Guest guest Posted November 7, 2001 Report Share Posted November 7, 2001 Im adding some comments here, not of pro or against nature, but specting to see list members comments... > <In the most gyms you can see some regularly and hard training people with > long time experience of training, but without a visible result. The reason > why is that they want to get the muscle mass of champions, but work out with > weights that my 90 years old grandmother can afford. Such champions as > Dorian Yates, Lee Haney, and Nasser El Sonbaty have results in the bench > press in the range of 220 kg. They know the major secret of training: the > stronger the muscle, that bigger the mass of that muscle. QUESTIONS: So how different should be the training of a powerlifter from that of a bodybuilder ? During off season for both athletes, should this training be any different at all ? Does the building of muscle mass help a powerliting getting stronger or are big muscles just a consequence of training to get strong ? >I do bench press on Monday, on Wednesday †" military press; and > on Friday †" French Press. Due to that I can spend all my energy on each for > 100%. There is no sense to train each muscle group more often than once a > week, otherwise, during working out in power regime you can involve yourself > in overtraining and get injured. COMMENT: Im surprised to see a Russian " Strength " athlete, as opposed to a bodybuilder which trains to build muscle mass using many exercises for each muscle group, doing a competitive lift just once a week. Guess most of us here were specting to see workouts in that 3x3 model or at even greater frequencies as 3 to 4 times a week per lift. The training he does, in some way resembles that popularized in the 90's by bodybuilders like Mentzer, Yates and many others. Denilson Costa rio de Janeiro, Brasil Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 8, 2001 Report Share Posted November 8, 2001 Denilson Costa wrote: Original article by Sergey Popov (as posted by Mel Siff) said: " I do bench press on Monday, on Wednesday military press; and on Friday french press. Due to that I can spend all my energy on each for 100%. There is no sense to train each muscle group more often than once a week, otherwise, during working out in power regime you can involve yourself in overtraining and get injured. " Denilson commented, >Im surprised to see a Russian " Strength " athlete, as >opposed to a bodybuilder which trains to build muscle mass using many >exercises for each muscle group, doing a competitive lift just once a >week. Guess most of us here were specting to see workouts in that 3x3 >model or at even greater frequencies as 3 to 4 times a week per lift. I read that in a much different way than you did. First, he is not talking about 100% intensiveness, but merely using 100% to mean 'focus completely on'. Second, he spends one day a week doing bench presses, but spends two days a week doing exclusive bench press assistance. The military press works very similiarly to the bench press and would focus on starting power in the bench. The French Press focuses more on triceps, which of course finishes the bench press group. So really he works his bench three times per week. And it is a sparse training program - three exercises for the bench. Pretty typical of the Russian approach. Second, I think he is a little confused about adaptation and overtraining. For example he is strongly stressing the triceps three times per week, then says you should only train a muscle group once per week. Personally I think Popov has found a routine that works for him, but his understanding of why it works is poor. Hobman Saskatoon, Canada Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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