic warm-up.  This should be sport/activity specific, mimicking the movements and activating the muscles that will be utilized during the workout or competition.  These can be anything from pushups, to groiners, to resistance band work, to glute/ham raises, pull ups, body weight squats, lunges, skipping, skipping with a bound, sprinting, and everything in between.  While most people would rather touch their toes for 30 seconds then squat, it is much more beneficial to both your health and your results in the gym to take the time and get a good active-dynamic warm-up in before training.  Next time you lift, take 15 minutes to properly warm-up.  Don't stretch, but use calisthenics and body weight exercises to activate and get blood flowing to the muscles that will be taxed during your training.  I promise you, doing this on a consistent basis will not only make you feel better during and after training, it will enhance your performance which is what we're all in the gym to accomplish in the first place.

Today was the last heavy deadlift day of the first 3 weeks cycle of postseason training.  After a dynamic warm-up and some explosive med ball throws we got into a heavy deadlift workout.  Everyone was pushing each other and working their ass off.  There's nothing better than training with a group of guys who get excited when someone steps onto the platform to pull some big weight.  Leonte, Mattera, Rizz, Mancino, and CJ Vines and fought through a brutal workout and got better today.  Love liftin' with these guys they walk the walk and show what embracing the grind is all about!
World class powerlifter Dan Green
How do you get a back like that?
Start with Heavy Deadlifts

General Warmup
Dynamic Warmup

Groiners--2x10
Lateral Slide Steps--2x5 steps each direction
Body Weight Box Squats--2x10
Glute Bridges--2x10

Power
Underhand Backwards Med Ball Throws--6x2

Strength
Deadlift (Sumo)--1x4 at 8 RPE, 2x2 at 9 RPE
--Worked up to 396 lbs for a set of 4, and 430 lbs for 2x2

Assistance
Deficit Deadlifts (Conventional)--8x1 w/ 60 seconds rest between lifts

Upper Back Muscle Building
Strict Lat Pulldowns--4x10

Muscle Building/Conditioning--3 Rounds
DB Goblet Squats--10
Lying Swiss Ball Leg Curls--15
Anti-Rotation Band Hold--30 seconds/side

Joe Meglio of Meglio Fitness, a former FDU student
performing anti-rotation press (kneeling)
Abs
Straight Leg V Sit Up--3x20


Finally, I'd like to say good luck to my boy Jim Rizz as he goes to play in the Senior Classic in Salem, Virginia this Friday.  You've earned it brotha go enjoy it.  For everyone else share this with your friends, enjoy the workout and don't forget to get a proper warm-up in beforehand.  If you'd like to check out the source of the information in the first paragraph I left the text citation below.



Heyward, V. H. (2010). Advanced fitness assessment and exercise prescription. (6 ed., p. 290). Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics.