Heres one adapted towards weightlifting. I'd like to try it one day. Seems intense to hit maxes each week.
In their "heavy" sessions Bulgarian lifters will build up to their daily max. This max is not an end in itself, rather it is the starting point of their training: the daily max is used to calculate the training load for the rest of the day. Once a lifter reaches his max, he backs down 25-40lbs and do 3-5 sets of 2-3 reps. Those are the money sets! With this form of training your daily session is always adapted to your present capacities.
Bulgarian wave loading parameters
Sets 1 - 3: Warm-ups with a load lower than 60% of the competition max/personal record
Sets 4 - 7: Work up to the daily 1 rep maximum
Sets 8-9: Daily max - 40lbs for 3 reps
Sets 10-12: Daily max - 25lbs for 2 reps
They will use this form of loading for 3 daily exercises. On "lighter" days they will do technique work with a relatively light load (60-70%). They will not have a precise number of sets to do. They do 3 different exercises, allocating 15-20 minutes per exercise and they do however many sets they feel comfortable doing that day. This is not unlike Charles Staley’s EDT, and it is also a technique used by Canadian weightlifting coach Pierre Roy.
It is not a method limited to the Olympic lifts. If anything it works better for basic strength lifts like the squat, bench press and Deadlift.
Bulgarian loading is for strength gains, not for size gains. Athletes seeking a boost in their strength without too much bodyweight gain will be well served by the method.
A typical modified Bulgarian strength program
Day 1. Hard session
A. Power clean from hang
Sets 1 - 3: Warm-ups with a load lower than 60% of the competition max/personal record
Sets 4 - 7: Work up to the daily 1 rep maximum
Sets 8-9: Daily max - 40lbs for 3 reps
Sets 10-12: Daily max - 25lbs for 2 reps
2 minutes of rest between sets.
10 minutes break between exercise A. and exercise B.
B. Back squat
Sets 1 - 3: Warm-ups with a load lower than 60% of the competition max/personal record
Sets 4 - 7: Work up to the daily 1 rep maximum
Sets 8-9: Daily max - 40lbs for 3 reps
Sets 10-12: Daily max - 25lbs for 2 reps
2 minutes of rest between sets.
10 minutes break between exercise B. and exercise C.
C. 1/2 rack Deadlift
Sets 1- 3: Warm-ups with a load lower than 60% of the competition max/personal record
Sets 4 - 7: Work up to the daily 1 rep maximum
Sets 8-9: Daily max - 40lbs for 3 reps
Sets 10-12: Daily max - 25lbs for 2 reps
2 minutes of rest between sets.
Day 2. Easy session
A. Bench press
3-4 reps
60-70% of maximum
15 minutes, do as many sets as you feel comfortable doing
B. Push press
3-4 reps
60-70% of maximum
15 minutes do as many sets as you feel comfortable doing
C. Incline press
3-4 reps
60-70% of maximum
15 minutes do as many sets as you feel comfortable doing
Day 3. Easy session
A. Power clean from hang
3-4 reps
60-70% of maximum
15 minutes do as many sets as you feel comfortable doing
B. Romanian Deadlift
3-4 reps
60-70% of maximum
15 minutes do as many sets as you feel comfortable doing
C. Barbell rowing
3-4 reps
60-70% of maximum
15 minutes do as many sets as you feel comfortable doing
Day 4. Hard session
A. Bench press
Sets 1 - 3: Warm-ups with a load lower than 60% of the competition max/personal record
Sets 4 - 7: Work up to the daily 1 rep maximum
Sets 8-9: Daily max - 40lbs for 3 reps
Sets 10-12: Daily max - 25lbs for 2 reps
2 minutes of rest between sets.
10 minutes break between exercise A. and exercise B.
B. Push press
Sets 1 - 3: Warm-ups with a load lower than 60% of the competition max/personal record
Sets 4 - 7: Work up to the daily 1 rep maximum
Sets 8-9: Daily max - 40lbs for 3 reps
Sets 10-12: Daily max - 25lbs for 2 reps
2 minutes of rest between sets.
10 minutes break between exercise A. and exercise B.
C. Close grip bench press
Sets 1 - 3: Warm-ups with a load lower than 60% of the competition max/personal record
Sets 4 - 7: Work up to the daily 1 rep maximum
Sets 8-9: Daily max - 40lbs for 3 reps
Sets 10-12: Daily max - 25lbs for 2 reps
2 minutes of rest between sets.
10 minutes break between exercise A. and exercise B.
Training Split
Ideally you would follow this split:
Monday: Day 1
Tuesday: Day 2
Wednesday: off
Thursday: Day 3
Friday: Day 4
Saturday: off
Sunday: off
This will allow for maximum recovery between hard sessions and as a result, constant progress!
The choice of exercise is up to you, depending on your goals you may want to vary exercise selection. But the important thing is to understand the concept. And do no forget to use both hard and easy sessions!
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