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Bench Press Shirts Shot Down by Ted Arcidi

natural-mike

New member
Found this article on the web written by Ted Arcidi

article written by: Ted Arcidi
Originally, when the supportive bench press shirts came on the market, their intended purpose was not to enhance performance but to aid lifters who were working out with an ailing rotator cuff or other shoulder problems. In fact, back in the mid 1980's the original prototype supportive bench press shirt was 50% polyester and 50% cotton and only one layer thick. It was more like a sweater and not at all like the laminated four or five layers thick armor suit that many powerlifters use today. I wore the poly-cotton variety when I officially benched 705 lbs on March 3, 1985, at the Budweiser World REcord Breaker in Honolulu. The sole purpose of wearing the shirt was to keep my shoulders warm.
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Not only that, but I was able to put the thing on by myself. It didn't take a pair of handlers to stuff me into a supportive bench shirt that was so tight, it might have been painted on. There were no bleeding hands or body bruises either. It was truely and purely me against the darned bar! Nevertheless, I could kick myself for wearing it when I benched the 705 lbs world-record fourth attempt. The reason was simple: That 705 would still be the raw world record in my weight class today; it went up like butter cake!
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The supportive bench press shirts worn by today's powerlifters cause them to look like Frankenstein's monster, with their shoulders and arms extended as if they were sleep walking. The shirts are nothing more than gimmicks for enhacing performance, and the number of outrageous bench press records being set today - especially in the heavy and super-heavy divisions - prove it. I even popped a 725 lbs world record with only three months of training back in 1991. The marks today are nearly 100 lbs above my 1985 record!
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If you have any lingering doubts that the bench shirt enhaces performance, consider the following: First, there is Chris Confessore, who's supposedly benching in the mid-700's at a bodyweight of around 220 lbs. Right! I'd be willing to bet that he can't bench in the high 500's raw!
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Then there's that fat boy, Anthony Clark, the one that looks like as if he swallowed a dirigible! Clark is somewhat shorter than I am (5'8 vs. 5'11) but outweighs my 290 by 50 or 60 lbs! He benched tremendous weights while wearing a double-lateral, quadruplayer rubberized denim and polyester slingshot shirt. If Anthony weighed 260 lbs, as he should, propotionetly, he'd be able to bench dick without a shirt! Even at 375 he still can't bench 700 with a regular grip!
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It's powerlifters like the two mentioned above who claim to have the strongest bench press. Yet their poundages on assistance exercises aren't in line with their supposed biggest bench presses. Some of those 700 lbs bench pressers, like Craig Tokarski - although he's a nice guy - can use only 225 on exercises like behind-the-neck presses and triceps nose breakers. DAWG! I was using those kinds of poudages on my assistance exercises back in college, when I weighed 220 lbs as a powerlifting purist and I wasn't even near a 700 bench yet...
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Back in 1985, when I did bench more than 700 lbs I was doing 395 for three in the behind-the-neck presses and 375 lbs for five or six on the nose breakers. Just recently, I ended a bench cycle by doing 600 lbs without a shirt, and the poundage I used on behind-the-neck presses was 340 for a big triple, without any herky-jerky movement.
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An example of true, undiluted strength occurred when I benched 650 lbs in Maryland in November '83. I weighed a mere 275 lbs and did the lift without the aid of any supportive bench shirt. At the time John Buckley computed the Schwartz formula ranking for the top lifters in the 11 weight classes (114 through Superheavyweight), and according to his stats, my Schwartz rating was 398.8. That indentified me pound for pound as the number-one bench presser of all time...
No one - and I mean - no one - has bench pressed more than I have, according to the Schwartz formula, without a bench press shirt! Ken Lain, the Abilene Giant, did 660 lbs in 1988 on his 3rd attempt, but I know in my heart that without a shirt he would have likely been good for only 610.
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Back in 1992, when I was recuperating from extensive elbow surgeries, I began to realize how phony most of the bench press records were. At that time, however, I had to sit on my hands, so to speak, and just watch. The thought did cross my mind that there would come a day when the powers that be in powerlifting would allow the use of hydraulic-assisted bench shirts with adjutable-out-put controls. What a farce!!!
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Now, you may be wondering why I'm raging so much about this subject. What's the difference, you may ask, between benching with a shirt and benching without one?
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To begin with, there's a major visual difference in the thickness of the muscles and tendons when you press without a shirt as opposed to results of pressing with the aid. The muscles are thicker, which translates into raw strength. Because I don't use a shirt, my tendons are very thick and have a lot of tensile strength. My ligaments are tight, and I have better joint capacity and balance than do most powerlifters who rely on bench shirts.
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Many powerlifters I know even do their training reps while wearing a bench shirt! It's very easy to see who's training without such aids and who's the strongest of all the 700-plus-pound bench pressers!
It feels good (if it felt any better, it would be obscene) to be in a midst of a comeback. My plan is to reclaim the bench press title - RAW, so to speak. In my opinion the bench press is the greatest upper-body movement around. Through my comeback I hope to spark an interest in promoting raw bench press contests. That can't help but return the sport of powerlifting to being a contest of true strength.
No bench shirts, no slingshot suits or armor, no gimmicks - just real muscle! In it's purest form benching is truley man against the bar, with the best - and not the best dressed - lifter winning...

here is the website if anyone needs proof, there are some other articles there too on tendon strength also.

http://www.geocities.com/Pipeline/Rapids/4365/bpshirts.htm
 
This is a clear case of jealousy. If he was mad about bench shirts why does he insult Anthony Clark calling him a fat boy? And what the fuck is a "double-lateral, quadruplayer rubberized denim and polyester slingshot shirt". What a pud! So many people get beat and come back with how the other people cheated. Sore losers always have a pocketful of excuses. He was using a bench shirt way back when all the other lifters were not. He was the cheater. He wore his to keep his shoulders warm?? Ya, so do I! You sore LOSER!
 
Personally I dont think Ted has a leg to stand on, in any sport, and I mean ANY sport, there is equipment, the better your equipment the better equipped you are to do well. And like POwfit said, ok you want to make a point make it, but when you start putting people down then your the one with issues, its funny to because Anthony Clark is like this God loving church going religious man and here Ted is dissin him. Damn shame.

Like you said, strictly jealousy
 
I just want to say it's funny when one fat guy calls another fat guy fat. Haha


He does seem a lil jealous. Why doesn't he just compete with the hardcore bench shirts of today since he is such a superior bencher he will obviosly get 800+. Give me a break. Does he even lift anymore?
 
wel ted arcidid is a strong motherfucker,but to each his own....
i know he's known for his heavy behind the neck presses and he did hit some big benches but i also see no need to call AC fat boy and all that shit.the freakin shirts are not magic,you still gotta push the damn weight.he doesn't want to compete against people that use shirts..FINE...DON'T COMPETE.shirts are here to stay wonder if he even competes anymore??????:confused: :mad: :alien: :bawling: and he says he wore a shirt to keep his shoulders warm...hmmmmm...NOT!!!!
 
All of this 'support equipment' in powerlifing is way overdone. Why should bench shirts be allowed if they give a lifter a 15 - 35 percent advantage (rough estimate of course)? Why not just bench in a t-shirt? If one cannot lift the weight without a bench shirt than too bad! Powerlifters ought to lift like the olympic lifters do - only a weight belt and knee bands/wraps. All of this crap with a double/triple ply suit and having the knees wrapped 8 - 10 times is not fooling anyone! I do have a lot of resepct for powerlifters. I think however the equipment is making everything a joke. It seems like the equipment makers call the shots. If they pulled out of the sport (if the rules got strict and were against all of the equipment) then what would happen? Scary isn't it? I am however leaning a lot more toward olympic lifting. The only real things that differentiate one lifter from another in olympic lifting is technique and heart, NOT equipment! Equipment should not be the big deciding fator that it currently is in powerlifting. Ted soes get a little personal in his article. THere is no need to blast people like he does. They are/were competign in the same environmnet the Ted does. It is his chioce under the rules to pick and choose what equipment he does or does not want to use. He seems off base with respect to those type of comments.
 
I'm still learning, but from what I know isn't it safer to pause a heavier weight with a shirt on than to pause a lighter weight raw? Also, posts like that won't go over to well with the seasoned lifters. Like he said, shirts are here to stay, if you don't like em, compete in the raw meets.
 
15-35% is a very rough estimate. The average is 10%. Some people work better than others with the shirts and people that use double layer tend to get a little more also. About 50% of the meets across the country allow only single ply garment and almost all the rest allow up to a double layer garment. The "raw" meets are a very tiny minority. We are all playing on a level playing field. If you think you are stronger than me... PUT ON A FUCKING BENCH SHIRT AND PROVE IT! They are not magic. This crying crap is a way for weak undedicated lifters to take away from the lifters that are better than them. You don't here an idiot track runner saying,"Lets see who is faster without the fancy track shoes! Lets run raw". The imaginary armored, rubberized, quadplayer that this moron is referring to is just stupid. He has no case so he goes to making up shit. Everybody knows that it is safer to bench with a shirt than without one and it makes the meet more fun. The only people that are anti-bench shirt are people who suck using them, are weak and looking for an excuse, or are trying to pump the "raw" agenda for some reason. If you don't like powerlifting... become a bodybuilder or something. Just stop the whinning.
 
Well everyone is entitled to their own opinion. Fortuneately we are all entitled to disagree if we want to. That's the fun in all this people can say what they want even if it makes them look like a complete ass.

Cheers,
Scotsman
 
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