BaseStrengthAI is more reliable than a coach, cheaper than an Excel template!👇👇👇 www.BaseStrength.com/the-app Bromley Merch from Barbell Apparel only available HERE! 👇👇👇 barbellapparel.com/Bromley
@ranthony27142 жыл бұрын
I have been using Steve Shaws rep goal triple progression method. Where I start with a rep range, base sets. Once I reach the top of the rep range on the base sets, I add a set. Once I reach the top of the rep range on the added set, I add weight and drop back down to the base sets. Rinse and repeat. I also will do am amrap on the final set if there are reps on the tank.
@Ahil44212 жыл бұрын
I've actually implemented this method on push ups without realising it. I would do 10 reps and the add a set until I built myself to do 10x20 push ups gave me crazy size in chest and shoulders. I'm thinking of doing this for my stoenglifts program where instead of adding weight everytime id just add a set and add weight next week
@paulchristie3306 Жыл бұрын
@@Ahil4421 Follow a good programme instead of making up mad shit.
@sonoftheking831 Жыл бұрын
Nice howd it work for you?
@sonoftheking831 Жыл бұрын
@@Ahil4421 great gains!?
@turul9392 Жыл бұрын
Same here. Steve's advice has helped me a lot.
@Wo1fLarsen2 жыл бұрын
I Appreciate your content man. I've been using Base Strength to design my current waves. Peak and the Deadlift book are on the way. Thanks again.
@heveyweightheveyweight53992 жыл бұрын
Yeah I bought his base strength book as well . Dudes on his shit
@zsahe21 Жыл бұрын
!!!!
@jayseb2 жыл бұрын
Very clear, well explained and (thank you) no annoying music or unnecessary crap. Cheers.
@porqpine532 жыл бұрын
The plus set waves in the Peak Strength Intermediate Bullmastiff have changed my whole game up man! Currently 2 weeks into the Peak Phase and man it’s already different enough from the base I’m blowing UP. Looking forward to sharing my progress
@SweelFor2 жыл бұрын
Based on one of your videos I've wrote a program that looks like your "volumise" section. I start at 2x12 to 5x12, and then 4x12 to 7x12 over 2 months, but the weight stays the same in that period. I've completed one cycle of this (2 months) and initially even 3x12 deadlift were torture but when I finished at 6x12 I felt very adapted to it. After the 1st cycle I up the weights a little bit on everything (approx 60 to 65%) and repeat. After 2 cycles of that I will go into 2 months of strength progression and test 1RMs. It feels like my body now naturally wants to reach 12 when before at 7-8 I would feel like stopping the set. This new video where you go over this again is very encouraging and re assuring to me because it's a programming view that I don't see anyone else doing or really talk about, so sometimes it feels like I'm in the dark a little, and hearing you hammer those points about potentialising etc is very nice.
@jan-jp4bt2 жыл бұрын
Exactly what I'm up to now! Very interested to see how your strength block would look like. do you cap at certain RPE? do sets across ? and how does the rest of the volume around the week looks like?
@Jnikola972 жыл бұрын
Bro 6x12 on deadlifts xD
@jan-jp4bt2 жыл бұрын
@@Jnikola97 Submaximal and once a week probably :0
@xrickster97x2 жыл бұрын
I used to program around a rep number like 12. I would do like you wrote 3x12 all the way to 7x12. I found that making each set the same difficulty is more productive. I need less sets for the same effect. I could do a set of 16, then a set of 14, then a set of 13 and it works way way better. Workouts don't take as long and my progression/ recovery is more predictable. I try to add a little weight AND add a rep each week. If I find that I am no longer getting as sore or tired between sessions, I add a set. Try that out because I felt like I was wasting time woth 7 sets of 12 lol.
@jan-jp4bt2 жыл бұрын
@@xrickster97x you're adding stress by increasing weights or reps , while he adds by increasing total sets - if you can keep up with having the same difficulty all the time, that's great but that would not be viable forever. He's accumilating volume over time because staying on the same rpe obviously does not work for him, for anyone at a certain point.
@NunoAlexandreMB2 жыл бұрын
Can't put into words how much I have been learning from your content and books. Another gem right here. Thank you!
@AnthonyVenmans2 жыл бұрын
This video is added to my favorites, I will sit down and watch this over and over again, thanks Alexander!!
@jackthebodiless51642 жыл бұрын
As someone who began serious strength training in middle age, flat loading has been the ticket for me. My previously underconditioned muscles adapt to load increases much more quickly than my old man connective tissues... injury city! Flat loading and patience have solved that problem for me.
@rowanmoloney1559 Жыл бұрын
This is a great point. Flat loading is amazing for allowing connective tissue to catch up. As soon as I moved to weighted calisthenics I found I needed flat load, it saved my elbows which initially were crying after weighted pull ups.
@anirudhvyas60692 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@evilTruthahn2 жыл бұрын
Stumbled across your channel and man do I love your videos. Great stuff!
@anirudhvyas60692 жыл бұрын
Alex: Your content is top notch, really appreciate your work! I like your coverage of front squats and your rack position coverage helped me figure out what is wrong with my front squats, can you talk a bit more on front squats for folks whose shoulders are not ready to rack yet and do not have a rack to keep bar on and have to clean and press please?
@destrohades20942 жыл бұрын
Currently running a Upper Lower, Heavy/light (ish) split where I'm wave loading on my two heavy days and volumising on the lighter days. I based the design on ideas I got from a lot of your previous videos and some of the stuff Alphadestiny puts out. Have run it for 3-4 cycles now with great progress.
@chrismays2553 Жыл бұрын
Just wanted to let you know I really do find your vids useful because I have been trying to find ways to refresh my training a bit since I feel its gotten a bit stale since its been the same thing for 5 months now, just wanted to say thanks again for all of the useful information in this and all of your vids really.
@martin12345123452 жыл бұрын
I really like doing waves. Straight weight week 1, add a chain week 2, add another chain week 3, and then try to beat my straight weight number week 4. This has taken my squat from 450 to 585 in about 4.5 years.
@justamustachewithoutaguy93702 жыл бұрын
Holy shit dude. How much mass did you gain in this time? Could you please go into a little more detail as to how you structured your sets x reps x weight?
@martin12345123452 жыл бұрын
@@justamustachewithoutaguy9370 a good amount. Probably 20 pounds or so. Um, as far as sets and reps, I do a month of 6s, then 4s, and then doubles. Big fan of working up to a hard set with the prescribed amount of reps, and then putting myself through hell with backdown sets. How many backdown sets depends on how I feel both mentally and physically.
@heveyweightheveyweight53992 жыл бұрын
That is horrible thats like 30 lbs of gains on a squat a year that is not good at all
@aurelius58372 жыл бұрын
@@heveyweightheveyweight5399 how much do you squat
@Marko-ij4vy2 жыл бұрын
@@heveyweightheveyweight5399 Would be horrible for a novice or early intermediate. For someone who squats in the mid 400s (advanced lifter) thats actually very good progress.
@posterchild8486Ай бұрын
Two years later - still a solid informational vid.
@johnharbour49362 жыл бұрын
Excellent content as always! Right now I'm combining LP and wave progression for my lifts. I had a lower back injury that set me back and I've had to work on some weaknesses and imbalances in my core and bracing. It's ridiculously slow but I'm figuring out that the training the week before is preparing me for the week ahead. I'm consistently getting stronger and feeling challenged each workout without getting bogged down. Thanks for all of your content you continue to produce!
@ilhamjaa50592 жыл бұрын
The presentation getting better. Sad to see no-drama channel not getting the recognition it needs.
@er98752 жыл бұрын
Thanks for these videos, it's a breath of fresh air in the sea of bullshit that is the fitness industry to see someone that actually understands how theory truly works when applied. Ive been training for over ten years and finding your videos validated so much of my own experience that I've doubted in myself over the years because of the bullshit gets repeated so often in the fitness industry, and your videos have filled more holes in my understanding of training for strength and size than any other resource I've found since I started lifting
@neinfraulein12 жыл бұрын
Love the Volumizing approach. I've found that last approach to be what works best for me. Thx for the info.
@hugobadillo27992 жыл бұрын
Volumizing seems simple and cool, I will try it out. Thank you 🙏🏽
@odjrin2 жыл бұрын
Seriously, this is one of the best channels around.
@astrudlang75572 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!! Excellently explained- just what I needed to organize myself in regards to my programming! Now I feel prepared to break my plateaus and have orientation as to what I need to do- even if I won’t maybe enjoy it ( flat loading with volume)😅
@25davidhenry2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! One of the best videos on programming I have ever watched - so informative.
@j.a.68662 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this! I found myself having many “lightbulb” moments… very helpful
@StrengthScholar0 Жыл бұрын
One type of progressive overload that's been really effective for me is progressively increasing the quality of your technique specifically on the bench. I pick a single workout that I can only accomplish with touch and go reps and as the weeks go on I gradually increase the length of the pause in between each rep until I can complete the entire workout with every rep completed from a dead stop. I think this approach is only really effective with strength-based programs. I'm currently applying this method to the UFPWRLIFTER program and I'm seeing incredible results so far.
@lefonwastaken33932 жыл бұрын
Bromley’s content is gold!
@GreatWhiteNiko2 жыл бұрын
That was beautiful! So much perspective on where each type is, came from, what it does in the big picture. Thank you!
@vincenthu25882 жыл бұрын
GREAT content as always brother, keep up the good work, much love
@jimsecord49372 жыл бұрын
Your books and content are great. Thanks for all of it
@SpidermansSymbiote2 жыл бұрын
Great video. Your final point on volumization reminds me of 5/3/1 BBB. I found that great for hypertrophy and strength gains, plus it just feels awesome.
@EduardO-gm7hx Жыл бұрын
You don't add sets in 531 BBB
@j.e.v.50162 жыл бұрын
Excellent content as usual. Interesting thought about increasing reps vs increasing sets. I have played around to make a program in which main lifts increase in reps and accessories increase in sets.
@defygravity92112 жыл бұрын
Flat loading (step loading) or constant “periodization” is made popular by Bondarchuk. Nothing changes in the program no wave loading no changes in exercises. Training stress is fixed variable, the athletes response is the dependent variable. The original idea was to observe time to peak sporting form and that changing variables constantly creates noise in determining peak (what’s driving the adaptation?). Which varies from athlete to athlete. You can run these with flat rpes across several weeks. Watch the load increase/decrease. This is useful because internal load needs to be a factor too (since it is highly variable) However it’s also good to point out you can use this in combination to other types of progressions. You can run linear on 1 movement and “step load” in others. Or short linear progression on emphasis and long linear progression (step load) on secondary emphasis. That way your not asking your body to adapt to everything at the same time. Excellent video! Very informative.
@AlexanderBromley2 жыл бұрын
Damn, I did not do that justice! That was more insight than I got from Bompas' text so thank you. Bompa's phrasing made it seem like load was constant regardless but what you're saying is that Bondarchuck changed training load based on the athletes feedback? I'm guessing that's the inspiration for Mike T's "Emergent Strategies" then.
@defygravity92112 жыл бұрын
@@AlexanderBromley this is all based on Derek Evelys information since he worked extensively with Bondarchuk. I took his course a while ago and yes Mike credited emerging strategies from bondarchuks writings. He went on Derek’s podcast and said it himself. Not just load was constant the exercises and day offs are constant. These micro cycles are repeated over and over. Since he worked with throwers he used throw distance as a metric to determine athletes reaction to the regimen. Overtime it’s becomes predictable. Once distance decreases he changes the stimulus and wait for another hopefully higher reaction.
@HooDRidEWhiteY2 жыл бұрын
@@defygravity9211 this is badass. Thanks for sharing.
@jan-jp4bt2 жыл бұрын
"You can run these with flat rpes across several weeks. Watch the load increase/decrease" what did you mean? can you give a practical example?
@defygravity92112 жыл бұрын
@@jan-jp4bt 3x5@8RPE run it for however long you want. The load is the variable. Meaning set to set/week to week you alter the weight to match the prescribed effort level which in this case is 8/10 or 2 RIR. If you overshoot/undershoot calibrate and adjust the load. Another way is hybrid and make reps the variable: 3 sets/75%@8. Basically do as many reps as you need to get to 8.
@runeandersen70222 жыл бұрын
Great as always...my fav youtuber...keep up the awesome work.
@melew252 жыл бұрын
Bro I just found your channel. Awesome info. Keep it up! All your tips got me hype for my next deadlift day.
@DCJayhawk572 жыл бұрын
I've been running one of your linear wave loads for my deadlift (HLM from Base Strength, but I skip the "light" days because I train lower body 2x/week), and it's working great. I like the RPE prescription on the "heavy" day so there's a bit more auto regulation built in, and the simplicity of a 3 week wave keeps it fresh. Plus I also like the fact that week 1 is kind of a deload and really helps me grease the groove. I didn't realize it, but I tend to run a pretty similar volumizing approach for my main accessories, especially on RDL. Right now my other main accessory is hack squat, and I do a pretty conservative volumizing approach or even flat-loading on that, focusing more on rep quality and maintaining work capacity than increasing weight each week. I haven't tried volumizing for my primary movement, but maybe I'll throw in a phase once 5s get stale just to see how it feels. I'm more into bodybuilding than pure strength work overall, but I like to deadlift, so that's really my only Big 3 movement at the moment that I'm pushing for strength.
@nmnate2 жыл бұрын
I started doing plus sets over the last few weeks. I definitely like that they give me a little bit of a challenge, but let's me still focus on sticking to a linear progression plan. Definitely worth it.
@HooDRidEWhiteY2 жыл бұрын
Shout out 575/505 💪
@slatermauro20922 жыл бұрын
2:50 6:00 8:20 9:17 9:44 14:20
@robertmosley11882 жыл бұрын
Currently trying my own take on wave loading for upper/lower (4 days a week, one day slightly easier than the other)
@ampedturtle40332 жыл бұрын
This is good info! I learned a lot about why my lifts have been inconsistent. .. I also like the BRCC shirt
@jamesj54692 жыл бұрын
Number 4 is a pretty good one. That's what I need to do
@dharma_donk1702 жыл бұрын
Great content! learned a lot in this video, really appreciate it, thank you
@TDace252 жыл бұрын
Really informative. Thank you
@isuzooms2 жыл бұрын
Excellent video
@johntrains13172 жыл бұрын
I've stumbled onto a bunch of these concepts and been experimenting with them for the last year. I blew up, and my strength has maintained and my training is more predictable and effective. This shit works. You gotta glue yourself to it like he says and learn how it works for you. Thanks Bromley
@luq78052 жыл бұрын
What worked the best for you? Just curious
@johntrains131710 ай бұрын
@luq7805 mainly flat loading and volumizing. I was experimenting w add more volume since I've been a moderate to low vol kind of guy for many years. And vol too quickly cause a lot of problems but I thought that's just what you had to do and just deal w the joint problems. Main takeaway was acclimating to a certain vol before ticking it up.
@squatplugenthusiast36672 жыл бұрын
I’ve done the base mesocycle of the Smolov squat program three times now. I use it as my linear progression model and taking it at my own pace, and throwing in 5 rep maxes or AMRAPS for my last sets. I started by only squatting 245 at like 175lb BW and now I’m squatting about 455 at 195-205lb BW as a natty
@angnguyen62502 жыл бұрын
mesocycle of the Smolov squat is basicly a DUP which is pretty good method for building strength
@cheeks70502 жыл бұрын
Bromley has the best content.
@drodiger2 жыл бұрын
Going from 5x2 in week1, to 5x3 in week2, to 5x4 in week3, and then increased weight and repeated. Helped me to add 5kg to my bench in 6 weeks. Which actually increases volume from week1 to week2 to week3. Of course, I did bench press 5/week, but RPE was bellow 6.5 and not every day was same (5x2). One was 5x2 (setsXreps), one was 5x4 (5x5, 5x6), one was 5x6 (5x7, 5x8)....
@djg09311 ай бұрын
I appreciate your approach to discussing programming. Would you potentially think about doing the theoretical examples for different skills/types of lifters in more videos? I don't remember the video you used examples, but a beginner, intermediate, and advanced lifter examples with percentages or program ideas/concepts that would be helpful to apply your advice and principles for folks like me who are not hardcore powerlifters, train raw and not enhanced, and are really only training the "big 3" lifts to maintain or slightly improve general strength and athletic proficiency. Also, there seem to be a few extremes in programs you mention. Juggernaut has a 1x8 set at 80%... does it even make sense to go in the gym and warm up for one set of 8? The last few reps of that set will likely be so slow that you would be much more total stimulus doing 3x4 at 80% and ending up with 12 total reps at 80% instead of 8... not sure if I'm making sense here but I am trying to apply the wave loading without ever getting down to 1x8 at 80% or starting with 5x10 at 60% and generally keeping most workouts in a manageable time range and rpe.
@NorthenTasawwuf2 жыл бұрын
Wow! Thanks to this video, I realise that I've mostly adhered spontaneously to a kind or varieties of flat loading, and ever since I started moving more and more into powerlifting and more specifically powerbuilding, the way I've (more or less had to due to circumstances) engaged Brian Alsruhe's programs was to turn them into this Russian variety of periodization. Although this flat loading approach probably worked in a pretty self-regulating typical linear manner initially many years ago as I got started. I find that at least some kind of periodization is needed to break out of the infinite plateaus of too much bodybuilding style training.
@merodeand0 Жыл бұрын
Could you tell us (or anyone who knows) what is the logic, the principles for determining how volume and intensity are decoupled over a macro cycle in the Soviet system of waves of strength?
@railander2 жыл бұрын
Step Loading is my favorite. Didn't even know it had that name. I like to keep the weight the same for at least 3 weeks just adding reps for a set each week. I'm not a competitive athlete so there is no need to rush for anything.
@denoffitness33793 ай бұрын
Volumizing is amazing tip❤
@fdsafsgrgsdg2422 жыл бұрын
Opinion on russel orhii's first powerbuilding program? The 12 week one. You can find it for free if you look it up. Never ran a program before, im late novice/early intermediate. Someone recomended this to me and it worked for him so I figured I'd give it a shot. I do change or swap some of the accessory excercises to my liking. Would his frequency, volume and percentages on the main lifts be somewhat appropriate for progression or are there way better programs out there? I red some mixed opinions.
@arborymastersllc.9368 Жыл бұрын
You should try to add the fibbonachi sequence to programming.
@callmeacutekitten81062 жыл бұрын
Could you make a video talking about how to manage fatigue and to have enough reps and sets for sports like strongman and wieghtlftings classic lifts or strongmans compation lifts
@dannyy86192 жыл бұрын
Beautiful. Base Strength is easily, and I mean easily, the best book on periodization and program creation out there. It really demystifies everything and gives lifters the tools to create their own programs and understand what it is they are tweaking. No more having to buy 5 versions of the same book, pay for some forum for the top secrets, and learn an entirely new language.
@BG-kj5wb2 жыл бұрын
totally agree with this. the story way of going through stages for a lifter is beneficial for everyone and every beginner should read.
@Ben-mx1ip2 жыл бұрын
Hi Coach, am I right or wrong in saying that what differentiates block periodization from step or wave is increase in intensity? Or for eg is a programme that increases by either sets or reps every week and then resets also a form of block periodization as the difficulty increases only for a period of 3-4 weeks before resetting? @16:09 you have an arrow saying "linear" pointing to the left, but there is a deload at week 4?
@SupERsNipAa3272 жыл бұрын
Thank you Alex!
@ronaldcasas93762 жыл бұрын
Can you do a deadlifts checklist!? Thanks
@denoffitness33793 ай бұрын
❤thank you so much for these golden tips. Very grateful. It's like finding gold in the trash. Gold here means legit channel like yours, Alex Leonidas, Steve Shaw etc who gives so much ❤ tips for us. Trash here means KZbin is saturated with trash KZbinrs who just make content for views and like without caring about any substance in it. It helps only them, no knowledge just hogwash. Sadly those channels who tells bs have more subscribers because most people have no clue what they are getting.
@lucageisweid30072 жыл бұрын
Hi, I still have one main question left. Let‘s pick the #4 Method of Volumize for instance. We talk about increasing sets and slightly weights week by week. But how often do I do the work within one week then? It feels too seldom to me to just take one day and do 2x12 reps of Back Squats for instance. Will I repeat this 2-3 times a week before I start the next week? Thanks for answering.
@Repienk2 жыл бұрын
Question regarding your blended 2x a week template from your base strength book: How do i program sets, reps, and intensity for all the exercises for that template? What pre fabricated template in the book would work well with the blended template?
@unky57242 жыл бұрын
Awesome and informative video.
@ThingsYoudontwanttohear2 жыл бұрын
Method 4 (Volumize) is my favorite too! It works very well for size and it is well suited for calisthenics IMO.
@andrecocco12 жыл бұрын
How do you progress after 5x10? Go up in weight with something like 3x8 4x8 5x8 or do you start over again with 3x12 at 55% of a new 1RM?
@ThingsYoudontwanttohear2 жыл бұрын
@@andrecocco1 IMO it works best to increase the weight a bit and slowly work back up to your maximum volume. I do not add a lot of weight right away because I do not want to sacrifice many reps or form/quality. When adding weight is not an option (like in calisthenics) I try to increase the amount of reps in the stretched position by adjusting technique.
@ebskinner12 жыл бұрын
Im more than willing to do a volumizing scheme. Im on my second run of Super Squats,but,im beginning to feel like i need to change it up. Any thoughts are greatly appreciated and im enjoying your content and knowledge!
@K-xor Жыл бұрын
I was looking for this video.
@gym4199 Жыл бұрын
What do you do to the program when form breaks down on a main lift, say squat, that reared its head as a result of the program’s increase to volume or intensity mid program. Do you keep with the program structure on squat day but just pull back on the intensity or volume to the point that you don’t see the breakdown in form and insert auxiliary work to address the weak points, or do you do a total change up for squat day and essential pull out of the program for squat and go all in to address the weak link with a sub program just for squat ?
@joshharper75372 жыл бұрын
Running your favorite base phase from your base strength book the past 7 weeks and feeling amazing, so far I’ve hit almost every set at the top % because I want to really show up for strongman nationals in June. I was thinking of phasing into a M/R/S peak phase like the one from your book, Monday deadlift, Wednesday overhead, Thursday squat, and Saturday strongman with the strongman progression from your book for that day. Max Deadlift and overhead on the same week, Max squat and Strongman on the same week, then a full week of recovery with reps and speed days, then about 5 weeks out after a 2 rep max deloading to 75% with a plus set, 85% with a plus set, and then the 3 weeks of 16” block pull, deficit, then reverse band scheme you’ve talked about before. I know this is a dictionary but do you think this is a logical progression or is it too complicated?
@HooDRidEWhiteY2 жыл бұрын
I'm a SHW strongman. I like your plan. I do better with less volume, but you do you and stay healthy. Good luck at Nationals.
@jimb4366 Жыл бұрын
Also when you do the volumising approach , at what point do you stop? What intensity/ % do you stop adding volume and start decreasing it? Or do you run that volumising indefinitely and just never end up training above 80-85% ? Once you volumising for 4-8 weeks where do you go from there once your working with weights at 75-80%??
@jimb4366 Жыл бұрын
I guess what I’m Asking is once you get to that 5x10 , how would you transition into a more strength phase type block and then to a leaking phase ? I’m just a little confused how to make that transition smoothly
@jimb4366 Жыл бұрын
Another question is can you do these sets and reps more than once per eeek for the same movement ?
@vinfamous9226 Жыл бұрын
Great content!!!!
@MrEShue2 жыл бұрын
Any comments on Dan John's "Easy strength" approach ? I'd love to hear a review from you Alex !
@MrEShue2 жыл бұрын
Me too !!
@nathangaines47492 жыл бұрын
I think I'm deciding on the wave. For example like you were mentioning at the end during the volumization portion, going up 1 set each each as well as increasing weight. Only thing I'm having a hard time figuring out is if I should program a deload after each 3 week block, or just use the first low intensity week of each block as a deload ish week? Thank so much for all this information. During my transition from bodybuilding to powerlifting, its extremely helpful and informative!
@nathangaines47492 жыл бұрын
It should be noted, I have been doing strength training for a few years now (I ran the 531 for about a year), but in more of a powerbuilding training style. So its a transition, but I'm very used to heavy lifting and max weeks
@howardmenkes2926 Жыл бұрын
Yes sir! Doug Hepburn and Anthony Ditillo got it right!
@ChrisZona232 жыл бұрын
I just finished a powerlifting meet and am using my ORM for my percentages. I used 90% of my ORM in competition and am trying to do 3x10 with 60% (of 90% of my ORM) and I am missing reps. I shouldn’t be missing reps with weight that light but I am. Does anyone have any advice?
@Lucas-tg3hv2 жыл бұрын
Assuming you actually ran a reasonable program leading into a meet you should have been peaked for that meet you've likely regressed to a higher level of fatigue masking your fitness
@HooDRidEWhiteY2 жыл бұрын
I agree with Lucas. You're just fried and that's ok. Restart the program with 80% and be patient, or just don't do 3x10's.
@Ben-mx1ip2 жыл бұрын
According to a strength conversion chart you should be able to do 60% for about 20 reps. 75% would be 10 reps @ RPE 10, which lines up with my personal experience too. You must just be fried from comp
@CRYPT552 жыл бұрын
Excellent!!!
@halfunder9712 Жыл бұрын
I'm kind of powerbuilding at the moment and my current split is ppl . And I'm wondering if my bench programming makes sense as longer linear progression scheme. Basically first push session of the week Bench 6×2 then accessories Second push session of the week (same weight as first session of the week) 6×3 Then if it all goes as planned I add 2.5lbs the next push session and repeat
@SupERsNipAa3272 жыл бұрын
Question, is it alright if I run say the juggernaut method on bench, a 5-3-1 on squats, and volumizing on deadlifts or should I be consistent with one method per cycle
@chillin30355 ай бұрын
Yeah that works absolutely
@christopherpeters4092 жыл бұрын
This dude is a fuckin genuis. Ive done strongman for 2 years now. And in the last year ive made most gains thanks to this dude. And i love waves. Im at a 606lb deadlift and 240lb log press thanks him. My stones are pretty high to. But im starting feel stagnant as a natty. Im 28 years old. Im thinking when im 30 im have to take my journey to the dark side and have gear. Hopefully not but i want compete in pro strongman comps and i def need to get heavier im only 180lbs.
@janpokrzywinski2 жыл бұрын
Great info, thanks!
@Fredbernier142 жыл бұрын
This video is awesome!
@nickpena85502 жыл бұрын
Volumize method: i want to understand and want to know a good workout example. 2x12 for db bench only if im working chest twice a week? can I still do accessory movements like cables after?
@jimb4366 Жыл бұрын
So can you do the linear classic periodisation table you provided during his video for bench press if you train it twice a week ? Or will that be too stressful on the joints to do that and may lead to injury? Can it only be used for separate movements for one time a week or can it be used for multiple times a week? Or will the send day have to be an accessory day that it’s lighter than the main bench day ?
@xnj_2 жыл бұрын
This is awesome stuff
@henri-q5d Жыл бұрын
if I ran a step loading progression for weighted pull ups and trained the movement 3x a week, would it be required to run H/L/M split throughout the week as a late beginner level lifter? I would start at 20kg in the first training block then 30kg then 40kg and going from 3-5 sets of 8 and drop reps by 2 each block but keep set scheme the same
@lasseladegaard74212 жыл бұрын
Just recently been taking on a more powerlifting centered approach to my training, your channel has been super helpful:) One thing I find myself wondering about in the examples for set structures, is how many of them are to be working sets? For example, in the volumizing bit, when you list 5x10 @ 60-70%, do those 5 sets include the sets warming up to the weight, or are all of those sets meant to be in the given percentage? I get that it seems kind of trivial, but I just want to make sure before I go off setting up my own plan😅
@AlexanderBromley2 жыл бұрын
Not trivial! It's a good question. When I write sets x reps, they are all working sets and don't include warm up sets. So if I have 5x10, I might do a set with the bar, 135, 225, etc..... then jump to my 5x10 at the appropriate weight.
@jwgosla082 жыл бұрын
Is there a base progam like the base strength building you were referring to in this video? One where you work with the same weights but the sets and reps change ...
@kokolokoblaszczak2 жыл бұрын
I am big fan ! Thank you
@Zugmaschine2 жыл бұрын
Is the VOLUMIZE also working for Presses, Rows and Isolation exercises?
@hardkorebhaktaofbob2 жыл бұрын
Love the Hulk poster!!!
@xarmy122 жыл бұрын
why what do you think of deadlift behind the back as replacement for squat for someone who has issue of doing squats ?
@victorwilliams1115 ай бұрын
Maybe it's not an exact science: I just do a starting strength linear progression. When my body starts to feel like it's been run over by a truck I might stop progressing the weight and just maintain it. If I still feel like I've been run over by a truck, I might even lower the weight or take a break from the gym for a day or two. Maybe there's a better way - you have me thinking.
@lukenath69832 жыл бұрын
Is it advisable to utilize flat loading for one individual lift (say squats) while doing wave type loading for other lifts, while trying to slowly bring up your squat if a weakness ? (and yes, your videos have been a Godsend!)
@X0rDuS2 жыл бұрын
Nice Video !!! Just have one question...i am Intermediate and push 2 movements (Squat&Bench / Deadlift&Military Press) linearly beginning with 5x5,then 7x3. when i reach the ceiling i switch the linear progression to the other 2 movements. Now what should i do with the rest of my training ? Try progressing with the volume with every exercise or leaving it the same (leaving more recovery for the main lifts) or just going all out on the last set ? what would you recommend ? my goal is mainly to get stronger on the 4 lifts.
@mauricexiberras15302 жыл бұрын
Hi Alex please could you recommend one or two programs based around volumising? Currently in the middle of my rugby season running 531 and would love to try out a volumising program when the season is over to put some size on 👍
@CoolColJ2 жыл бұрын
Just buy his book base strength...🤔
@vado1st2 жыл бұрын
Hi Alex, thanks for the contents. Talking about volumizing how would you progress if you want to add reps instead of sets without hitting a wall? What is the right pattern for an equivalent of 3 to 5 sets of 10's but by using reps and maintain the workout short.
@CoolColJ2 жыл бұрын
Why not 5x6, 5x8, 5x10
@WtbgoldBlogspot2 жыл бұрын
Oh cool, so I've been using a flat progression, didn't know what it was called. TLDR: Pick a weight you can lift ~5 times, and then you're married to that weight until you can lift it 30 times. To keep fatigue in check, I start with 5 sets at 0-2 RIR, and drop down to 4 sets once I can do 10-15, and then drop down to 3 sets at 30. The idea is start off by strengthening the muscles you have with the 5 reps, then as you get stronger the same weight is a lower % of your 1RM, so rather than doing calculus before every set, the same weight can be used for 8-15 reps and fast-twitch hypertrophy. As you keep getting stonger 15-30 reps builds slow twitch hypertrophy and gives the connective tissue a time to heal up. Then with all this new muscle you rinse repeat to strengthen it. Since I'm in a calorie surplus on the way up, once I hit 30 reps I stay there for a block as a fat loss phase. By staying at 30 reps, I'm getting stronger, but there's no progressive overload so fatigue is going down, and with the spare fatigue I can afford a caloric deficit. And the best part is that it's super easy. Pick a heavy weight. Lift it as many times as you can for 5 sets until you can lift it 30 times. Then pick a new heavy weight. My favorite little piece is that your 1RM is about 2x your 30RM, so after 1 cycle this really heavy weight that you started with is now your 50% warmup. That part is really emotionally fulfilling. I'm still tweaking it and looking for drawbacks. Going to 1RIR all the time sucks but you can't not improve if you keep fatigue in check. IMO it's better than starting strength for noobies because you're not just focusing on powerlifting, it's total development, always at a level that pushes your capabilities, and gives your joints times to relax. I've been tracking my calculated 1RM across a few lifts and it's about 3% a day strength improvement the first month, 2% the second month, and I'm currently at about 0.5%, but what happens to the plan when it slows down even more? As a new lifter, you can do an entire cycle (each cycle improves strength by about 70%) in 5 or 6 weeks and take your bench from 100 pounds to 170. It's amazing. But what'll happen when the cycle is starting with a 315 bench? Going from 5 @ 315 to 30 @ 315 is essentially going from a 350 bench to 500. I'm just completely ignorant about the pitfalls of improving when you're big and strong. Maybe once you're close to your genetic ceiling for muscle development you don't need the hypertrophy stuff anymore, idk.
@TheBcoolGuy2 жыл бұрын
30 reps is too much. You start getting what I call "rep fatigue". You get tired of doing all these reps, and it's a lot harder to put up those last few reps, which are what matter. I'd say anything over 20 reps is just excessive. If you're gonna do this, decrease the rep range a lot. I used to train like this in a way, where I'd have quite specifically my 13RM in a lift, calculate my 10RM, and do that until I was doing 13 reps. It wasn't that amazing, though. I went over to the adding weight every so often camp instead, though that might be mroe because I'm running 4-week periods.
@WtbgoldBlogspot2 жыл бұрын
@@TheBcoolGuy Thanks for the input. From the research, there's no difference in hypertrophy when failing between 5 and 30 reps, but I have noticed that since I started progressing on barbell lifts, it makes a lot more sense to add weight over time rather than reps. Like, my stabilizers are so weak on squats that with high reps you can hurt yourself. Also as I get stronger, progress slows and adding 25% to my strength takes more than a month or two. Don't think it's too much in general; if you're weak at reps higher than 20 do that and you'll improve. But maybe for specific lifts or stages it is.
@Cali-Fit-B942 жыл бұрын
I was searching periodization and I stumbled upon ur channel very informative I love ur content, Just 1 Question coach I do calisthenics and I want to improve my strength by doing weighted muscle up what method's gonna work for me what do u recommend.
@muineeguh70112 жыл бұрын
Great stuff
@matthewblack91462 жыл бұрын
But after you're detraining shouldn't you slowly build back up volume in the hypertrophy phase