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Narrow the Weight Training Menu | RAW with Marty Gallagher – Iron Company

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Fewer things done better for better results

I like to refer trainees back to the ultra-basics they likely never learned to begin with: why exactly are we weight training? Why are we making time to lift weights? What is it that we seek? I’ll make this a rhetorical question: we lift barbells and dumbbells for two reasons and two reasons only – to grow muscle and to become stronger. Period! We don’t weight train to build better cardio, we don’t weight train to become more flexible or to melt off body fat. The irreducible goal of sustained and protracted progressive resistance training is twofold: increased lean muscle mass and a concurrent increase in power and strength.

To obtain the sought-after size, strength and power, the proven pathway of progress is to get really, really good at performing a select few lifts, weight training done with barbells and dumbbells; crude exercises using crude tools. By ‘getting good’ we mean becoming technically proficient; you don’t have to bench press 500-pounds, squat 700 or power clean 300, but you need to know how to perform the lifts and perform them expertly. You need technical weight training benchmarks in each of the important lifts against which to compare your own gym efforts.

To obtain optimal results, concentrate on five key exercises. Every rep of every set of every workout should be viewed as an opportunity to adhere to a predetermined technical ideal.

Technical weight training precision is combined with workout intensity.  As the old iron cliché goes, “it’s not so much what you do, it’s how hard you do it.” Without Herculean effort there is no hypertrophy, no massive strength increases and no radical physical transformations. Moderate or sub-maximal weight training efforts are insufficient stimuli to cause the body to reconfigure itself. The body does not transform in response to anything other than limit-exceeding physical efforts. Only by exceeding our current capacity is the body forced into growing and getting stronger.

The important lifts are compound multi-joint exercises and are biomechanically complex.  The smart trainee apportions the lion’s share of available weight training time to the five core lifts.  Establish archetypical, benchmark techniques in each core lift.

Each important exercise has a core technique and variations.  The exercises all use a full and complete range-of-motion. Weight training done with full range-of-motion (ROM) elicits maximum results from minimal payloads. No half reps, no partial reps, no technical slop for the sake of handling more weight. Full ROM exercises take the ego out of weightlifting; on every exercise undertaken, on every rep of every set, technical perfection is sought. Poundage is secondary to the correctness of the movement pattern. Better to lift less perfectly than more (poundage) using sloppy, inconsistent, potentially injurious partial rep “techniques.”

Over time (as a direct result of ever-increasing payloads) the trainee naturally muscles-up. With a radical increase in lean muscle mass comes a concurrent increase in strength. What are these magical exercises? The tools are Old School free-weight barbell and dumbbells. Most all the weight training is done while standing on your feet. The movements are compound, multi-joint exercises that require groups of muscles to work together; the opposite of an isolation exercise that, as the name implies, zeroes in on a lone muscle. In life and athletics, muscles work together.

These are the five Tier 1 core lifts. The first four are cumulatively known as ‘the core four,’ to which is added the ultra-explosive power clean. Grind strength and explosive strength are built by performing these lifts – assuming pristine techniques are used while exerting maximally. For building size and power, reps are done in the 1-5 rep range, with some 6 and 8 rep sets thrown in.

Below the five top tier lifts are the “assistance exercises,” i.e., dips, curls, rows, tricep presses, power rack work and chins. Higher rep sets are used on the assistance exercises. Most all assistance weight training exercises are isolation exercises designed to hone in on a single muscle to the exclusion of its neighbors. Think of the Tier 1 exercises as the meat and potatoes and the assistance exercises as desert: never eat desert first and if full, skip desert.

Barbell Squats: This is the single most important lift. Mastering squats builds leg power: leg power spills over into everything we do. Strong legs improve all athletic undertakings. The best squats are the deepest squats: maximally deep squats reap maximal size and strength benefits; partial squats reap partial benefits. In the barbell back squat, the power bar should never travel in front of the knees. Avoid leaning forward as this turns the spinal column into a crane. Squat staying as upright as possible, open the stance width and sink down as deep as humanly possible. Front barbell squats are an effective squat variation. Front squats force the squatter to maintain the preferred upright torso throughout the set.

Deadlifts: unquestionably the finest of all back exercises, done right, a proper conventional barbell deadlift causes the deepest possible muscular inroad for upper and lower lats, traps, rhomboids, teres, erectors and glutes. The sumo deadlift is done with feet outside the hands and requires an all-leg launch to break the barbell from the floor. Because of the sheer payloads used, the deadlift inroad is far deeper than any of the various back isolation exercises. 1-5 rep sets are the rep choice of champions. Deadlift variations are done standing on a box or weight plate (makes the start harder) or the deadlifter can perform heavy power rack work (builds lockout power.)

Power cleans: this is the most technically complex of all the Tier 1 exercises. A proper power clean needs to be dynamic and explosive. The athlete must generate momentum during the upward tug on the weighted barbell. The goal is to generate velocity of such magnitude that the Olympic bar develops upward momentum, allowing the athlete the nano-second needed to whip under and catch the barbell on the shoulders. Explosiveness is built with light weight and low reps; 1-3 rep sets that demand maximum explosiveness on each rep. This combination of moderate payloads (relative to the deadlift) and high velocity builds monstrous traps and thick erectors.

Overhead presses: mastery of the overhead press builds maximum shoulder size and maximum shoulder power. There are many valid types of overhead pressing: standing and seated dumbbell presses can be done “military press” style, or with some purposeful backbend. Barbell presses can be done in front or behind the neck. Use varying grip widths for varying effects. Push presses and push jerks are heavy overload lifts that deserve inclusion in the rotation. Skip weight machine presses, machines eliminate the 3rd dimension of tension, the need to control side-to-side movement, this makes machine pressing easier and ergo, inferior to the crudeness of barbells and dumbbells.

Bench presses: barbell flat benches can be done with varying widths for varying effects; the wider the grip the more pec required; the narrower the grip the more the effort is spread between pecs, front delts and triceps. Flat dumbbell benches are a terrific exercise that forces each arm to push its equal share. Dumbbells can be lowered beneath the level of the torso for a growth-inducing pre-stretch. Incline barbell presses and incline dumbbell presses are done on a 45-degree angle and are extremely effective. All benches can be made even more difficult by adding pauses on the chest. How long should a pause be? One second in length. stay tight and tensed when pausing.

Assistance work: biceps and triceps should get worked hard once a week. Triceps can be hit with dips, narrow-grip benches, nose-breakers and single-dumbbell tricep exercises. Rotate various types of barbell and dumbbell curls. Alternate biceps and triceps to save time. Make sure to make a mind/muscle connection on all assistance weight training exercises. Whatever the targeted muscle, use continuous tension and unwavering concentration. Make sure the isolated muscle is doing the work.

Experiment, but remember, assistance work should be apportioned only a small amount of total training time. Stick to the core five exercises and their variations.  Strive for technical weight training perfection. Over time, gradually increase poundage. Stick with low to moderate reps and stay with a narrow training menu: do fewer things better. Exert with Herculean intensity and muscle is built as a defensive response to the continual stresses imposed on the body by the continual practice of these Old School hardcore barbell and dumbbell progressive resistance exercises. Streamline the training menu and up the Herculean effort. In doing, you will get more (results) for less (time.)  What could be better?

*Photo credit: 6 time IPF World Powerlifting Champion and a 13 time USAPL National Powerlifting Champion Brad Gillingham @bradgillingham

About the Author
As an athlete Marty Gallagher is a national and world champion in Olympic lifting and powerlifting. He was a world champion team coach in 1991 and coached Black’s Gym to five national team titles. He’s also coached some of the strongest men on the planet including Kirk Karwoski when he completed his world record 1,003 lb. squat. Today he teaches the US Secret Service and Tier 1 Spec Ops on how to maximize their strength in minimal time. As a writer since 1978 he’s written for Powerlifting USA, Milo, Flex Magazine, Muscle & Fitness, Prime Fitness, Washington Post, Dragon Door and now IRON COMPANY. He’s also the author of numerous books including Purposeful Primitive, Strong Medicine, Ed Coan’s book “Coan, The Man, the Myth, the Method” and numerous others.

This content was originally published here.

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