DISCLAIMER:
The author of this FAQ has no qualifications in
the field of Exercise Science, Sports Medicine, etc. This FAQ is based on
research done by the author, and that provided by certified strength coaches. An
attempt has been made to avoid scientific references in this FAQ, to make it
more of a practical source of information, rather than theoretical.
WARNING:
The routines and techniques described in this
FAQ are intended only for healthy men and women. People with health problems
should not follow the routines without a physician's approval. Before beginning
any exercise or dietary program, always consult your doctor.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT:
The author wishes to make it clear that the
information contained within this FAQ is based on the work of other authors, and
certain sections are taken ad verbatim. Nothing in this FAQ is derived by the
author himself - it is a compilation of the work done by others in the field.
Acknowledgment must especially be made to Matt Brzycki.
CONTENTS
HIT Basics
What is "HIT"?
HIT Resources
20 General Guidelines
What are some Sample HIT Workouts?
What Equipment do I Need?
What is "Overtraining" and How to Avoid It?
Other Considerations
Food and Nutrition
Rest & Sleep
Steroids
Advanced HIT
Advanced Techniques
Methodology to Determine Your "Optimal" Rep Range
Super Slow (tm) Training
HIT Anecdotes
Who uses HIT?
What are some Specific Examples of what Athletes use HIT?
A "Real Life" HIT Anecdote
Other HIT Anecdotes
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1. HIT Basics
First, a definition is in order - what exactly
is intensity? Intensity has been identified as the single most crucial factor to
success in your training.
Intensity can be defined as the percent of your
momentary ability to perform an exercise.
It has nothing to do with how much resistance
you are using, nor what percent of your 1 repetition maximum is for a chosen
exercise. It refers to the degree of difficulty that you experience during the
exercise. The specific intensity required to produce optimal gains in strength
is remains unknown. However, if you are a healthy person and perform an exercise
to the point of momentary muscular failure (100% intensity), you can be assured
that you have attained a level of intensity that will stimulate increases in
muscular size and strength.
1.1 What is "HIT"?
The acronym "HIT" stands for High Intensity
Training.
HIT in extremely basic form means organizing
your workouts so that they are:
Hard - as hard as possible in good form.
Brief - 1-3 sets of a few basic exercises performed in an hour or less.
Infrequent - No more than three times per week, often times two, or even one.
Safe - HIT is intended to be an extremely productive protocol, but also one that stresses safety. One of the fundamental goals of strength training is to act as injury preventative.
That is the essence of HIT. There is nothing
complex or "magical". HIT has been used successfully for decades by many
trainees without the acronym, "HIT".
It must be noted that High Intensity Training
is not a set of principles etched in stone. It is a disciplined style of
training which is based on the two universally known factors affecting muscular
growth - Overload and Progression.
Repetitions should be done in a controlled
fashion so that continuous tension is placed on the muscles. Some use a 2 second
count for the concentric (lifting) phase while others use a 20 second count. The
key is performing quality repetitions to a point of volitional fatigue.
One set is productive, although some high
intensity advocates sometimes choose to perform more than one set. Some people
may require additional sets. As a general rule, with of course some exceptions,
one set performed in a high intensity manner will provide all the stimulation
you need for muscular hypertrophy (growth).
The following is a quote from Dr. Ken Leistner
which provides a good synopsis of what High Intensity Training is all about.
"High-intensity training is going all-out, not
almost all out. It is taking one set to one's absolute limit, not almost to the
limit. It is using whatever equipment that is available, not just a machine or
group of machines. It is not the words of two or three men, but a commitment to
work as hard as possible while in the gym without socializing, resting
excessively between sets, or falling prey to the 'this isn't going to work so
I'll copy the star' attitude".
When an exercise is performed in the described
high intensity manner, one set usually gives your body optimum strength
stimulation. Multiple sets of the same exercise are simply not necessary.
Dorian Yates' (1992-97 Mr. Olympia) trainer,
Mike Mentzer, recommends the following:
"Train intensely, train briefly, and train
infrequently - it's valid and will work for everyone."
A quote from Mike Mentzer about the "copying
the star" mindset so prevalent in "muscle mags" and gyms:
" . . . it is a mistake to point to the
'apparent' success of a couple dozen top title winners as indubitable proof that
a certain training approach is efficacious. If one were to look back through the
course of their bodybuilding careers and calculate the hours, months and years
of wasted effort resulting from their blind, non-theoretical volume approach,
one would have to question whether their achievements could properly be termed
successful at all." Mike Mentzer, IronMan Magazine, March 1994.
1.2 HIT Resources
It is always a good idea to obtain a basic
textbook on exercise physiology. That would help as a guide to general, well
established scientific principles in this field and can steer you away from the
"pseudo-science" that is so prevalent in this field.
Textbooks suggested by Lyle McDonald, CSCS:
The Physiological Basis for Exercise and Sport,
by Edward L. Fox, Richard W. Bowers, Merle L. Foss Hardcover 5th edition
(February 1993) Brown & Benchmark Pub; ISBN: 0697126269
Physiology of Sport and Exercise, Jack Wilmore
and David Costill; Human Kinetics (1994)
HIT Books
A Practical Approach to Strength Training (3rd
Edition), Matt Brzycki [ NTC/Contemporary Publishing Group, 4255 West Touhy
Avenue, Lincolnwood, Illinois 60646-1975. (1-800-722-2677)]
Beyond Brawn, Stuart McRobert
The Insider's Tell-All Handbook On
Weight-Training Technique, Stuart McRobert
The Muscle & Might Training Tracker, Stuart
McRobert
For ordering information on McRobert's books,
go to www.hardgainer.com.
Strength Fitness: Physiological Principles and
Training Techniques (expanded 2nd edition), Dr. Wayne Westcott.
For those interested specifically in the Super
Slow (tm) protocol: The Ultimate Exercise Protocol: Super Slow (2nd Edition),
Ken Hutchins
Strength Training: Objective Principles of an
Exact Discipline, Brian D. Johnston. Check out www.mikementzer.com for more
information and ordering details. Johnston also heads up the International
Association of Resistance Trainers
Maximum Muscular Fitness: Strength Training
Without Equipment, Dan Riley.
This book is devoted to a technique called
manual resistance (or "manuals" for short). This technique can be used with a
partner, without any equipment, and is regularly used by the Washington Redskins
(of whom Riley is the Strength and Conditioning Coach) and other athletes.
It can also be used as an advanced technique as
detailed in 3.1.
Arthur Jones writings can be found on
Cyberpump! For more of Arthur Jones' writings:
Arthur Jones Collection
IRONMAN Magazine
1701 Ives Ave
Oxnard, CA 93033
$29.95 + $5.00 s/h
1-800-447-0008, ext. 1
Note: You obviously don't need to buy ALL of
these books.
For an overall "complete" book on strength
training, Matt Brzycki's, A Practical Approach to Strength Training is
recommended. It is very complete in that it covers the history of strength
training, strength training principles in details, exercise
selection/description/routines using free weights, Nautilus and Universal
equipment, as well as manual (partner assisted) exercise. "Must-haves" also
include Beyond Brawn and The Insider's Tell-All Handbook on Weight-Training
Technique by Stuart McRobert.
There aren't any books out by Dr. Ken Leistner,
but if you have any old IronMan magazines (circa late '80s and back) he has
written some excellent columns in "The Steel Tip" that are now being republished
on Cyberpump!. (TST is no longer published). Excellent advice that is not just
for powerlifters, but anyone who wants to improve their strength. Leistner is
also a regular writer for The H.T. Newsletter and MILO.
HIT related Newsletters/Magazines
The HT[Hard Training] Newsletter.
The regular contributing authors have
included/include:
Dr. Ken Leistner, Dr. Ted Lambrinides, Matt
Brzycki, Ken Mannie, Bob Whelan, Dr. Joe Horrigan, etc.
The mailing address is:
Hard Training, P.O. Box 19446 Cincinnati, Ohio
45219
Hardgainer. For ordering information check out
the Hardgainer website: www.hardgainer.com. 6 bimonthly issues. Another
"must-have".
Master Trainer: Lifetime Bodybuilding and
Masters Athletes. Suite 221, Memorial Building, 610 N. Main St., Blacksburg, VA
24060-3349 Attn: Dr. Richard A. Winett. An outstanding newsletter for "lifetime"
lifters. Ordering information can be found on the website
www.ageless-athletes.com
1.3 Internet Resources
NOTE: These links are current as of the time of
this writing. The addresses may change.
Cyberpump! - THE home of HIT on the web:
www.cyberpump.com
Hardgainer - Covers the Hardgainer philosophy
popularized by Stuart McRobert: www.hardgainer.com
Mike Mentzer's web page: www.mikementzer.com
Dr. Richard Winett's Master Trainer website:
www.ageless-athletes.com
"Maximum" Bob Whelan's Natural Strength
website: www.naturalstrength.com
Super Slow - Devoted to the Super Slow
protocol: www.superslow.com
Clarence "Ripped" Bass's website: www.cbass.com
1.3 20 General Guidelines
There are many variations among HIT advocates,
but there is one overriding commonality. They all espouse brief, hard work done
infrequently.
When you're in the gym you want to focus your
energies on only performing work that is productive, i.e., growth producing. In
good form, you push yourself as far as you can go on every set. Now, by training
this way you simply CANNOT do the marathon 2-3 hour workouts the "champs" say
they do in the muscle mags.
HIT can be summed up in the following general
guidelines. These guidelines - or ones very similar - have formed the basis of
strength training programs for years:
1. Train with a high level of intensity
Intensity is defined as "a percentage of
momentary ability". In other words, intensity relates to the degree of "inroad"
or muscular fatigue, made into muscle at any given instant.
Research, going back almost 100 years now has
conclusively shown that intensity is the single most important factor in
obtaining results from strength training.
It has been shown that the harder that you
train (intensity), the greater the adaptive response.
A high level of intensity is characterized by
performing an exercise to the point of concentric (positive) muscular failure,
i.e., you've exhausted your muscles to the extent that the weight cannot be
moved for any more repetitions.
Failure to reach a desirable level of intensity
- or muscular fatigue - will result in little or no gains in functional strength
or muscular size as low intensity workouts do very little or nothing in the way
of stimulating muscle size/strength. Evidence for this "threshold" is suggested
in the literature by the overload principle (Enoka, 1988; Fox and Mathews, 1981;
Hochschuler, Cotler and Guyer, 1993; Jones, 1988; Wilmore 1982).
2. Follow the "double progression" technique in
regards to repetitions and weight
For a muscle to increase in size and strength
it must be forced to do progressively harder work.
Your muscles must be overloaded with a workload
that is increased steadily and systematically throughout the course of your
program. This is often referred to as progressive overload.
Therefore every time you work out you should
attempt to increase either the weight you use or the repetitions you perform
relative to your previous workout. This can be viewed as a "double progressive"
technique (resistance and repetitions). Challenging your muscles in this manner
will force them to adapt to the imposed demands (or stress).
Each time you attain the maximum number of
repetitions, you should increase the resistance for your next workout.
Progression need not be in dramatic leaps and bounds, although this can happen.
The point to remember is that the weight must always be challenging. The
resistance should be increased in an amount that you are comfortable with.
One of the biggest mistakes even advanced
trainees can make is adding too much weight, too fast. Stuart McRobert espouses
the use of very small weight increments - quarter-kilo or even 100-gram discs.
One supplier of steel fractional plates - from 1oz to 1.75lbs - that can be
added to an Olympic bar (or pinned on a weight stack) is Piedmont Design
Associates, which has a website at www.fractionalplates.com
Adding 1lb/week to your squat or deadlift may
not seem like much, but as Stuart McRobert points out, "How many of you, two
years from now, couldn't be happy with a "mere" 100 pounds on your eight-rep
squat?"
A sidebar on PROGRESSION:
There has often been the debate of whether to
train for "size" or "strength". There is no difference in training methodology.
Training for size leads to strength increases. Training for strength leads to
size increases (although it does not necessarily follow the % increase in one
attribute will be equal to the % increase in the other).
The following two quotes illustrate:
Arthur Jones is the creator of the Nautilus
line of equipment, former owner of MedX Inc., and considered by many to be the
"father" of HIT. Jones has stated that, with barbell curls as the example, when
it is possible for a trainee to curl 200 lbs in good form without body swing,
"...then his arms will be as large as they need
to be for any possible purpose connected with any sport just short of wrestling
bears".
Dr. Ken Leistner:
"I am fond of telling doubting trainees that
it's just a matter of always adding weight to the bar, adding another
repetition, If you could get to the point where you're squatting 400 lbs for 20
reps, stiff-legged deadlifting 400 lbs for 15 reps, curling 200 for 10 reps,
pressing 200 for 10 reps, doing 10 dips with 300 lbs around your waist, and
chinning with 100 pounds, don't you think you would be big - I mean awfully big?
And strong? Obviously!"
That sums up progression pretty well.
3. Perform 1 to 3 sets of each exercise
In order for a muscle to increase in
size/strength it must be fatigued or overloaded in order for an adaptive
response to occur. It really doesn't matter whether you fatigue your muscles in
one set or several sets - as long as your muscles experience a certain level of
exhaustion.
When performing multiple sets, the cumulative
effect of each successive set makes deeper inroads into your muscle thereby
creating muscular fatigue; when performing a single set to failure, the
cumulative effect of each successive repetition makes deeper inroads into your
muscle thereby creating muscular fatigue. Numerous research studies have shown
that there are no significant differences when performing either one, two or
three sets of an exercise, provided, of course, that one is done with an
appropriate level of intensity (i.e. to the point of concentric muscular
failure).
However, as there are always exceptions to the
rule. But, as a general guideline the vast majority of people will never need
more than 1-3 sets.
4. Reach concentric muscular failure within a
prescribed number of repetitions
As stated above, research shows that our level
of intensity is the most important factor in determining your results from
strength training; all things being equal the HARDER you train, the BETTER your
response.
As muscle hypertrophy is an adaptive response
by the body to stress, you should always strive to go as far as you can go on
that "impossible" rep. Every centimeter matters. Your "impossible" rep should
last between 10-15 seconds. One could even call this an "isometric rep".
-------
CAUTION: There are a few notable exercises
where you should NOT try the "isometric rep". These include the bench press (and
it's variants) and stiff-legged deadlift. The bottom position of those exercises
are where you are most vulnerable to injury. "Failure" for these exercises means
completing as many reps as you can without degradation in form and then lowering
the weight under control to the starting position. The same rule applies to the
squat and deadlift (and their variations). "Failure" means you cannot complete
another rep without degradation in form. Do NOT try to go farther than this and
try the "impossible" rep or worse, negative reps. You are looking for injury if
you do this. Always err on the side of caution.
-------
Regarding the question of partials, i.e.,
performing as many partial positive reps as possible after the last complete
repetition is performed, the general consensus is not to perform them. After
performing the "isometric" rep, it's not likely you'll have any positive
strength reserved for doing this anyway.
If concentric muscular failure occurs before
you reach the lower level of the repetition range, the weight is too heavy and
should be reduced for your next workout. If the upper level of the repetition
range is exceeded before you experience muscular exhaustion, the weight is too
light and should be increased for your next workout by five percent or less.
If you're just beginning an exercise program,
or if you change the exercises in your routine, it may take several workouts
before you find a challenging weight. Simply continue to make progressions in
the resistance as needed.
Repetition ranges differ from bodypart to
bodypart, and the recommendation schemes vary according to what source you refer
to.
The most important thing to remember here is
that it the number of repetitions isn't the key factor - time is. One can
perform a set of 10 reps in as low as 10-15 seconds, or a set of only 1 rep in
60 seconds.
The general recommendation is 8-12 repetitions
But this can vary from individual to individual, and from bodypart to bodypart.
In many cases people have been known to benefit from higher reps for their lower
body (12-15), while lower reps for the upper body (6-8).
So how many seconds per repetition? The general
guideline is a 6 second repetition consisting of a 2 second lifting (concentric)
phase, followed by a 4 second lowering (eccentric) phase. The emphasis is placed
on the lowering, or negative, as research has shown this to be the most
productive part of the repetition.
The lowering of the weight should also be
emphasized because it makes the exercise more efficient: the same muscles that
are used to raise the weight concentrically are also used to lower it
eccentrically. The only difference is that when you raise a weight, your muscles
are shortening against tension and when you lower a weight, your muscles are
lengthening against tension. So, by emphasizing the lowering of the weight, each
repetition becomes more efficient and each set becomes more productive. Because
a muscle under tension lengthens as you lower it, lowering the weight in a
controlled manner also ensures that the exercised muscle is being stretched
properly and safely.
Thus in a 8-12 rep scheme with the above
guidelines, each set should take you between 48-72 seconds until you reach
concentric muscular failure.
However, there are methodologies that have been
employed which have been used to find your "optimal" repetition, or more
correctly again, timeframe for a set. Please see 3.2 for details.
5. Work to concentric (positive) muscular
failure in each set
If concentric muscular failure occurs before
you reach the lower level of the repetition range, the weight is too heavy and
should be reduced for your next workout. If the upper level of the repetition
range is exceeded before you experience muscular exhaustion, the weight is too
light and should be increased for your next workout by five percent or less.
If you're just beginning an exercise program,
or if you change the exercises in your routine, it may take several workouts
before you find a challenging weight. You can't avoid that. Simply continue to
make progressions in the resistance as needed.
6. Perform each repetition with proper form
This one cannot be stressed enough as it's such
a common mistake, especially among young trainees that has led to many
unnecessary injuries.
A repetition should be performed by raising and
lowering the weight in a deliberate, controlled manner. "Explosive" lifting is
not only non-productive, but also dangerous.
This is one of the issues that is stressed most
by HIT advocates. Anytime, anyone, be they Mr. Universe, or some "expert"
trainer, whomever, tells you to move a weight fast, "ballistically", in an
"explosive" style just walk away.
That person is a fool.
Remember one thing - free advice is worth what
you pay for it. And many times in this field advice that you pay for is worth
about the same.
Sidebar on SAFETY
Here's an excerpt from a letter from Dan Riley,
Strength and Conditioning Coach of the Washington Redskins, to the National
Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) dated May 6, 1994. Incidentally, Riley is
considered by other HIT strength coaches to be the best HIT strength coach ever.
He's HIGHLY respected and because of his efforts and accomplishments, he's a
role model for many coaches and has helped usher in the "next generation" of
strength coaches:
"There are many philosophical approaches a
conditioning coach can use to obtain the same results. We all have our 'way of
getting it done.' However when one approach places the athlete in a more
potentially dangerous training environment, I will always select the safest
avenue available. I would strongly urge you to evaluate the literature and
unbiased experts available in several areas. Areas of concern I have include
practices in the area of nutrition and supplementation, explosive training,
plyometrics, max rep training, speed acquisition, and skill transfer."
The general guideline time for a rep is as
stated above, 6 seconds in length - two seconds up, four down. Two seconds may
not seem like a lot of time, but when you're lifting a weight it is. Try having
you're training partner say "one-thousand, two-thousand" as you lift.
Many people are surprised that they actually
lift the weight much faster than this.
Avoid explosive, ballistic movements at all
costs. Lifting a weight "faster" does NOT make you more "explosive". No matter
what type of training style you do, you simply cannot bypass the slow-twitch
muscle fibers (Type I) and activate the fast-twitch (Type II) fibers. Muscle
fibers are recruited in order of size according to the Size Principle of
Recruitment.
One can get mired in endless debates about the
"exact" or "optimal" rep speed. There is a great deal of controversy surrounding
this issue. Just how slow should a rep be? In truth, nobody knows the answer.
However the best general guideline is widely
accepted to be the following:
Lift the weight under control and try to reduce
the amount of momentum. If in doubt, move slower, never faster. Train with a
partner who can reinforce proper form. It is easy to perform a rep "too fast",
but rarely do you see a person performing a rep "too slow".
7. Use a full range of motion
Perform the rep at the greatest possible range
of motion that safety allows - from a position of full stretch to a position of
full muscular contraction and back to a position of full stretch. Exercising
throughout a full range of motion will has been shown by studies (Project Total
Conditioning, done at the U.S. Military Academy) to increase your flexibility
which reduces your potential for injury which is one of the goals of HIT -
injury prevention.
Using a full range of motion ensures that you
are exercising your entire muscle - not just a portion of it - thereby making
the movement more productive and thus greater growth stimulation. Studies have
shown that full-range exercise is necessary for a full-range effect, i.e.,
performing an exercise through a limited range of motion, for e.g. the middle
portion of a leg extension, will result in a strength increase largely in that
range of movement. Studies with individuals who have used this style of training
for an extensive period of time have found that they are weaker in the range of
motion not worked, e.g., in leg extensions if done as stated above will result
in noticeable weakness in the contracted position.
8. Train for no more than one hour per workout
If you are training with a high level of
intensity, more than one hour is counterproductive as it increases the
probability of overtraining due to a catabolic hormone called cortisol.
Overtraining, next to injury, is your worst enemy. Avoid it like the plague.
Symptoms of overtraining, and some tips on avoiding it are listed in I) v).
In addition, the faster you can complete your
workout, given the same amount of sets performed, the better conditioning
obtained.
9. Move quickly between sets
The transition time between each set varies
with your level of conditioning. You should proceed from one exercise to the
next as soon as you catch your breath or feel that you can produce a maximal
level of effort. After an initial period of adjustment, you should be able to
recover adequately within 1 to 3 minutes. Training with a minimal amount of
recovery time between exercises will elicit a metabolic conditioning effect that
cannot be approached by traditional multiple set programs, as was shown by the
study at West Point.
10. Exercise the major muscle groups first
The emphasis of your exercises should be your
major muscle groups (i.e. your hips, legs and upper torso). You should select
any exercises that you prefer in order to train those bodyparts. It is
recommended that lower body work be done first, as it is more taxing. This is
not always the case, as a technique for bringing up a lagging bodypart is to
work it first in your routine, but it is a general outline.
Exercises like the full squat, when properly
performed until failure are the most difficult exercises there are, as any
experienced lifter will tell you. That's what also makes them the most
productive. Remember, make your exercises harder, not easier, and your results
will be in proportion to effort exerted.
Since the major muscle groups store the highest
levels of glycogen, we want to tap these fuel sources first to get the glucose
flowing. A secondary reasoning is to raise the lactic acid level and therefore
lower blood pH. By lowering muscle and blood pH we lessen the amount of work the
remaining muscle groups must do to stimulate growth. The advantages of this are
that less work means less glucose is utilized and the risk of tapping into our
protein reserves (catabolism) is reduced.
It is especially important to avoid (unless you
are using a specialized routine) exercising your arms before exercising your
upper torso. Multiple joint (or compound) movements done for your upper body
require the use of your arms to assist the movement. Your arms are the "weak
link" in the exercise because they are smaller. So, if you fatigue your arms
first, you will weaken an already weak link, thereby limiting the workload
placed on the muscles of your upper torso.
Similarly, your quadriceps and hamstrings are
the weak link when performing exercises for your hips and glutes. Thus *some*
authorities recommend avoiding training these muscles, i.e., avoid leg
extensions and hamstring curls, before performing a compound, multiple-joint
exercise for your lower body, like the squat or leg press.
11. Do not split your routine - do not work
your body on successive days
Many bodybuilders practice a split routine. The
reasoning is that training their upper body on one day and lower body on the
next day allows them additional time to work each muscle group "harder". HIT
advocates believe this NOT to be the case.
First, split routines lead you to believe that
more exercise is better exercise. Remember HARDER exercise is better. And if you
train harder you MUST train briefer, not longer. You cannot train hard for a
long period of time. Thus, out of physiologic necessity, people who use a split
routine have to reduce the intensity of their exercise which leads to less
growth stimulation.
Second, split routines use up more of your
valuable RECOVERY ABILITY. Recovery is the chemistry that is necessary inside
your body for the adaptive response to occur. Thus split routines can lead to
your worst enemy again - overtraining.
It should be noted that although full body
routines are recommended they are not always the rule. For example, some people
simple cannot take much in terms of high intensity exercise. To try and workout
the entire body in one session would lead to submaximal effort and results.
If this is the case, one might be better off
performing "abbreviated" full body routines or "splitting" your routine. The
purpose here is NOT to increase the amount of work. It is to "spread out" that
work over time. For example, 10 exercises of one set each might be required by a
trainee to train the entire body. Instead of doing all 10 exercises during one
session, the trainee might split the routine into 5 exercises one session, and 5
the next. Continue by alternating these sessions. The important thing to stress
is that these sessions are NOT on successive days for reasons mentioned.
12. Get ample rest after each training session
Believe it or not, your muscles do not get
stronger while you workout. Your muscles get stronger while you recover from
your workout. After high intensity training your muscle tissue is broken down (a
very basic way of describing it) and the recovery process allows your muscle
time to rebuild itself, adapt, and with all factors permitting, grow larger.
There are definitely individual variations in
recovery ability. A period of about 48 to 96 hours is usually prescribed for
sufficient recovery from a workout. It is the feeling of some HIT advocates that
muscle will begin to atrophy after 96 hours of high intensity exercise. However,
this is disputed by other authorities, who have their trainees workout more
infrequently than that. One strength training workout per week or even less, is
definitely not unheard of, although this appears to work better for those who
have attained an advanced level of development relative to themselves, i.e.,
have increased their strength by 200-300% relative to their untrained strength.
It is generally said a period of at least 48
hours is also required to replenish your depleted carbohydrate stores.
Therefore, it is suggested that you strength train 2 to 3 times per week on
nonconsecutive days (e.g. Monday, Wednesday and Friday).
13. Take periodic layoffs
What is "Periodization"? Periodization is not a
set routine, but a philosophy or method to vary the volume and intensity of
training to optimize training adaptions by avoiding overtraining.
HIT is also a philosophy. HIT advocates
frequently make mention to the importance to changing the exercises performed,
order of exercises, frequency of training and the set/rep combinations. Thus to
say that HIT is "one set of 8-12 repetitions" or a "canned program" is simply
erroneous.
HIT does advocate a form of "periodization".
But it is not the 1RM-based, pre-planned workouts of the traditional theoretical
models with different "phases" within the "cycle".
This is not to imply that that these models
don't "work".
They do. This is an important thing to
understand - ANY training system that applies the techniques of overload and
progression will "work". HIT advocates feel that there are some definite
shortcomings to periodization models - too much time is spent training
submaximally for one thing.
One of the objectives of using a
"periodization" program is to "cycle the intensity" to prevent overtraining. The
general school of thought on HIT does not believe in this concept of "intensity
cycling" - with some exceptions such as Stuart McRobert (see "Hardgainer").
The real culprit of overtraining
is...overtraining, i.e., training too frequently.
To prevent overtraining the cure is rest, or a
reduction in training. Train up to 2-3 times/week intensely (generally).
If one is training three times a week and does
not feel recovered or one is not making progress, try training two times a week.
If that is still too much, try training once every five days. A good rule of
thumb is to focus on reducing the volume/frequency. Most trainees find that as
they grow stronger training less becomes more of a necessity rather than an
option.
Train hard for 6-8 weeks and take a week off of
strength training. A week away from training can help tremendously both
physiologically and psychologically.
After a week off, gradually start on a new
routine. A new routine could mean staying with the same exercises but changing
the order or choosing new exercises. Variety is the key. You can call this
"cycling your workouts" or "periodization". It's the same thing.
Ten days off between workouts might be even
better. Two weekends of rest can do tremendous things for your recovery ability,
motivation, and future progress. A full 10 day layoff from training is
recommended every six months.
This is probably one of the hardest things for
a trainee to do, and another factor perhaps why people don't get the results
they aspire for. Trainees tend to find it EXTREMELY difficult to take layoffs
from training. The fear is that "my muscles will atrophy" or something to that
effect.
That simply isn't the case. There has even been
a study published where a group of elite powerlifters ceased all training for a
period of two weeks. Strength losses were found to be very minimal.
Even if you do lose a little muscle, it is FAR
EASIER to REGAIN muscle mass than to gain it the first time.
Sidebar on increasing "STRENGTH":
It is important to understand that progressive
resistance exercise with single set training causes beneficial morphological
(muscle) changes. If it is the goal of the trainee to improve his/her 1 REP MAX
(1RM) on the squat or bench press, then ADDITIONAL SETS ARE REQUIRED to train
the specific neural pathways for success in those lifts.
The majority of the strength training
literature to date has NOT shown a conclusive difference between multiple set
programs and single set programs relative to changes in LEAN BODY MASS.
Varied set/rep training systems produce
increases in muscle mass and strength. Single set training also produces
increases in muscle mass and strength. How one defines and utilizes STRENGTH
will ultimately influence their training protocol.
This FAQ is NOT intended for those who are
seeking to improve specifically their 1RM, i.e., competitive powerlifters. This
FAQ is intended for those who are concerned with inducing changes in body
composition - increases in muscle mass and maintenance or reduction in fat
tissue.
If you are interested in specific training for
the sport of powerlifting, it is highly recommended you read Bill Piche's
Powerlifting FAQ located on the Cyberpump! website.
14. As you get stronger decrease the frequency
of workouts and/or amount of sets
Exercise physiologists have found that your
strength increases disproportionately to your recovery ability.
The stronger you get the LESS high intensity
exercise you can tolerate. Dr. Ellington Darden has mentioned a "300/50%" ratio
of strength to recovery ability potential. Thus - in theory - the average
trainee has the potential to increase his untrained strength by a factor of 4,
but his recovery ability will only increase by a factor of 1.5. Therefore, as
you get stronger you simply MUST do less exercise.
The GENERAL recommendations for number of
sets/workout are as follows:
Beginning level: 12-15 sets
Intermediate level: 8-12 sets
Advanced level: 6-8 sets
Of course you may require more or most likely
can benefit from LESS, but this is a good general outline.
As for frequency of training general
recommendations are as follows:
Beginning level:
3 times/week (full body)
Intermediate:
2 times/5-7 days (full body)
Advanced:
1 time/4-6 days (full body)
Again, depending on many factors you may
require LESS than this. Three times/week is being used successfully by high
school and college athletic training programs. However, there are cases of
trainees who have made great gains by training less frequently. It is emphasized
again that these are GENERAL recommendations. There are cases of advanced
trainees who can tolerate and adapt to a 3x/week 15 sets/workout regimes. Others
can only tolerate 2x/week 4-6 sets/workout.
As the general rule of thumb for aerobic
conditioning is training 2-3 times/week, if you are at the intermediate to
advanced level perform some form of aerobic exercise one other day/week.
Training three times a week is the general
recommendation given for increasing cardiovascular endurance. If your strength
training sessions are performed in a manner such that your heart rate is
maintained at the target level for your age (by keeping the rest between sets as
short as possible; 1-3 minutes is recommended), then your strength training
sessions "count" as part of your aerobic conditioning.
If your strength has increased to the level
where you are training less than 3 times/week, additional aerobic exercise can
be done for conditioning purposes.
15. Use high intensity techniques sparingly
Too many people make the mistake of using
advanced techniques like those mentioned below too often, which quickly leads to
overtraining. Another reason perhaps why some people fail to meet their
expectations using HIT.
This cannot be stressed enough. Learn through
experience how hard you can push yourself. Do not even attempt these methods
until you have established a good "base" strength. And even then, it is
emphasized that these are used sparingly. Over the course of your training
career you will learn to be able to push yourself harder on straight sets. Going
to failure on straight sets should be the mainstay of your training program.
Use these techniques to bring up a lagging
bodypart, and use them infrequently. The following are some of the advanced high
intensity techniques. Descriptions are provided later in this FAQ:
Breakdowns.
Super-slow reps.
Pre-exhaustion.
Negatives.
1 1/4 reps.
The above techniques should as I said before be
used infrequently. Do not perform them every workout as many bodybuilders do.
It's very easy to overtrain using these techniques. Use them for specific
bodyparts that are lagging behind the rest of your body. This is so important to
remember. You should train to positive failure on all your sets. But going
beyond positive failure is extremely taxing on the body. So use these techniques
sparingly, or you'll end up overtrained. The point is not to work your body into
the ground. The goal is to elicit a training response so you will be able to add
more poundage/more reps next workout. Keep the goal clear in mind.
For descriptions of these techniques see the
section in Advanced HIT, section 1.
16. Perform a Proper Warmup and Cool down
Warming up is a safeguard against injury. The
change to higher temperature also augments speed of movement and power
potential.
Almost any sequence of light calisthenic
movements can be used as a general warm-up preceding a high intensity training
session. Suggested movements include head rotation, side bend, trunk twist,
bodyweight-only squat, and stationary cycling. Doing each movement for a minute
or so will be sufficient. Specific warming up for each bodypart occurs during
the first few repetitions of your set. Thus, a "warm-up set" is usually not
deemed to be necessary.
Cooling down after your workout is also
important. This prevents blood from pooling in your exercised muscles. After
your last exercise, cool down by walking around the workout area, getting a
drink of water, and doing some easy movements, like moving your arms in slow
circles. Continue these easy movements for four or five minutes or until your
breathing has returned to normal and your heart rate has slowed.
17. Keep Accurate Training Records
Training records are a way to measure your
progress.. It is important that you keep an up-to-date, written record of each
exercise that you perform during every workout. In the organization of your
workout chart, you will need to make not of the following factors: date,
exercises, order of exercises, seat position (if applicable), resistance,
repetitions, sets, overall training time, and any other specifics such as
bodyweight, time of day, outside temperature, and aches and pains that may
affect your performance.
As you review your progress from month to
month, the accuracy of these training records will prove to be invaluable in
providing you with problem-solving information.
As mentioned in the "Books" section, Stuart
McRobert’s, "Muscle & Might Tracker" is a great tool for this.
The strength of a muscle is the best measure of
progress. This is best measured, not by seeing how much you can lift ONCE
(referred to frequently as your "1RM" - one repetition maximum), but by seeing
how much you can lift for your prescribed number of repetitions, e.g., 10 reps,
in good form. Why shouldn't you peform maximum single repetitions as a measure
of strength? In short, because they are DANGEROUS.
Attempting a 1RM with heavy weights can place
an inordinate amount of stress on the muscles, bones and connective tissues. An
injury occurs when the stress exceeds the tensile strength of the structural
components. Additionally, a 1RM attempt tends to increase blood pressure beyond
that which is normally encountered when using submaximal weights.
Another concern is that a 1RM lift is a highly
specialized skill that requires a great deal of technique.
Now there is another way to predict your 1RM
max - from reps to failure, using what has been called the "Brzycki Formula"
(created by Matt Brzycki).
The following is the formula:
Predicted 1RM= Weight Lifted/(1.0278 - .0278X)
where X= the number of reps performed.
This formula is based on noted near linear
relationship between the number of reps to failure and the percentage of maximum
load. It appears as if the relationship is not quite linear beyond about 10
reps. Therefore, this formula is only valid for predicting a 1RM when the number
of reps to failure is less than 10. If the reps exceed about 10, then the test
becomes less accurate. So if what you have determined as your "optimal" rep
scheme based on section III) i) is greater than 10, than this test becomes less
accurate.
18. Get a good Training Partner
A good training partner will help you
immensely. You can then push each other one at a time through hard workouts.
Once you've trained together for a length of time, you will know each other well
enough to organize productive training sessions. Having a training partner will
allow you to go to failure without fear of "dropping the weight" on exercises
such as the bench press.
A good partner will also monitor your form and
give you feedback. A partner will also be useful when you need assistance in
using advanced techniques such as negatives, breakdowns, manuals etc., mentioned
later in this FAQ.
19. Do not try to "mimic" a sports skill in the
weightroom
Strength training should be GENERAL and
requires HEAVY RESISTANCE
Skill training should be SPECIFIC and requires
NO ADDED RESISTANCE.
Do not try to mimic a certain sports skill in
the weight room in an attempt to improve performance in that particular sport. A
common example is the use of power cleans. Power cleans have been touted by some
parties as being specific to an incredibly wide range of skills from the breast
stroke to the golf swing to the shot put. It's absolutely impossible for one
movement to be identical to such a broad group of differing skills. The
PRINCIPLE OF SPECIFICITY states that an activity must be specific to an intended
skill in order for maximal improvement - or carryover - to occur. Specific means
exact or identical, not similar or just like. So, performing power cleans may be
just like driving towards the basket, but the truth is that power cleans will
only help you get better at doing power cleans and lunges will only help you get
better at doing lunges.
There is NO exercise done in the weight room -
with barbells or machines - that will expedite the learning of sports skills.
Skill training and conditioning is SPECIFIC to a sport, but strength training is
GENERAL.
Strength training, as well as most other
conditioning movements, should differ from skill practice as much as possible in
content, meaning, form, method of execution, and environment.
If you want to perform better at a certain
sport for example like basketball, EMPHASIZE those muscles involved in
basketball, specifically the buttocks, thighs, calves, back, shoulders, arms,
and lower back, in your training.
To improve the skill component simply keep
PRACTISING the skill, such as shooting the basketball, or doing layups.
20. Avoid Orthopaedically Unsound Movements
Scientific, athletic and rehabilitative
professionals have questioned certain exercises and drills - such as power
cleans, snatches and plyometrics - in terms of being safe for years. The
potential for injury from most of the movements practised by competitive
weightlifters is positively enormous. When performing such exercises, the
muscoskeletal system is exposed to repetitive trauma and extreme biomechanical
loading.
The sport of weightlifting carries a certain
degree of risk. Competitive weightlifters accept those risks as being part of
the sport. However, athletes who aren't competitive weightlifters shouldn't have
to assume such an unreasonable risk of injury. Therefore, for reasons of safety,
movements done by competitive weightlifters should only be performed by
competitive weightlifters, and only because it relates to their sport.
There are other "standard bodybuilding"
exercises which also are inherently dangerous. These include:
Behind-the-neck press
Barbell Bent-Over Row
T-Bar Row
Machine Hack Squat
Upright row
Good mornings
Smith Machine Squats
Sissy squats
Lunges
"French" press variations for the triceps
For further explanation of why these are
inherently dangerous movements, please refer to books by Stuart McRobert and
Matt Brzycki.
1.4 What are some Sample HIT Workouts?
Don't be misled by the brevity or simplicity of
a program that calls for one set of an exercise done with a high level of
intensity. An exercise performed with a high level of intensity can be very
productive and effective. In fact, Michigan State Strength Coach Ken Mannie has
stated that HIT is "the most productive, most efficient and without a doubt, the
most demanding form of strength training known to man [and woman]."
A sample HIT routine for the beginner to
intermediate level:
Squat/Leg press or Deadlifts
Overhead Press
Regular Chin-up
Bench Press
Row or rear shrug
Biceps Curl
Triceps Extension
Lying l-flye
Calf Raise
Abdominal Crunches
Note the above are done for only ONE SET each.
As you move to the "intermediate/advanced" stage you will most likely eliminate
direct arm work, i.e., biceps curl and triceps extension.
This is just an example. The important point is
that it is a full body workout, brief, and centered around the major growth
producing exercises like the squat, chin, row, bench, etc. Of course you can
substitute other exercises in, but try and keep the "big" exercises in there.
You might want to alternate the squat with the deadlift which is another very
productive exercise.
Another routine, suggested by Dr. Ken Leistner:
Full Squats - 15-20 reps
Pullovers - 10 reps (preferably on a quality machine version like Nautilus, Hammer, or MedX.)
Standing Overhead Presses - 10 reps
Chins - 10 reps
Dips - 12 reps
Barbell Curls - 10 reps
Shrugs - 15 reps
Stiff-Legged Deadlifts - 15 reps
How many sets of each exercise in this routine?
One. Two. Certainly never more than three, and if you are working hard enough
according to Leistner, one set of most of these exercises should be more than
enough for anyone.
The following routine is very brief, but
extremely productive when executed properly. This routine consists of two
training days/week and slightly different exercises on each day:
Day One
Day Two
Deadlift (with a Trap Bar if available)
Squat
Leg Press
Bench Press
Overhead Press
Rowing movement
Shrug
Dumbbell Overhead Press
Close Grip Pulldown
Triceps Pressdown
Both days also include the following exercises:
Standing Calf Raise
Reverse Curls (with a Thick Bar if you can find one)
Abdominal Crunches
Remember only one set. This routine is low
volume, but the intensity of the program is so high that little else can be done
productively. You don't perform any negatives, 1 1/4s etc. The squat and
deadlift are performed with as heavy as weight possible for a relatively high
amount of reps - 12-20. You push yourself as hard as you can, maintaining good
form all the time to failure. If done properly this is an extremely productive
program. Stuart McRobert is one proponent (among others like Peary Rader, and
Dr. Leistner) of the high-rep (20+) "breathing" squat, which you simply cannot
perform more than one set of (and properly performed you would not want to).
It's tough to describe this type of training; one has to see it to believe it.
Incidentally, this is almost identical to the
routine Dr. Ken Leistner used with trainees like Greg Roman. Greg Roman is (at
the time this was originally written - 1996) a 5'8", 235 lb noseguard for John
Carroll University. In an article I have he is performing Trap Bar Deadlifts
with 445 lbs - for over 20 reps. As far as rep speed goes for high repetition
work that Leistner recommends, it is a 1-2 second raising, and a 1-2 second
lowering. Thus a 20 rep squat would most likely be within the period of time
where the anaerobic component of the energy cycle is greatest.
There are also routines to emphasize a lagging
bodypart. But these should not be performed until you have built a solid
foundation first and advanced to the intermediate level. If done properly (i.e.,
to failure and in good form) this is one of the most growth producing workouts
you can ever do for your arms.
Try one workout and see what happens:
One-repetition chin-up (30 seconds up, 30 seconds down) immediately followed by:
Biceps Curl
One-repetition dip (30 up, 30 down) immediately followed by
Triceps extensions
Leg press
Calf Raise
Lateral Raise with dumbbells
Overhead Press
Row
Bench Press
Ab Crunch
Try this routine for ONLY three to six
consecutive workouts. Or you could try it once a week for 3-6 weeks in a row.
The point is that with the general guidelines
outlined above YOU can design your own routines tailor made with what you have
available and what your needs are.
1.5 What Equipment Should I Use?
There are some good equipment lines out there
by Hammer, MedX, Nautilus, Southern Xercise, etc. If you have them available to
you they are highly recommended by many strength coaches (especially, the
low-friction Nautilus machines, and the Hammer line, if you want to perform
Super Slow).
Remember, there are many machine movements
which are also dangerous. Stick to quality name brand equipment mentioned above.
Many of the Universal pieces are fine. This is not to say that ALL other brands
are contraindicated, but again, always err on the side of caution. Use a machine
that forces you into a dangerous movement pattern, and you are headed for
certain injury.
One machine in particular should be pretty much
avoided (except by the companies mentioned above) and that is the leg press.
Most of them are very poorly designed and will inevitably lead you to knee
and/or back problems.
Most gyms today have Hammer, Nautilus or
Universal. Avoid the "exciting" new machine that supposedly can do wonders that
free weights and other machines cannot.
But, the equipment you have available doesn't
really matter. You can gain size/strength with any equipment, machines or free
weights as long as you progressively increase the resistance. For example Greg
Roman used to train in an unheated shed with a dirt floor next to his house
which contained a barbell, a pair of squat racks, and some dip and chin bars.
1.6 What is "Overtraining" and How to Avoid It?
Overtraining is the trainee's number one
"enemy" next to training injuries. Overtraining results from an imbalance
between the amount of stress applied to your body, and your ability to adapt to
it. Overtraining results in losses in size and strength and actually also
increases the probability of illness.
Here is a list of some of the symptoms of
overtraining:
Decreased muscle size and strength
Longer-than-average recovery time after a workout
Elevated waking pulse rate
Elevated morning blood pressure
Increased joint and muscle aches
Headaches
Hand tremors
Tiredness
Listlessness
Insomnia
Loss or decrease in appetite
Injury
Illness
So what biochemical mechanism leads to this
overtrained state?
After the onset of high-intensity training
exercise the body pumps out cortisol which breaks down protein into their
constituent amino acids and routes them to the liver for conversion to glucose.
The longer the workout, the more cortisol is
pumped in and the more protein is destroyed.
This causes a "catabolic state" as the largest
supply of protein lies in the muscles so that is where the cortisol goes first.
Research by Costill and Nieman et al., has
shown that one hour of intense strength training will increase the protein
stores in our immune and skeletal systems, but that any further training will
only begin to deplete these stores.
Overtraining can force the body into a weakened
physical state, which, at best can produce a cold or the flu and, at worst, can
tear muscles ligaments, and tendons once these bodyparts lose their structural
integrity protein loss.
The culprit is a built-in "survival" drug
hormone called cortisol. Immediately following a high intensity effort, the body
pumps out this hormone whose function is simple: It carries off the proteins to
the liver, where they are converted into glucose, for energy use in the body.
Why does this weaken our defense mechanisms?
Because all our immune systems are based on proteins, and the influx of control
in our biological mix steals the proteins that make up our immune system.
Nieman, a researcher at Loma Linda University
found that athletes who train twice as intensely as normally prescribed will
wind up with twice as many colds, and viruses.
Nieman investigated the athletes for cortisol.
He found that astonishingly, after only ONE grueling strength training session,
their bodies revealed a 60% increase in cortisol production.
Among the first proteins to go were the T-cells
that make up our front line of defense against viruses. This watchdog system was
depleted by more than 30 percent. However, this shortfall lasted only 6-8 hrs.
So you're probably thinking "What's the big
deal? Is putting your body at risk for only 6-8 hours such a high price to pay?"
Well, Nieman and other researchers found that
after a few days of such exercising, the "at risk" time became longer and
longer, until the T-cells stopped rejuvenation.
In addition, the body's first line of defense
against bacteria and viruses an antibody known as IgA, which is found in the
saliva, was reduced to nearly non-protective levels.
The conclusion of the researchers was that
athletes can overtrain themselves into illness.
Thus the logical conclusion would be that high
intensity strength training should be limited to one hour or less to restrict
the amount of protein destruction.
Other ways to reduce the risk of overtraining:
Emphasize carbohydrates: make them 60-70% of your total diet.
Take carbohydrates two hours prior to exercising and immediately following exercise. Research has shown that your fatigued muscles seem most responsive to energy storage within the first 30 minutes following your workout. There is a lesser response for the next 10 hours.
Take protein one to two hours before and immediately following exercise. Again I use regular food, but I see no problem with supplementation to save time (at the expense of more money however). Research has also shown your body to be more receptive to protein immediately following a workout.
Continue eating high carbohydrate foods every 2 hours during the first 4 to 6 hours after hard training. During the first 6 hours post-exercise, simple sugars appear to replace muscle glycogen better than complex carbohydrates.
Post-exercise muscle glycogen storage can be enhanced with a combination carbohydrate-protein supplement as a result of the interaction of carbohydrate and protein on insulin secretion. The addition of protein with carbohydrates can allow for a more rapid return recovery.
Drink a rehydration beverage during and after exercise, for example, Gatorade.
Take periodic layoffs.
Use the best "miracle supplement" there is - WATER. You can't "overdose" on water. The worst side effect you can get as mentioned previously, is a few more trips to the washroom. Your body functions optimally when it is fully hydrated. A general recommendation is to consume at least 128 ounces (one gallon) of water a day. During hot weather you should double or triple this amount.
LEAVE YOUR WORKOUT IN THE GYM. Give your
undivided attention to your training when your in the gym. But when you're
outside the gym, cast your attention to other things in life. Establish your
other priorities, set goals, and keep busy. There are many athletes who fall
into the trap of letting their mind continually dwell on training. Train hard
when your in the gym, but try and relax more when your not. Stress has been
shown to increase levels of CORTISOL in the body - the catabolic hormone, so try
to find ways to manage stress in your life and relax, and your results will be
improved.
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2. Other Considerations
2.1 Food and Nutrition
I would first recommend you peruse the writings
of Lyle McDonald, CSCS, who has a column on Cyberpump, entitled "Nutrimuscle".
At the time of the latest revision of this FAQ, Lyle has a book due released on
the "ketogenic diet". Further information can be found on the Cyberpump web
page.
For the strength-trained athlete attempting to
increase muscle mass, probably the most important nutritional considerations are
to obtain sufficient energy and protein. Adequate amounts of both may be
obtained simply by increasing the amount of complex carbohydrates and healthful
protein sources in the daily diet.
The topic of dietary considerations is covered
in many of the books in the "Reference Section" of the FAQ. One other book you
should have is "Fats that Heal, Fats that Kill", by Udo Erasmus.
How much Protein Do I Need?
The answer is probably not as much as you think
you do. For sedentary (non-active) individuals the most recent studies show that
the RDA for protein of .36 g/lb bodyweight is adequate.
The most recent research has shown that
athletes DO require more protein than the RDA, but not excessive amounts.
It should also be pointed out that it is
incorrect to rely on nitrogen balance results as a means of determining
increases in strength and muscle mass. It is simply not validated by scientific
research. Studies have shown that nitrogen balance is not a relevant factor. So
forget about those "Nitro Strips" - they are a waste of money.
How much protein? Studies have shown that the
optimal protein intake for athletes undergoing high intensity exercise is
1.35g/kg/day which translates into 0.6136 grams/pound/day. Therefore a 200lb
athlete would require 122.72 grams of protein.
What these studies also indicate however, is
that although protein intakes should be higher than the RDA for strength
training athletes, the protein intakes of most strength trained athletes is
already at or above this level.
One must remember that protein intake is not
the rate limiting factor in muscle mass development.
A diet which provides adequate calories will
general provide enough protein as most research studies have indicated.
Thus you definitely don't need 300-600 grams of
protein as I've seen some of the muscle mags suggest. And you probably are
getting enough protein as it is if you are an athlete.
One possible exception is the athlete who must
restrict his/her food intake to lose a great deal of weight in a short time to
make a certain weight class. In this case, a small amount of supplemental
protein may be warranted.
Remember more is not better when it comes to
protein intake. In fact, excessive protein intake over extended periods of time
can possibly seriously damage your liver and kidneys.
What guidelines do I use for my diet?
Carbohydrates are the main source of energy for
athletes. From 60-65% of your diet should be carbohydrates, 15-20% fats and
15-20% protein.
How do I estimate my Caloric Intake?
A good estimate uses the following procedure:
- Multiply your present bodyweight in pounds by
20.
For a 200lb man this is equivalent to 4000
calories. This is how many calories you need to maintain this bodyweight.
But to build muscle, and thus gain weight, you
need slightly more calories to allow for extra growth. Add from 400-600 more
calories to this total. Taller, younger, heavier, and more active people
generally require more calories per day than do shorter, older, lighter and less
active individuals.
Some guidelines. If you weigh:
175 lbs or under, add 400 calories
176-200lbs, add 500 calories
201 lbs or more, add 600 calories
If you're getting bigger and stronger, without
adding noticeable fat to your waist, you are okay. If you notice you are gaining
fat, then cut back by 100 calories, or until the fat disappears.
How do I Up My Calories?
Get a blender!
This is one of the best ways to add calories to
your diet. Here's a drink you can make that gives you 200 calories:
8 ounces of 2% milk
1/2 banana
1 egg white, cooked
1 teaspoon of honey
A dash of cinnamon and
1/4 teaspoon vanilla.
Combine all of this into a blender and mix.
There are also "portable" caloric substitutes
that you can buy at you local drugstore. I would favour them over what you buy
at a supplement store, as you notice, the ingredients are basically the same,
and it's cheaper at the drugstore.
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The Importance of Water:
It's almost impossible to drink too much water
if you are an athlete. In fact, most people simply don't consume enough water.
Water is of vital importance to the human body. There have stories of
individuals who have gone weeks without food, but without water you will only
last a few days.
For your body to function optimally, the cells
of your body must be fully hydrated.
Water also helps in the loss of fat. do not cut
back on your water consumption.
Here's why:
Restricting your water intake causes your body to retain fluid. The less water you drink the more your body feels deprived and the more water it stores.
Restricting your water intake promotes fat retention. Since your body uses water as the major component of blood to transport nutrients and wastes, a lack of it can cause your body to perceive it as a major stress. To adapt your body will preserve fat.
Restricting your water intake makes you constipated. When deprived of water, your system pulls it from the lower intestines and bowels, thus creating hard stools.
How much water should you drink each day?
Activity and environmental conditions are the two most important factors that
determine your body's need for water. During study, rest, and sleep, the loss of
water is much less from the body than during strenuous activities, such as
training. When the temperature is hot and the humidity is low, more water
evaporates from your body's surface.
In sedentary individuals, thirst is an adequate
signal of the needs of the body. But with serious athletes, and all people using
high intensity training, the desire for water is not an adequate indication of
the body's requirements.
A good general recommendation for serious
athletes is to consume at least one gallon (128 ounces) of water a day. During
hot weather, this recommendation may need to be doubled, or even tripled.
Here are some tips that will help you in
consuming more water:
Carry an insulated container, the quart size with a plastic straw, with you for sipping water throughout the day.
Keep the water ice cold.
Do not substitute coffee, tea, or caffeine-containing soft drinks for water. Fluids containing caffeine tend to dehydrate the body.
Drink 75% of your water between 7AM and 5PM. That way you won't have to get up after you've gone to bed to go to the bathroom.
Understand that it takes several weeks for your
kidneys to become less sensitive to an increase in your water intake. At first
you'll be going to the washroom 20 or more times a day. Within two weeks, your
bladder will become less sensitive and you'll be voiding less often but with
greater volume.
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What about the New Anabolic Mega-Mass
Supplement I just read about?
Most of the commercial nutritional products are
marketed as a dietary means to influence metabolic processes that stimulate
muscle growth and/or facilitate the loss of bodyfat, primarily by inducing the
endogenous production or release of testosterone or human growth hormone (HGH).
At the time of this writing, creatine and
prohomones are all the hottest things on the market today. To get the latest
REAL information (not commercially funded) on supplements, visit Lyle McDonald's
Nutrimuscle column on Cyberpump.
There is little or no scientific evidence
supporting positive effects on muscle growth, bodyfat reduction, or strength
enhancement in strength-trained athletes for the following:
arginine, lysine and ornithine (amino acids)
ornithine alpha-ketoglutarate (OKG)
inosine
vanadyl sulphate
Met-RX
HMB
yohimbine
vitamin B-12, or dibencozide
carnitine
chromium piccolinate
boron
magnesium
medium chain triglycerides (MCTs)
Smilax
"natural" herbal products
None of these ingredients, or any combination
of them, has been proven to build muscles and enhance athletic performance
better than common foods in a well-balanced diet. Take a look at the muscle
magazines from 20 years ago. How many of those "miracle" supplements are still
around? Try 10 years ago. The same thing. What does this tell you? Remember one
key thing: if your diet is lacking, NO supplement will help you. The most
"anabolic" supplement is FOOD. If you are missing just one key nutrient, your
overall health and training performance will suffer. And anything that is a
detrimental effect on your health will be detrimental to your training efforts.
For example, many people are deficient in an Essential Fatty Acid – Omega3.
Omega3s are found in fish, certain nuts, and oils (flaxseed, hemp). Again, refer
to Erasmus’ book for far more detail on this topic.
Another quote from Dan Riley from the same
letter earlier in the FAQ, regarding nutrition and supplements:
". . . the most basic concepts taught today in
the area of nutrition, were available twenty years ago. Yet some conditioning
coaches continue to promote, endorse, and sell pills, potions, and powders, that
the American Dietic Association would consider foolish, and potentially
dangerous. Who will coaches and young athletes be more apt to listen to? A
professional Registered Dietician, or a famous athlete or conditioning coach
employed by a successful team?"
Evidence for supplements like creatine and the
"testosterone boosters" is skimpy. Remember the old adage - if sounds too good
to be true, it is.
The only supplement that is as "powerful as
steroids" is steroids. Period.
2.2 Rest and Recuperation
Exercise provides the stimulus for your muscles
to grow larger. Muscles do not grow during exercise, most growth occurs when the
body is at rest. After a training session, it takes several days for the
adaptation process to occur. The importance of rest and sleep are often
overlooked.
Here are some guidelines that can help you get
better results from your training:
Get 10 hours sleep each night if you are a teenager.
Get 9 hours sleep a night if your are an adult.
Schedule a 15-minute nap during the middle of the afternoon (if possible).
Do NOT do any type of vigorous activity on the days you are not training.
Take a 10-day layoff after each period of six
months of steady training.
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2.3 Steroids
One of the very best articles I've ever read on
anabolic steroids was written by Mark Asanovich, Strength Coach of the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers. The article was published in the volume 2, number 1 (1989) issue of
the HIT Newsletter. By calling, you can order back issues of the HIT Newsletter,
and I'm sure you'll find this article informative.
Steroid abuse is the fastest-growing form of
drug abuse in the U.S. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration estimates 1 million
steroid abusers nationwide compared to 500,000 heroin and 500,000 crack cocaine
abusers. An unbelievable statistic.
And the highest misuse occurs in adolescents.
The use of anabolic steroids is the fastest growing drug abuse problem in the
U.S. today. Hard to believe.
It is extremely difficult to accurately discuss
the use of anabolic steroids. Why? Because there really is a lack of scientific
information on steroids - particularly in the way that they are used by
athletes. Most information is based on anecdotal evidence, word spread in the
gym, underground "handbooks", etc.
You hear a lot about the side-effects of
steroids. Just what are the KNOWN adverse side effects associated with steroid
use?
Note that these side effects are attributed to
normal, therapeutic dosages:
Short-term
Liver dysfunction
Prostate enlargement
Severe acne
Acceleration of Male Pattern Baldness
Connective tissue catabolism
Kidney dysfunction
Cardiovascular dysfunction
Gastrointestinal dysfunction
Immune system dysfunction
Water Retention
Gynecomastia (fatty deposits under the nipples)
Testicular atrophy
Spermatogenesis dysfunction
Impotency
In adolescents, the added danger is of premature fusing of epiphyseal growth plates.
There are also dangers related to the
self-administration of steroids:
Infection/reaction as a result of contaminated product
Spread of communicable disease (even AIDS) as a result of unsanitary, shared needles
Nerve dysfunction as a result of improperly placed injection
Remember these potential side effects are
attributed to normal, therapeutic dosages. The long-term, cumulative side
effects are not known. Unknown also is the increased risks of serial, multiple
dosages that is common among steroid abusers. And since most of these drugs are
purchased on the black market, the associated risk potentials are even greater.
Self-administered dosages are "stacked",
"staggered", "pyramided," and/or "shotgunned" in dosages ranging from 10 to 100
times higher then therapeutic dosages. The risks obviously become even greater.
This is not a speech, or a "scare" tactic. This
is reality. Steroids are DRUGS. ANY drug has potential side effects, even in
small dosages, and thus have a risk associated with their use. And the potential
for abuse is very large, as many fall prey to the "more is better" attitude.
One should also remember one other very
important point - steroids are illegal to distribute and to possess in most
countries.
Yes, steroids obviously do "work". That can't
be denied. But this too varies from individual to individual. Some individuals
make large gains in strength/size in a very short period of time - others don't.
The same with side effects. Some people can take normal therapeutic dosages of
steroids, and encounter little if any side effects. Others can have a severe
reaction. Such is the case with ANY DRUG.
The choice is obviously yours. One can make
tremendous changes to their strength, physical appearance and overall fitness by
following a logical scientific approach to training without steroids. Results
that would surpass most expectations.
If you are intent on taking steroids, I don't
believe anything I say will deter you. I feel the risks are not worth the
potential "benefits". In fact, every study I've seen has not shown that there is
a permanent gain in size/strength from taking steroids once one has stopped
taking them. You are putting your body in an unnatural state - and it has to
return to normal. How much of these "gains" are really water weight? Unknown.
But the bottom line is: Are the risks worth
what is very likely a temporary increase in size/strength?
Your choice.
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3. Advanced HIT
3.1 Advanced Techniques
Use these techniques INFREQUENTLY. This can
never be stressed enough. Too many trainees fall into the trap of using these
too often. Remember, these are advanced techniques, and should be used
sparingly:
1. Breakdowns. Breakdowns are also referred to
as "triple-drops". Basically you perform a set in the regular protocol manner
mentioned above. Once you have gone to failure have your training partner
quickly reduce the weight on the barbell or machine by approximately 20 percent.
Do not take longer than 3 seconds rest. Then you work to failure once again,
exactly as you did on the first set. You should only be able to get a couple of
reps in. If done properly your muscles will start to really "burn". Resist the
temptation to cheat (have your training partner help you). After you performed
this "second" set, drop the weight again another 20% and work to failure again.
At this point it gets pretty painful, but try to perform as many reps as you can
in perfect form.
You have just performed "3 sets" going to
failure on each one with no rest between. Here's an example set:
200 lbs - 8 reps to failure
DROP
160 lbs - 3 reps to failure
DROP
130 lbs - 2 reps to failure
Another variation from Dr. Ken Leistner:
Perform a regular straight set to failure. IMMEDIATELY reduce the weight by 50%.
Perform the EXACT number of repetitions you did on the first set.
2. Super-Slow Reps. The positive movement is
performed in 10 seconds followed by a 5 second negative movement. However, this
timeframe has been changed in the most recent work of Ken Hutchins. More about
that in the next section.
Performing this type of set requires intense
concentration and willingness to put up with a lot of discomfort. For more
details on this type of technique see the Super Slow web site.
Initially, you'll have to reduce the resistance
that use normally by 30-40 percent. Super slow reps are a great way to minimize
momentum and involve muscle fibers that you might be "skipping over" due to
faster movement speeds. It’s useful also to help "learn" an exercise and find
out just what point of the movement you are "skipping" over during regular speed
sets.
One of the best things about super slow is that
it's perhaps one of the safest ways to train, as well as being extremely
productive – especially for advanced athletes who are suffering joint pain from
the use of extremely high weights. It’s also useful when coming back from an
injury.
You should perform about 2-3 less reps than you
do in a regular set, e.g. if you regularly perform 6-8 reps use 4-6 for
super-slow.
Super Slow does not work well for all
exercises. It is near impossible to use for a regular deadlift, for example. The
more "skill" component required for an exercise, the less applicable this
technique is.
Many people lift weights too fast, I have yet
to see one lift a weight too slowly. Never, ever let anyone tell you to lift a
weight "fast". Next time someone says that just smile and walk away. Don't
bother arguing. Lifting the weight fast is a good way to injure yourself. It is
tough on the ego to lower the weight by 30-40%. But, you will find that
eventually you can lift greater poundages in a controlled manner than you did
before normally. "Cheat artists" can "lift" enormous amounts of weight by
jerking and bouncing the weight. These people are doing themselves alot of harm
that they may not notice now, but they'll pay for it in the long run.
3. Pre-exhaustion. Normal pre-exhaustion is
practiced when a single-join movement for a specific muscle is immediately
followed by a related multiple-joint exercise. The multiple-joint movement
brings into action surrounding muscles to force the previously exhausted muscle
to a deeper level of stimulation.
This is also a technique used to get around the
"weak link" in a compound exercise. For example, your upper back muscles (lats)
are far stronger than your biceps. During a chin or pulldown movement, the
weaker biceps will fail before the lats limiting the potential stimulation of
the larger upper back muscles.
Pre-exhaustion can be a useful tool for this
problem. For example, to pre-exhaust the lats perform a normal set of machine
pullovers. Immediately with no rest perform lat machine pulldowns (or chin-ups).
Another example is performing dumbbell flyes for the chest immediately followed
by bench presses. For shoulders, perform lateral raises immediately followed by
overhead presses.
4. Negatives. You are 40% stronger negatively
than you are positively. That's why you can lower slowly a much greater weight
than you can lift. It has been demonstrated that increasing your negative
strength automatically increases your positive strength. There are three ways
you can perform negatives:
1) Two training partners lift a heavier than
normal weight than you would use for a regular set (30-40% heavier). You would
then proceed to lower the weight slowly (8-10 seconds) for the desired
repetitions (about 2 reps less than in a normal set). You can perform negative
dips and negative chins without the aid of a training partner by using your legs
to climb to the top position.
2) After a normal set of reps to failure your
training partner lifts the weight back to the top as you do 2-3 slow negative
reps.
3) Negative accentuated reps. Use approximately
30% less weight than you would use in a normal set. Lift the weight in the
normal style (2 seconds) and then lower the weight in 8-10 seconds using ONE
appendage. Repeat the lifting and lower the weight using the OTHER appendage.
Perform 8-12 reps (lifting). Obviously this works only with certain exercises,
specifically machines.
Negative training is the one of the most
difficult, intense training modalities you can perform.
In addition, method 1) is very difficult unless
you have a couple of really strong people who are willing to lift the weight for
you. Negative training can make you extremely sore. You will take a long time to
recover from this type of exercise. If you performed it regularly you would very
quickly overtrain. Use it sparingly.
An example of what an elite athlete has
accomplished using negative-only training is Tom Laputka - a former professional
football player. In 1972 Laputka was involved in one of the Nautilus research
projects involving negative-only work, and was personally trained by Arthur
Jones.
"At that time in my life," Tom recalls, "I
wanted to get as big and strong as possible. And I wanted the results as fast as
possible."
Laputka's NEGATIVE-ONLY poundages done, FOR
REPS:
Nautilus Hip and Back (single movement arm
version) - 700 lbs with ONE LEG. That required the entire 500lb weight stack
plus a 200lb man riding the stack. And he worked each hip separately.
Nautilus Leg Extension - 500lbs, which included
a 300lbs weight stack and a 200lb rider.
Nautilus Leg Curl - 350lbs, 150lb weight stack
and a 200lb rider.
Nautilus Pullover (plateloading version) -
700lbs, 300lbs of plates and two 200lb riders
Dip - 463 lbs, 263 lbs bodyweight, and 200lbs
around the hips
Nautilus Torso Arm - 350lbs, 150lb weight stack
and a 200lb rider
Nautilus Triceps Extension (plateloading
version) - 150lbs of plates
Nautilus Biceps Curl (plateloading version) -
150lbs of plates.
Tom makes a few important points emphasized
throughout this FAQ:
"One important rule I learned from the research
project was that it was very easy to overtrain using negative-only exercise. For
example, my strength plateaued after four weeks of training. That indicated to
me that my strength had improved to the point that I was now overtraining. To
make continued progress I had to reduce my workouts from three days a week to
two days a week.
A month later my strength plateaued again. At
the second plateau, I reduced my training from twice a week to three times every
two weeks. Almost immediately my strength increased. I never reached a third
plateau, as I had to report to football camp before the end of that month. Even
then, my strength on some exercises was so great it was scary: 700lbs on the hip
and back, and that was with one leg only, and 700lbs on the pullover.
I've often wondered what would have happened
after the next plateau. Or if I'd gone to once-a-week training. Arthur [Jones]
would have had to redesign some of the machines so we could get more helpers
around them. Or we would have had to rent a forklift to do a majority of the
lifting."
5. Manuals - Dan Riley, the strength and
conditioning coach of the Washington Redskins, can perhaps be thought of as a
pioineer in this strength training approach as he was one of the first in the
past few decades to give it the exposure it deserves. Matt Millen, former great
linebacker of the Los Angeles Raiders, Redskins, and 49ers uses manual
resistance almost exclusively for all deltoid raising exercises.
The deltoids will be used as an example to
illustrate this technique. One of the most effective ways to increase the
intensity of one's deltoid training is to go to a point of momentary muscular
failure/fatigue in the lateral raise movement and IMMEDIATELY follow it with two
or three manual repetitions.
Whether you are using dumbbells or a machine,
as with any high intensity set, push yourself to the point that does not allow
for the completion of another full lateral raise and the push even further,
until almost no movement at all is possible. At this point, immediately step
away from the machine, or place the dumbbells on the floor and have a training
partner apply resistance so only two and perhaps three manual resistance reps
can be completed.
These reps should be agonizing, with the limbs
moving quite slowly to the completion of the movement. Resisting in the lowering
phase will insure very slow movement upon the return to the starting position.
As soon as the hands or arms touch the side, begin the next repetition. In fact,
an effort to "push upwards" should be made during the entire exercise.
The manual resistance can be applied above the
wrists, with your arms and forearms being fully extended, or above the elbow,
with the forearms flexed. the latter will protect against elbow stress or
injury. Adding a few manual resistance reps as a completing "touch" to the
regular lateral raise movement, will result in a much higher level of intensity
and give concomitant results. Your deltoids will burn and it should be literally
impossible to raise the arms away from the body upon completing this finishing
movement.
3.2 Methodology for Determining your "Optimal"
Number of Repetitions
How many repetitions? The general consensus is
8-12 repetitions at a speed of 2 seconds on the concentric phase and 4 seconds
on the eccentric phase. The importance is not the number of repetitions,
actually, but the amount of time you perform a set.
Basic muscle physiology says that skeletal
muscles hypertrophy more readily when they are taxed within their anaerobic
pathways of 30-90 seconds with approximately 60 seconds being the average time
required.
Any exercise that is carried beyond 70 seconds
utilizes more aerobic than anaerobic pathways, and, consequently the trainee's
endurance is increased at the cost of size/strength. Likewise, a set performed
for only 10 seconds has little, if any benefit. The only time you need to
perform a "single" rep is if you are a powerlifter, and you are training
yourself on the skill component.
There are several powerlifters (Dr. Ken
Leistner comes to mind), who very rarely perform singles. In fact to increase
the amount one can bench press Leistner has recommended practising the bench
press as little as once every 3 weeks! Dips, and other exercises for the
involved muscle groups are performed instead.
The time factor for the transfer to the
anaerobic threshold (the "window" during which the greatest amount of muscle
size/strength stimulation takes place) can vary greatly from individual to
individual, depending on factors such as neurological efficiency and muscular
endurance.
The most widely accepted guideline as stated
previously is to select resistance for each exercise that allows the performance
of 8-12 repetitions in a 2 second up, 4 second down style. When 12 or more
repetitions can be performed increase the resistance by approximately 5% at the
next workout. This tried and proven repetition scheme is effective for 70% of
the population.
However, there are those people that obtain
better results using lower or higher repetition guidelines. It is speculated
that this is governed by your "neurological efficiency" and muscle fiber type.
Remember that the goal is to make an inroad of approximately 20% into your
starting level of strength.
Research shows that most people make about 2%
inroad/repetition and fail at 10 repetitions. People who can involve more muscle
fibers make a greater inroad per repetition and fail sooner. There are those
that reach failure in as low as 3 repetitions. There are also those that could
do 20-30 repetitions before they reach failure.
However, these are extremes, there are not that
many people who fail at 3 repetitions and 30 repetitions. But they do exist. And
they need to be trained accordingly.
Here is a simple testing procedure that you can
use on almost any barbell or weight-machine exercise to determine your optimal
repetition guideline. Single-joint exercises are said to work better than
multiple-joint exercises. To test a multiple-joint exercise you have to avoid
the lock-out position:
Determine your 1 repetition maximum on any exercise.
Rest 5 minutes
Take 80% of this 1 repetition maximum and perform as many repetitions as possible in proper form. Do not cheat.
Make a written note of this number of repetitions
Multiply the number of repetitions by .15.
Round off the resulting figure to the nearest whole number.
Add this whole number to your 80% repetitions. This becomes the high end of your repetitions guidelines.
Subtract the same number from your 80% repetitions. This becomes the low end of your repetition guideline.
The number of repetitions that most trainees
perform with 80% of their 1RM on the leg extension correlates well with their
performances on other lower-body exercises. The standing biceps curl with a
barbell also correlates well with other upper-body movements. Thus, by testing
yourself on only the leg extension and biceps curl, you have established the
repetition guidelines to apply on most other exercises.
Many trainees require higher repetitions for
their lower bodies than their upper bodies. Some trainees are just the opposite.
Others show no differences. The only way to find out is to test yourself
according to the described instructions.
Whatever your repetition guidelines turn out to
be, it is important to understand that you should not stop an exercise simply
because you've completed a certain number. Always perform as many repetitions as
possible - and then attempt one more. Make sure each set is your best effort.
For example, say your 1 rep max is 100 lbs in
the barbell curl. 80% of that is 80lbs. Suppose you can perform 6 reps (2 secs
up, 4 secs down) at this weight to failure. 6 x .15 = 0.9 which we round off to
1.
Thus your lower rep limit would be 5 reps
(6-1), and your upper limit would be 7 reps (6+1). So you would perform between
5-7 reps in this exercise. Once you can perform more than 7 reps you would
increase the weight.
CAUTION: As stated prior, performing a 1
repetition max (1RM) is a dangerous procedure. Thus caution should be taken if
you wish to try this methodology due the risks inherent in performing a 1RM. A
safer way to determine which rep scheme works best for you is to try either
lower or higher reps for a few months.
It should be noted that Dr. Ken Leistner and
others has espoused the use of high repetition ranges for exercises that involve
a significant amount of muscle mass, such as the deadlift and the squat.
In fact, his trainees have performed up to and
above 20 reps in the squat. Leistner has obtained great results using this
approach. Stuart McRobert, Randall Stroessen etc. have also recommended using
high repetitions for this exercise. Stroessen has written a book on this
technique that you can find in the book catalogue within IronMan magazine.
So, the logical conclusion is for YOU to decide
upon what best suits your particular needs.
The key is you are trying to stimulate muscular
growth. You never need to perform singles unless you are a powerlifter.
3.3 Super Slow (tm) Training
The man credited with "creating" Super Slow
(and who has trademarked it) is Ken Hutchins. However, there are definitely
anecdotes of others who have used this technique prior to Hutchins. Going back
to the 1960s it has been reported that one of the great powerlifters, Ronnie
Ray, used Super Slow in his training. Ray was reported to have performed 3
strict super slow reps using 405 lbs (!) on the bench press, with a full pause
with the bar resting on his chest between reps.
Here's the analogy used about speed of
movement. When you pull a trigger on a rifle or gun, you're supposed to pull
with a slow, steady squeeze to the rear - if you jerk the trigger than the shot
will be off. Same thing when lifting weights - each repetition should be a slow,
steady squeeze of the muscle with no jerking.
Momentum is an asset in athletic endeavors. Its
utilization is part of the skill component. In the weight room, however, the
emphasis should be on constant tension flow through the muscle, along the entire
range of movement.
In the lifting phase, move slowly, continuously
and fluidly. The equipment you use must have the smooth, low friction feel of
Hammer Strength machines, MedX, Southern Xercise Tru-Line, or Nautilus Next
Generation Machines or your efforts are going to be thwarted by arbitrary
apparatus friction that snags the repetition. Hutchins calls this "stiction"
meaning a sticking point in the range of motion.
Move in a controlled fashion through the
lowering phase. You are moving too slowly when you're starting and stopping
throughout the lifting phase, or resting, i.e., getting a "respite", during the
lowering phase. Try to maintain movement at a steady speed.
Your training partner should use a stopwatch to
ensure that you are legitimately counting seconds and not just counting as fast
as possible. Trainees without the supervision of an experienced training
partner, or instructor, will have great difficulty mastering a 10 second lift.
Go as slowly and smoothly as possible.
Another important aspect of Super Slow is how
you react when you can no longer lift the resistance. No jerking or
pre-stretching. When the movement ceases, just keep pressing into the
contraction - breathe, concentrate, visualize the weight moving - and maybe you
will get a couple more inches of movement. Press for a good 15 seconds once
perceptible movement stops.
The key to effective Super Slow training is the
amount of friction inherent in the exercise as the following illustrates:
When you raise a weight, you're lifting the
weight plus any friction (i.e., mechanical, intermuscular); when you lower a
weight, you're lowering the weight minus any friction. Friction makes it harder
to raise a weight and easier to lower it. So, if you're doing the leg press with
200 pounds and there's 50 percent friction in the system, you'd actually be
raising 300 pounds on the positive stroke [50 percent times 200 equals 100 PLUS
200 equals 300] and lowering 100 pounds [50 percent times 200 equals 100 minus
200 equals 100]. And if you can raise 300 in 10 seconds, then lowering 100 in 5
seconds would amount to a recovery. On the other hand, let's look at a leg press
with hardly any friction. Although your intermuscular friction is the same,
suppose the overall friction amounted to 10 percent (instead of 50 percent).
Using the same 200 pounds, you'd now be raising 220 [200 plus 20] and lowering
180 [200 minus 20]. In this case, if you could raise 220 in 10 seconds, then
lowering 180 presents a bit more of a challenge - thus the traditional 5 second
negative stroke of Super Slow.
Here's a quote from Hutchins' book:
"Friction. The major reason for an exception
[to the 10 up 5 down protocol] is excessive friction in the exercise equipment.
The performance of smooth contraction in the presence of exorbitant friction
requires a slightly faster movement of 5 - 8 seconds.
Few of the Nautilus machines used in the
osteoporosis study [1982-86] were designed and manufactured with bearings. Most
used bearings of exorbitant friction and were barely acceptable -- certainly
less than ideal -- for Super Slow application.
One of the most important exercises - leg press
- was originally performed on the early-vintage Compound Leg machine. Although
this machine was the lowest-friction Leg Press we could locate, its friction
required a positive contraction less than 8 seconds. Any slower and the
mechanism stuck...broke loose...stuck...broke loose with static friction -
"stickion".
Since apparatus friction exceeded 50 percent
and negative work was almost meaningless in this Leg Press, the negative phase
was performed in approximately 2 seconds - all but dropping the weight.
Once the Nautilus Leverage Leg Press - bearings
throughout - replaced the Compound Leg, the specific leg-press protocol changed
to: Positive -- 10 seconds, Negative - 10 seconds. This protocol was effected in
consideration of the careful turnarounds performed at either end of it's highly
efficient stroke."
Regarding some of the "older" Nautilus machine
lines, Hutchins says, ". . . the 1982-vintage Nautilus Overhead Press
(stand-alone) allowed a 10/6 protocol . . . " athough "10/5 is the
generally-accepted standard."
Also, because of the cam shape on the leg curl
- which creates resistance that decreases rapidly in the positive and increases
rapidly in the negative - Hutchins recommends a 10/10. Other exercises that
"require a negative of equal duration for adequate control" are the leg
extension, rotary torso, hip abduction, hip adduction and the lateral raise.
They get a 10/10, too. Finally, the neck machine is 10/10 because the "subject
can easily loose [sic] his orthogonality with the movement arm if he moves much
faster than 10 seconds during the negative."
Here's another quote: "In the presence of an
ideal resistance curve (See Chapter 14) and low friction, I recommend a 10/10
protocol for rotary movements."
To summarize: If an exercise has little
friction, it's better to use a longer negative as you don't get the "partial
respite" that you would from an exercise with lots of friction. He doesn't
mention barbells, but the logical assumption would be about a 10/10 for them, as
there is no mechanical friction. Think about how brutal it would be to lower a
barbell in 10 seconds on the bench press - you're certainly not going to get a
"partial respite" there! As far as the Nautilus Next Generation pieces, he
claims they really don't have that much less friction than the vintage
equipment.
Hutchins also discusses how the mechanical
friction of the machine plays a role in determining the length of the negative
stroke. The negative shouldn't be too long as that would provide your muscles
with a respite. Hutchins says that the vintage Nautilus machines - like the old
Leg Press - had so much friction that he recommended only a 2 second negative
stroke! On the other hand, he suggests that a longer eccentric phase is
warranted if the machine has very little mechanical friction. He recommends a 10
sec up and 10 sec down on exercise machines that have very little friction, such
as the Nautilus Next Generation pieces, and the Hammer line of equipment.
Also, keep in mind that movements using your
bodyweight - like dips and chins - don't involve equipment and, therefore, only
involve intramuscular friction (which is negligible). Free weight exercises also
do not have any mechanical friction, either. Logically, a longer eccentric
stroke would be recommended with free weight or bodyweight or bodyweight
exercises. Thus for these types of exercises a 10/10 protocol would be
recommended.
Now where the difficulty comes into play is how
many repetitions to perform. If we use the general guideline of 8-12 repetitions
at a 6 second repetition speed, that works out to a range of 48-72 secs. If you
are using a 10/10 protocol, that would work out to *approximately* 2-4
repetitions. However, assume that you have found from the methodology of the
previous section that your "optimal" time for a set should be 30-42 secs. How
many repetitions? Don't fret about being precise on this one. 2-3 reps is fine,
you won't go wrong. An 8/8 protocol might be better in some cases actually
depending on the range of motion.
Hutchins claims that Super Slow's margin of
safety is unsurpassed. High-velocity repetitions generate impact forces that
reverberate in your joints and connective tissues. Depending on the particular
exercise, high-velocity repetitions may also produce a "backlash" effect. This
can result in being rammed beyond your point of comfortable stretch, which
increases the probability of injury.
A word on this issue of rep speed and safety.
There is NO firm evidence to support the claim that a rep speed as slow as that
prescribed by Hutchins is "safer" than the standard prescribed repetition speeds
of other HIT advocates such as 2/4, 4/4, etc. In fact, using such a slow speed
of movement can be dangerous for specific exercises like the deadlift and bench
press. The bottom position of both exercises is the most dangerous. It is not
wise to remain very long in those positions as injury can occur. Caution is
advised. It is also much more difficult to perform super slow on multi-joint
exercises that have a higher "skill" component, i.e., the deadlift. It is more
suited to "low" skill movements and single-joint exercises.
As far as "optimal" speed of the rep - nobody
can answer that question. Hutchins claim to have identified the ideal speed of
movement, but there is no conclusive evidence that this is the case. The only
thing that is known with certainty is that slower speeds are safer and more
efficient in terms of maintaining tension on the muscles and stimulating
muscular growth as compared to "faster" speeds, i.e., those that involve
momentum. Move the weight under control. Never heave, or "throw" the weight.
Look around most gyms and you rarely see trainees move to slow – but you will
see a great many who are heaving, cheating, and using momentum to move the
weight. This is unproductive and dangerous.
Finally, there isn’t ANY scientific evidence to
suggest that a rep speed slower than a 4/4 rep speed is "safer". Use your own
judgement. If you enjoy Super Slow, use it. But it is NOT "superior" to standard
rep speeds that are recommended in previous sections. Use it for your entire
routine, or for specific exercises. You may find more benefit using it in
certain exercises than others.
For further information on Super Slow, jump to
The Super Slow Home Page.
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4. HIT Anecdotes
4.1 Who uses HIT?
High Intensity Training may seem a bit
"radical" to some. It seems to run contrary to that of "prevailing wisdom",
i.e., one must spend hours in the gym to attain peak levels of performance.
It should be remembered that HIT is based on
the scientific foundation of muscular growth - OVERLOAD and PROGRESSION.
You probably haven't heard a lot about HIT -
probably because it isn't widely advertised. Common sense doesn't sell. As
stated previously, it isn't "magic" - it's just at downright hard work. It's a
lot easier to sell the (so-claimed) routines of the bodybuilding "champions" and
the supplements they supposedly take.
You can get a lot of repeat business from
selling "magical" bodybuilding supplements. Selling a training philosophy will
not likely reap you financial gain.
Here's a brief compilation of athletes,
professional sports teams and collegiate level teams, etc., who use HIT.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sidebar:
These examples are not meant to prove that
training in a particular style (as there are many variants of HIT) of HIT is
"superior" based on win-loss records, poundages, physique contests won, etc.
All those are not "proof" of ANY strength
training program's efficacy. These examples are just that - examples. They are
also to be used as a resource for those who are seeking HIT strength coaches and
players for the purpose of sharing information, etc.
It should be noted that science has not to this
date found any set/rep/training protocol to be "superior" or "optimal". There
are many claims made out there. They aren't substantiated. There are those who
are quick to take credit for win-loss records, etc., and use these as "proof"
that a particular program is "superior". Read Ken Mannie's article on The All
P.U.B. Team of Strength Training.
Good athletes, good coaching, etc., wins games.
PERIOD.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HIT is used by a number of universities and
professional teams - it certainly doesn't represent the majority of the programs
but it's used widely enough to be considered a productive form of training.
Different teams/programs have used HIT at different times. The teams listed
reflect those that either used or are using HIT in the late 1990s.
The U. S. Military Academy has been using HIT
since the early 1970's - despite having several different strength coaches
during that time. Penn State and Michigan have been using HIT for practically
the same time - although Michigan has had the same strength coach, Penn State
has gone through several (Dan Riley now with the Washington Redskins, Joe Diange
who was there on an interim basis and later went to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers,
Chet Furhman who is now with the Pittsburgh Steelers and most recently John
Thomas).
All these men advocated HIT at Penn State and
in the present. Penn State and Michigan are also noted for having very
successful sports teams.
In the NFL:
Pittsburgh Steelers
Minnesota Vikings
Cincinnati Bengals
Philadelphia Eagles
Arizona Cardinals
Washington Redskins
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
New York Giants
Carolina Panthers
(The Redskins since 1981 and the Bengals since
the early ‘70s).
In professional hockey, Stanley Cup Winners The
Pittsburgh Penguins.
In professional baseball, the Detroit Tigers
and San Diego Padres
In professional basketball, the Boston Celtics
1996 U.S. Olympic Women's Basketball Team (gold
medal)
At the collegiate level, HIT programs are used
at
The University of Kentucky (except football)
Southeast Missouri State University
University of Detroit - Mercy
Michigan
Penn State
Villanova
Stanford
Michigan State
The University of Toledo
The U.S. Military Academy
Providence College
Western Kentucky
The University of Cincinnati
Drexel University (PA)
University of Miami (FL) -- basketball (M/W), baseball, track and
field (M/W)
There are bodybuilders, powerlifters, and
athletes from all walks of life. There are regular people who are just seeking
to get as strong as possible, and obtain the health benefits of high intensity
training like cardiovascular endurance, flexibility, etc.
4.1 What are some Specific Examples of Athletes
that use HIT?
The following examples illustrate what some
elite athletes have achieved using HIT, and as well show HOW FAST gains can be
made using HIT:
KEVIN TOLBERT - adopted son of Dr. Ken
Leistner.
Was a 5'9" 220 pound running back at the U.S. Naval Academy.
Ran a 4.5 40.
Performed 20 to 23 reps with 375 lbs and 15 x 405 lbs in the bench press at a bodyweight of 230 lbs.
Benched 510lbs in a legal, competitive style.
Performed 30 x 600 lbs in the barbell squat at a bodyweight of 248 lbs.
Performed 30 reps of 450 lbs in the deadlift in the spring of 1985 at a Gold's Gym in Philadelphia - immediately after a performing a set of squats for 30 reps [weight unknown] taking only the time necessary to change the weight.
Tolbert's measurements were accurately measured
as:
33" thighs
20 1/2" arms
52" chest
20" neck.
This man is an incredible physical specimen. At
one time, he was said to be one of the strongest, massive 250 lb men on the
planet.
JUNIOR SEAU - San Diego Chargers all-pro
linebacker. Workout as reported by strength coach John Dunn in the October 1993
issue of Muscle & Fitness. Unless otherwise noted all exercises performed for
only one set:
Poundages
Neck Flexion (manual resistance) 12 -
Neck Extension 12 x 120lbs
Lateral Flexion (L) 12 x 120lbs
Lateral Flexion (R) 12 x 120lbs
Shoulder Shrug (barbell) 12 x 275lbs
Duo Squat (Nautilus) 15 x 525lbs
Seated Leg Curl 12 x 135lbs
Leg Extension 15 x 200lbs
Leg Press (Hammer) 15 x 855lbs (no misprint)
Hip Flexion 12 x 50lbs
Situps (on board) 25 x bodyweight (2 sets)
Back Extension 12 x 180lbs (2 sets)
Bench Press (dumbbells) 10 x 340lbs
Rear Delt 10 x 40lbs
Incline Press (dumbbells) 10 x 240lbs
Seated Row (Hammer) 10 x 120lbs
Seated Press (dumbbells) 12 x 200lbs
High Row (Hammer) 9 x 345lbs
Iso-Incline (Hammer) 12 x 455lbs
MITCHELL "KING KONG" SAMMONS
- 2X National Heavyweight Bando KickBoxing Champion
- Former running back University of Miami
- Olympic competitor in 1984 in the Shot and Discus
Ht: 6'2"
Weight: 258 lbs
Only accurate measurement available: 24" Neck
Incline Press: 405lbs x 1, 315lbs x 40
Leg Press: 1600 lbs x 1
40 yd Dash: 4.4 secs
100 yd Dash: 9.75 sec
16 lbs Shotput: 72'3"
Discus: 229'
Workouts:
Full body - low sets (2-3) for 8-10 reps for
4-5 exercises for upper body, higher repetitions for lower body. Trains
approximately three times a week. Sometimes less if feels overtraining.
RAY MENTZER - ex-pro-bodybuilder, Mr. America:
January 5, 1983:
Weight: 253 lbs
Arm size: 19 3/4"
After training using one set to failure of
eight exercises approximately six weeks later:
February 21, 1983:
Weight: 260 lbs
Arm size 20 1/8"
In noticeably leaner condition (exact bodyfat % not available)
Ray Mentzer's workout on June 15, 1983 (all Nautilus machines):
Duo Squat: 560lbs x 20
Pullover: 275lbs x 8
Behind-Neck pulldown: 200lbs x 9
Lateral Raise: 290lbs x 7
Overhead press: 200lbs x 11
10 degree chest: 275lbs x 8
Multi Biceps: 190lbs x 10
Lower Back: 400lbs x 12
MIKE MENTZER - Ex-pro-bodybuilder, Mr. Universe
(1979), 1st runner-up, Mr. Olympia (1979). Made the best gains of his career
using HIT. Here's a description of Mentzer's chest routine used on July 20,
1983:
1. Nautilus 40 degree chest: 300lbs x 6
NO REST,
2. Decline Press, negative only: 325lbs x 10
NO REST
3. 10 Degree Chest: 275lbs x 8
DORIAN YATES - Pro-bodybuilder, Six-time Mr.
Olympia (1992-97)
Personally trained by Mike Mentzer. Has stated
on the record that he made his best gains using HIT, and in fact uses LOWER
VOLUME than Mike Mentzer did.
CASEY VIATOR - Ex-pro-bodybuilder. To this day
the youngest man to win the Mr. America contest at age 18, under the tutelage of
Arthur Jones. Viator in the early '80s supposedly trained with a much higher
volume.
However, Mark Asanovich, Strength Coach of the
Tampa Bay was in Gainesville, Florida in 1994 to attend a MedX Seminar and ran
into Viator.
During lunch with Asanovich, Viator said that
he was training for one of the Senior Men's National Bodybuilding contests. He
was also doing some personal training in Charleston, South Carolina. According
to Asanovich, Casey is "high intensity through and through" and "back" to
training HIT.
DR. KEN LEISTNER
374 pound legal bench press at 152 lb bodyweight in 1987.
Leistner is shown in one photograph weighing a
solid 230lbs.
The picture has him at that weight balancing a
glass of water on his upper chest.
Other official lifts:
Deadlift - 660lbs
Squat - 555lbs x 1, and 255 for 100
Bench Press - 455lbs
Note: Leistner would bench press ONLY ONCE PER
MONTH.
There is also a picture of Dr. Ken doing
overhead presses for reps with a 200 lb WOOD LOG.
GREG ROMAN - Foster son of Dr. Ken Leistner.
Former 5'8" 235 lb noseguard for John Carroll
Trains 2 days per week, for a total of 9 exercises per workout.
One recent workout of trap bar deadlifts: 455lbs x20
Squatted 515lbs x13 with no equipment.
Bench Press - 475 lbs
FRANK SAVINO - 282lbs at 5'11".
Squat - 700lbs x 15
Bench Press - 375lbs x 15
Deadlift - 500lbs x 40
[Also trained by Ken Leistner using HIT]
BILL PICHE - My personal good friend, creator
of the Cyberpump! Web page and author of the Powerlifting FAQ as well as
articles in Powerlifting USA, HT Newsletter, Hardgainer and Master Trainer.
Competed as a powerlifter in the American Drug
Free Powerlifting Association. Deadlifted over triple bodyweight - 600lbs at a
bodyweight of 193lbs - which was ranked #49 in the nation in the 198lb weight
class.
475lbx11 in the regular deadlift
195lbx1 (+bodyweight of 200lbs) - 5 sec negative chin-up
170lbx7 in one arm dumbbell row
STRICT barbell curl with a lift of 67.5kgs (148.5lbs) in Iowa State Championships.
Trained for the Iowa State strict curl contest
by practicing singles once per week (about two sub-max singles). Main focus for
biceps was working the back hard using negative chins. 1 set of 4-5 reps.
It should also be pointed out that Bill has
trained pretty much exclusively in his basement using plain old barbells and
dumbbells. This reiterates the point about the equipment doesn't really matter -
just make your workouts hard and progressive.
JEFF REINEBOLD - Assistant coach of the CFL's
British Columbia Lions reports these gains from 6 WEEKS of a HIT program
consisting of 12-14 exercises, one set to failure:
[Sidenote: Kim Wood, strength coach of the
Cincinnati Bengals, was also instrumental in setting up the program]
GLEN SCRIVENER - (265 lbs)
upper arm (R) 16 1/8 to 16 1/2
upper arm (L) 15 7/8 to 16 3/8
chest (expanded) 49 1/2 to 50
upper leg (R) 26 to 26 1/4
upper leg (L) 23 3/4 to 26
O. J. BRIGANCE - (224 lbs linebacker)
neck 17 to 17 1/2
upper arm (R) 14 3/4 to 15 3/4
upper arm (L) 14 to 15 1/8
chest 40 1/4 to 42 1/8
waist 33 7/8 to 33 1/2
upper leg (R) 22 1/4 to 25 3/4
upper leg (L) 24 to 25 1/4
Note: This training program was featured in two
Vancouver, B.C., newspapers as well as two major TV stations.
JOHN WELDAY - strength coach of the Pittsburgh
Penguins (NHL). Played football at Penn State. At one time was 6'2" and 260
pounds. Tom Montebell (National Fitness Institute and Exercise Center/Rockville,
Maryland) reported seeing Welday use the entire weight stack during Leg
Extensions on the old Nautilus Compound Leg Machine - WITH ONE LEG AT A TIME.
ROB DRIBBON - In the late 1980s, held the New
Jersey State Teenage record in the bench press: 265 at a body weight of 132
(double bodyweight) in a sanctioned meet. Dribbon bench pressed twice per week
(Mon and Fri) using a low amount of multiple sets. All other exercises were done
HIT style (i.e., one set to failure using a 6-9 rep range followed quickly by
several breakdown or negative reps). Trained 3 times per week. Wed workout was
done all HIT - no bench press this day (did one set of negative only dips
instead). Workouts without bench press rarely lasted more than 20 minutes.
TONY ALEXANDER - Princeton University, training
partner of Matt Brzycki. Has trained exclusively HIT for about 3 years.
Currently 6'1" and 235 pounds. Recently measured at under 11 percent bodyfat.
Averages about 1 hour and 20 minutes of lifting PER WEEK.
Some recent performances achieved by Tony in
January, 1999:
Trap bar deadlift 360x20. No belt. No warm-up
Hip Extension (Cybex): 350x20 (250-pound weight
stack + an additional 100 pounds pinned to the stack)
Leg Curl (Cybex): 167.5x12
Pullover (MedX): 512x12 (256 each arm)
Seated Row (MedX): 456x12
Dip: BW+130x9
Shrug (on row machine with arms parallel to the
ground): 420x12
Tony's workout on December 24, 1997:
MedX Leg Press (one leg at a time) 428/18
Cybex Hip Extension 288.75/20
Cybex Leg Curl 115/12
MedX Leg Extension 438
Barbell Bench Press 280/8
MedX Arm Cross 252/12
MedX Incline Press 440/11
Chins BW+50/7
MedX Pullover 456/11
MedX Seated Row 374/12
Manual Resistance External Rotation
Manual Resistance Internal Rotation
MedX Shoulder Shrug 334/11
Fat Bar Bicep Curls 97.5/10
Universal Tricep Extension 92.5/12
NOTES:
1. MedX Leg Press was done one leg at a time as Tony has exceeded
the limits of the 996-pound weight stack with
both legs.
2. Cybex Hip Extension was the 250-pound weight stack (20 plates)
plus an additional 38.75 pounds pinned to the
weight stack.
3. MedX Leg Extension was done for 90 seconds: a 30-second negative
followed by a 30-second concentric followed by
a 30-second negative.
4. Barbell Bench Press was done without any type of warm-up or
warm-up set (nor were ANY warm-up sets done on ANY exercises during
this workout).
5. Chins were done with Tony's 235-pound bodyweight (approximate)
plus an additional 50 pounds attached to his
waist.
6. Manual Resistance exercises for his rotator cuff were done as
part of his shoulder work due to a minor shoulder injury incurred the
previous weekend in a flag football game. (Tony's team won the league
title in that game.)
7. Shoulder Shrugs were done on the MedX Seated Row machine with his
arms parallel to the floor and pinching his shoulder blades together
(i.e., no movement at the elbows).
8. Bicep Curls were done using a fat bar with a
3-inch diameter.
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN:
MIKE EVANS
6'4" 275 pound defensive lineman. Weighed 215 as a freshman.
8 x 360lbs in the Hammer Behind the Neck Press.
DESMOND HOWARD - Heisman Trophy winner. Four
years of HIT at The University of Michigan and being trained using HIT with the
Washington Redskins
DEAN DINGMAN - 6' 7/8" 290 pounds, 5.43 40
time.
TOM DOHRING - 6' 6 1/2" 290 pounds, 5.6 40
time.
[Sidebar: trained by Mike Gittleson, strength
coach for Michigan. Wolverine
players train only 20-40 MINUTES, two or three
times/week.]
WASHINGTON REDSKINS:
JIM LACHEY - 6'6" 300 lbs. Now with another HIT
team, the San Diego Chargers.
JOE JACOBY - 6'8" 315 lbs. Former Redskin
offensive tackle.
MATT MILLEN - of the Redskins, "They've always
been the strongest team in the league."
[Redskins train pure HIT style]
Other random individuals:
KEVIN ALLEN - 6'5". Increased bodyweight from
312 to 330 in 10 weeks using HIT.
GREG HUNTINGTON - Penn State football. 6'4".
Increased weight from 235 to 260 and decreased bodyfat from 17.1 percent to 16.7
percent in one summer using HIT.
KEN MOYER - 6'6" 293 Cincinnati Bengal
offensive lineman (former University of Toledo Rockets - another HIT NFL team)
performed 14 x 595 on the Hammer Leg Press.
MARCUS AMICK 6'1". Increased bodyweight from
258 to 265 and decreased bodyfat from 15 percent to 13 percent in a 10 week
off-season HIT program. DOUG SPIDEL increased bodyweight from 248 to 255 and
decreased bodyfat from 17 percent to 12 percent in same program. (University of
Toledo)
ANTHONY MUNOZ - regarded by many as the BEST
OFFENSIVE LINEMAN IN THE HISTORY OF FOOTBALL.
Member of the Team of the Decade, 1980s.
100 reps with 400 lbs on the Hammer Leg Press
DARREN CARRINGTON - 6'1" 205 pound cornerback
for the San Diego Chargers. Increased bodyweight 20 pounds since turning pro and
training using HIT. Also now has 4% bodyfat.
CHARLES WOODSON (1997 Heisman Trophy winner.
University of Michigan)
What the ACSM Recommends
The American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM)
in its position stand entitled "The Recommended Quantity and Quality Exercise
for Developing and Maintaining Cardiorespiratory and Muscular Fitness in Healthy
Adults" recommends (based on all the available scientific literature) one set of
8-12 reps of 8-10 exercises for two days/week. Even though this is recommended
for sedentary adults, it is still considered appropriate for athletes due to the
fact that they can typically train harder.
4.3 A "Real Life" HIT Anecdote
The following is a very recent local true life
story of a good friend of mine, Dave, who has switched to training HIT and in
particular the Super Slow protocol. Dave received his PhD in Industrial
Engineering at the University of Toronto, and is also an amateur kickboxer who
has been lifting weights for years (thus it would not be wise to tell him his
gains are "psychological").
The following is an excerpt of a letter Dave
sent to Matt Brzcyki:
"I am an old engineering buddy of Robert
Spector and he suggested that I send you a note. Over the last little while, Rob
has been raving about the "super slow" strength training techniques that you
have described to him, so I thought that I would give it a try. I started
training in this manner for the last 4 weeks. I have to admit that it felt
strange only working out twice a week or once every five days. I thought from my
surprising increase in weight that my lack of usual aerobic exercise, such as
kickboxing, jogging, was making me fat. However, my girl friend, the old pinch
test, and my "reduced-calories-for-recently-less-active-guys" diet suggest that
this is not the case. I believe that I have gained about 7-8 pounds over this
period. I started with 40% less than the usual weight and can now use almost
what I used with Darden's "2 sec up 4 down" training prescription!"
I personally went through a similar experience
awhile back as have others I've met in "real life" as well as on-line.
4.4 Other HIT Anecdotes
My fellow Torontonian, John Little, used to write a monthly column in the
British version of FLEX magazine. Little told a story about a neighborhood
training partner of his who developed 19" arms doing 20 sets/bodypart, 6
days/week workouts. The bodybuilder soon became burned out and disappears. Two
years later the guy with the big arms suddenly resurfaces at a local gym. In a
matter of weeks he's bigger than ever with arms that are called "too big" by
some onlookers. "And he's training differently," say all the local bodybuilders.
"As it turned out," writes Little, "he was indeed training differently. In fact
the difference in his training could quite accurately be described as
revolutionary. He was not heading in the direction of more work. In fact, he was
so far down at the opposite end of the volume scale that Ellington Darden would
have kissed him! He was now training a mere three times a week and performing a
total of 6 sets/workout for only one set/exercise"
True story.
Another story:
In one of the Gold's gyms (going back a few years, obviously) there was a
trainee performing set after set of cable crossovers in an effort to increase
his pectoral size. He was about to do his 15th set when Mike Mentzer entered the
gym. Those were the Mentzer heydays and he was a pretty awesome specimen, so the
trainee stopped his workout to observe what Mentzer was doing. Mentzer proceeded
to perform slow, controlled movements on the Nautilus Chest Flye until he
reached positive failure, and then immediately went on to the Nautilus Decline
Press with no rest between. The kid watching was awestruck. After this Mentzer's
pectorals were pumped enormously. After shaking his head in disbelief the kid
went back to performing his next set of cable crossovers.
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A Final Word
So does this mean by training HIT you can
become "Big Beyond Belief"? Possibly, but probably not. Remember elite athletes
are born, not made. HIT is a training philosophy that will allow you to create
your own training methodology - based on the general principles - that best
suits you. Through proper training (along with the other factors such as rest
and diet) you might just achieve your genetic potential, but there is NO
training protocol in the world, no supplement, no drug that will turn a Woody
Allen-like physique into a Dorian Yates.
Remember that. Be realistic in your goals. The average person can attain a level
of development through proper strength training that will most likely exceed
their expectations - as well as others. Shoot for the stars, but don't take any
shortcuts thinking that you can be something that nature won't allow you to be.
Personally, I'm proud of my accomplishments.
I've never won any physique or powerlifting contests. My physique and poundages
are nothing extraordinary in the least. But I've dramatically changed both my
appearance and lifestyle for the better by incorporating HIT principles into my
training. And one of the best things of all perhaps is that I am always
improving - a little at a time, but it's always there. So HIT has allowed me to
incorporate Continuous Improvement into part of my life.