Starting on Monday, Nov. 7th.
OH Press: 180 x 5, 190 x 5, 200 x 5
Deadlift: 375 x 5, 400 x 5, 425 x 5
Sumo DL: 225 x 10 x 5
Flat Bench Press: 270 x 5, 290 x 5, 310 x 5
Incline Bench Press: 185 x 10 x 3, 185 x 8, 185 x 6
Squats: 375 x 5, 400 x 5, 425 x 5
Squats (no belt): 225 x 10 x 5
*OH Press: 190 x 3, 200 x 3, 215 x 5
Deadlift: 400 x 3, 425 x 3, 450 x 3
Flat Bench Press: 290 x 3, 310 x 3, 325 x 5
Flat Bench Press: 225 x 10 x 3, 225 x 8, 225 x 6
*I've decided that I'm OK with using some leg drive in the heavier overhead presses (85-100% 1RM). This changes the excersise to something one might call a push press and makes it more dynamic than static pressing. Some purists may claim that if I can't press the weight statically then I should lower the weight. Here are three reasons those people are jackasses.
- This is a functional strength exercise in my program, not a bodybuilding movement. I can't think of a real world scenario when you wouldn't use your legs to lift something heavy overhead.
- There is no competition for static overhead pressing and therefore no strict rules. Olympic lifters and strongmen both press overhead in competition, but they use as much leg drive as humanly possible. The bench press is probably the most similar competitive lift. If you're not using leg drive in the bench, you're doing it wrong.
- You're lumbar spine will thank you when you bend your knees to absorb the eccentric portion of the lift. A belt helps, but doesn't offer the same protection as in exercises where you're condensing your torso rather than elongating it.
I'm done now.
1 comment:
Helluva soap box. You've convinced me...i don't think you're as big a wuss as I otherwise would have. In fact, I might just drop out from under some of today's lifts like an olympian.
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