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Creation of an Explosive Mofo - My Training Journal :)

BTW I finally got my black Do-Win Rogue Oly shoes

So I now have 2 Do-Win oly shoes for the price of one :)
Actually the more expensive white-red Do-Win they sent me, by mistake, is a better quality shoe from the materials used. Leather vs suede or something like that.

Will try the Black ones today.
These 2 will last me a long time :D
 
Tuesday 12th August - Micro Cycle 9 - Week 5 - Day 1 - Workout A Volume

Pretty good workout - again I had morning wood today, high testosterone levels :D

Skipping was awesome! Getting smoother and more complex without fouling on the rope

tweaked the setup and changed a few upper body exercises

Body weight at gym - 194lbs in winter clothing
Workout time - 1.5 hours
Workout rating - 8/10

General warm up -

3 min moderate speed walk on treadmill

Then did this foam rolling routine
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8caF1Keg2XU

1 set each of my usual dynamic mobility exercises
behind the neck band pull aparts - green mini-band help 3/4 length 2x8
lateral deep lunge x8
situp complex on swiss ball
single leg RDL mobility + psoas activation walk
2 short runs of low effort prime times (stiff legged runs)

A few sets of hops in place - 2 legged and then single legged
3x10 seconds rope skipping - 2 legged then 5 reps single leg, each leg, then alternating legs - 30secs rest

45lb oly bar complex - slow clean pull, GM onto toes, high hang powerclean, military press - 5 reps each


Front and Full Back Squats - shoulder width stance - no Belt - Nike Free 5.0 Trainer + Oly shoes

alternating sets between front and low bar back squats, 45 seconds to a minutes rest between each. Then 2-3min rest between each complex

warmups - Nike Free 5.0 Trainer
Front Squats - Bar x5, 95lbs x 2, 135x2, 185x2, 205x2
Back Squats - Low bar - Bar x5, 95x2, 135x2, 185x2, switched to oly shoes 205x2, 225x2, 255x1, 285x1

Back Squat - low bar - controlled - 2.5 mins rest
1) 315lbs x 2 (90% of estimated 1RM - 355lbs)
2) 295lbs x 2 (83%)
3) 295lbs x 2
4) 295lbs x 2
5) 295lbs x 2
6) 295lbs x 2

I was just going to do 6 sets of 2 with 285lbs, but I decided to see what 315lbs felt like, with a heavier double first up, like I did last time, but 20lbs heavier across the board. 315lbs felt ok, 2nd rep had my hamstrings screaming! I might be able to do 5 reps with it.
295lbs felt ok, not feeling much lighter, even if I can do at least 7 reps with it. Pretty fast concentrics, but still feels gut busting...

front squats felt sweet and solid - can definitely feel the stronger hamstrings from these low bar full squats

Upper body/shoulder prehab stuff

Low incline dumbell face pull to forehead - elbows at 90 degrees, palms facing with a hold at top - 2x2kg x 3, 2x3kg dumbbells x 18 (2-3sec rest between each rep)

switched from doing those on a cable pulley machine to dumbbells lying face down on a low incline bench. Works better, and cuts out the lower back work you have when standing with a cable machine


5kg dumbell x18 (+1 rep) (2-3 sec rest between each rep)
elbow on knee external rotation - pause at parallel
single arm lying on back/floor subscap rotation
single arm seated Cuban rotation into press

dip shrug - 5sec hold + 3 reps, BW x 20 reps with a pause at bottom, and hold at top on each rep

Lat machine situp
warmup - each rep progressively lower - 3 secs rest between each BWx12
BW+15lbs x 3, BW+25lbs x 8 paused middle and bottom

Leg lowering Ab exercise - slow tempo x 8
very easy ---> strong abs


Stretching for whole body
 
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feeling stale and sapped out

sore and achey everywhere, especially my hamstring/glutes and calves, and upper back/cuffs/sub-scaps and arms

25 min walk for active recovery today
 
Saturday 16th August - Micro Cycle 9 - Week 5 - Day 2

I went to the BBall court I mentioned earlier in the week today. It's right next to a Church as seen in this video on YouTube by some guy
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=evpIib9Q-X4
Those guys are pretty tall, 6'5" or so, and it turns out that rim is lower than regulation :)
This court has 4 rims, the main one near the road as seen above, is like 9'10" and then hangs down to 9'9.5" at the front. The one at the back is way higher like 10'1".

Court is dusty, a little uneven and doesn't have a good vibe for practising, but jumping on it is ok. It's secluded and was empty until just before I left, where some kids started to arrive.

Bodyweight = 87.5kg 192.5lbs in shorts and t-shirt

Outdoor BBall court - one next to Church - Nike Free 7.0 Trainer


1 hour total

1) did some dribbling, shooting, moves and low/medium intensity jumps for 30 mins

2) did max effort jumps of all types for another 30 mins, resting about a 30secs - 1.5min between jumps

I played on the lower side near the road. Freaking priests across the road scoping me out :)

Jumps were ok, kinda low considering the height of the rim 9'10" to 9'9.95" at the front, I could touch it off a step and grab it pretty easily off a short slow run. Would have expected to get much higher on it though.
Quite a big difference between my standing and running jump today. Around 5 inches, that's a lot more than usual. More due to my standing jump being really low today. I'm using my hamstring more to jump now as well - so that might be a reason as well. They were getting quite achey today, compared to more quads before. Thanks to low bar squatting me thinks, which hammer and strengthen my hammies better than anything else.

I was also able to touch my head on the net off a short run - bottom of it was around 8'4", so I could touch 8'5"- 8'6" with my head. Around a 32 inch jump. Still 2 inches down from where I was 3 weeks back :(
Which means my vertical jump was 27.5 inches today. Still fatigued.
Should be jumping 30-31 inches now.

My feet and ankles take a pounding. Either it's the Nike Free or my feet and lower legs are weak, maybe I need to start doing some calf work etc....
 
Sunday 17th August 2008

Late night, so not much quality sleep. Feel pretty beat up, mostly in my upper body/back, from my part time job, and my foot muscles/ankles from BBall.

Waist is 34 inches and bodyweight at 87.8kg 192.9lbs.

damn waist is up 0.5 inch and my weight is up too - getting after - time to cut back down! Maybe another reason why my hops are down. Been eating a lot of cheese, that will have to be cut way back....

25 min walk for active recovery and foam rolling/release work for some upper body areas

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Next week I have a Wedding to go to on Saturday, so no BBall/jumping then. Will do it on Sunday, which I might start doing from now on. I'm always pretty tired after my part time job on Saturday mornings. So I might Bball and jump much better on Sundays, and there are no netball games then, so I can go to my fav outdoor court complex.

That means I will have to shift my Weights session to Wednesday, from Tuesday - not really keen on that, but I have no choice.
 
Nice quote from that guy (Alan Barch Jr aka SquatDR aka AC) the 5'9" 210lb guy with the 46-49 inch vertical jump. Not only did he improve his hops from average to one of the best in the world, he also got a lot faster, just by getting stronger and practising jumping/sprinting

Goes to show, if your not born with it, you can still get there by working hard!

---

in response to a pm i received:

so i started off by sprinting for the first time as a junior in college at age 20. i didnt sprint in highschool and hadnt flat our ran fast in a long time outside of playing bsaketball. i trained for size and vertical jump, but not speed.

so when i started sprinting, quite frankly i sucked. it bothered me so much to the point that i was determined to be fast. at that time i was a 7.5 60 meter guy and i thought 7.2 was fast. so i busted my ass and ran 7.2 the next year. then i thought 7.0 flat was fast, came back and was overtrained and ran 7.3.

so at this point people are telling me that i am slow, and that you are either fast or not. that pissed me off. trained on my own for a two years outdoors in snow and never was healthy, but managed to run small pr's. then i ran a 7 flat with the flu. then i started running much faster. why? well i think i always had it in me, i just never showed it. the paralysis by analysis is my best explaination. that and my technique was worse than any human being i had ever seen. threw countless hours of trying to fix it (it still needs work) it improved, but i was still thinking too much.

so finally, after advice from a good friend who told me to shut the brain off, i started running fast. then confidence starts going, then you start seeing the results of all those ice baths, contrast showers, stretching, foam rolling, training on the snowy track by myself etc kicking in, which reinforces you to do that more.

i recently trained with a 10.22 sprinter, who used to beat me by over a second and to 60 meters i beat him, every time. my mind set is "shut the f*ck up and run" and it works, as long as technique is reasonably good.

my personal best timed with a speed trap on an outdoor 60 meters is 6.59 with the 10.22 guy as my competition and that was with SLOOOOOOOW reaction time factored in but also some tailwind as well. i just had a groin tweak but i have been extra careful and i am excited to get back to see where i am at.

personal bests speed traped time are 1.68 sec to 10m, 3.76 to 30m, 6.62 to 60m with reation time (the first two are with no reaction time).
so all in all, i did something, struggled, pushed threw it, was told i couldnt do it, did it anyway while training by myself outside in the snow, and got WAY faster, and with all that said, i got more in the tank! train hard.
 
Tuesday 19th August - Micro Cycle 9 - Week 6 - Day 1 - Workout B Heavy

Not a bad workout. I had a feeling I would be stronger, just by how I felt internally and how my legs felt, and I was right :)
Warm ups and skipping felt ace as well. Didn't feel too tired on the way home as well.

Changed my setup up a little, added some exercises and removed a few - will do those on the other workout in a week's time.
Added the calf raises to strengthen my feet and lower legs. They are week, foot muscles/ankles/calves keep getting trashed up on my BBall/Jumps sessions

Bodyweight is up from a pre workout meal and holding water.

Body weight at gym - 197.5lbs in winter clothing
Workout time - 1.5 hours
Workout rating - 8/10

General warm up -

3 min moderate speed walk on treadmill
Eric Cressey foam roll routine

1 set each of my usual dynamic mobility exercises
behind the neck band pull aparts - green mini-band help 3/4 length 2x8
lateral deep lunge x8
situp complex on swiss ball
single leg RDL mobility + psoas activation walk
2 short runs of low effort prime times (stiff legged runs)

A few sets of hops in place - 2 legged and then single legged
3x10 seconds rope skipping - 2 legged then 5 reps single leg, each leg, then alternating legs - 30secs rest

45lb oly bar complex - slow clean pull, GM onto toes, high hang powerclean, military press - 5 reps each


Low bar Full Back Squats - shoulder width stance - Oly Shoes - no Belt


warmups - 45 seconds rest between double sets on the same weight. Then 2-3min rest between each weight increase

in Nike Free 5.0 trainer - 95x4, x2, 135lbs 2x2, 185lbs x2, switched to oly shoes 205x2, 225x2, 255x1, 285x1, 315 x 2 sec support

315lbs x 6 (+20lbs -1 rep)--> gut busting grind on last rep

Been thinking about 315lbs all week, wasn't sure if I would just go for 305x7 or hit 315lbs and hope for at least 5 reps.
The warmup single with 285lbs felt heavy as hell, which didn't do my confidence any help, but the 315lb support helped. And then I cranked 6 reps with 315lbs! Sweet. Would have gotten 305x7 for a 10lb gain from 2 weeks ago.

I think this is the best relative strength I've ever had. And only squatting once a week :0
Rep calculator puts my max at 365lbs. Up 10lbs and damn close double bodyweight. Enough strength for a 31-32 inch vertical jump now I think, and 35-36 from a run.

Video of the main 315x6 set
YouTube - 19th August 2008 - Low Bar Full Squat 315lbs x 6


rested 10 mins before moving on


Single leg kneeling Deadlift

1.5 mins rest between each side
- 2 sec pause at bottom - BW x 5, 2x55lb dumbbells x 8 (+10lbs)

Pretty hard, but better than last time.


Upper body/shoulder prehab stuff

Low incline dumbell face pull to forehead - elbows at 90 degrees, palms facing with a hold at top - 2x2kg x 3, 2x4kg dumbbells x 12 (2-3sec rest between each rep)

close grip triangle Push up on floor - paused top and bottom x 18 (+1 rep)

6kg dumbell x12 (2-3sec rest between each rep)
single arm face down on bench subscap rotation - hold at top


Side Plank hold warmup - supported leg raises x 8

1 min 10 secs each side - up 15 secs


Single leg standing calf raise machine

warmup - BWx5, 2 plates x 3

1.5 mins rest between each side
1 rep + 20 sec ISO hold at top x 3 plates

shakey, left leg is much weaker than my right. And the left happens to be my layup leg too....
felt pretty shakey
 
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crap sleep last night, went to be bed later, and then I woke up early.... grrr
feel pretty sapped and slightly drained, but not like before.
Achey all over - glutes really sore, followed by my calves and upper back. Hammies and quads not as sore as I expected

25 min walk for active recovery today
 
Size and strength article - makes a lot of sense to me
The Relationship Between Size and Strength, Part 1

gain raw material ( muscle mass ) --> peak strength until gains run out for that amount of muscle mass -->repeat - which in turn allows you to gain even more muscle mass

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It always bugs me when someone says that there is no relationship between size and strength. It’s bugged me since I took up weight training 36 years ago. They said it back then and they’re still saying it. In this article, I’m going to lay this myth to rest and explain the true relationship between size and strength. In the process, I will explain why it is absolutely critical that you skinny bastards incorporate bodybuilding training methods into your routines if you aren’t gaining muscle mass by powerlifting. First, here’s a little background.

I took up weight training after getting my ass kicked. A bully from another neighborhood beat the crap out of me, and it was a major turning point in my life. If you’ve ever had your face punched while the back of your head was against a wall or the pavement, you know it’s like two punches for the price of one. The first impact is against your face. The second comes from the back of your head hitting the street. I made up my mind that that wasn’t going to happen again and began a lifelong quest to get bigger and stronger. To say I was motivated is an understatement.

I started working out in my basement and reading the bodybuilding magazines that were available in the early 1970s. When I turned 18, I joined the first bodybuilding gym on Long Island called Futureman. We used every intensity technique known to man, and I was chronically overtrained.

After several years of bodybuilding, I weighed 207 lbs at a height of just over six feet, and my walking around weight was around 183–185 lbs. So we’re talking about a gain of roughly 20–23 lbs of muscle mass on a medium weight bone structure.

The strength and size gains stopped when I reached 207 lbs. After several years of overtraining and zero gains, I decided to try powerlifting and started reading Powerlifting USA, which was then in its early days. My goals were simple—increase my strength and gain more muscle mass.

I put together a powerlifting routine and stuck with that over a period of around five years. This routine was made up of low rep narrow stance back squats, front squats, partial squats, deadlifts, stiff-leg deadlifts, partial deadlifts, weighted chins, pull-downs, bench presses, close grip bench presses, weighted dips, partial benches, barbell rows, barbell curls, push-downs, lying triceps extensions, and wrist curls. All of the dinky little bodybuilding exercises were cut out to conserve energy/recovery ability for the big lifts. I didn’t take any drugs of any kind, and I used few supplements. I figured that with the combination of basic exercises, heavy weights, and fewer sets I would start gaining size and weight again. I really wanted to get to 225 lbs.

After just a couple years on this routine, my strength went up quite a bit. These were my best raw lifts:

Bench press, 355 X 5, 400 X 1
Dips, 155 X 5
Chins, 100 X 5
Rows, 275 X 5
Deadlift, 500 X 5
Stiff leg deadlift, 440 X 5
Squat, 440 X 5
Wrist curls, 185 X 5
However, here’s the kicker. My weight didn’t increase at all! It stayed exactly the same. Then my lifts hit a plateau. I continued on this routine and started to pull muscles. I hurt my quads, lower back, traps, and elbows. Eventually, the weights started to drop, and I never returned to this program. I went back to a version of my old bodybuilding routine using moderate weights. My strength dropped, but my weight stayed exactly the same.

My experience left me confused. I couldn’t make sense of what happened and why I failed to get any bigger. It was hard for me to believe that I had reached the limits of my “genetic potential” at 207 lbs, especially because my legs were pretty skinny. I knew my experience wasn’t unique because I had a training partner who matched me lift for lift and made identical strength gains. He also failed to gain a pound. He started the program at 217 lbs and ended at 217 lbs.

Over time, I realized that what happened to me and my training partner actually answered many questions I had about the relationship between muscular size/muscle mass and strength. More importantly, I realized why I failed to gain weight and what I could have done to keep the gains coming. Skinny bastards, listen up…

I have listed a series of “lessons” or principles that I learned from my experience that apply to bodybuilding and powerlifting/strength training. Some of them appear to contradict one another at first glance. However, they are all truisms nonetheless. If you keep them in mind, they will help you to design a program that will enable you to achieve the results you’re looking for.

Here it goes…

Lesson #1

Intense bodybuilding training with sub-maximal poundage can increase size and strength but will not generally develop maximal strength. Obvious, right? This is where we start, and it’s important that we all agree that it is possible for some people to develop significant muscle mass without handling (or being able to handle) “heavy”/maximal poundage. This principle is beyond dispute. Bodybuilders can develop muscle mass using training methods and exercises that no strength athlete would ever consider using. Some examples include high rep sets, pre-exhaustion, forced reps, negative reps, negative accentuated reps, training to failure, drop sets, giant sets, supersets, and training with little or no rest between sets. All of these methods increase the “intensity” of the exercises and produce muscle mass gains even though many of them actually reduce the amount of weight that can be used.

Former Mr. A., Steve Michalik, has said many times that exercise poundage is irrelevant, and he can induce muscle mass gains with any poundage. All that matters is the intensity of the exercise. Many people use this as a jumping off point to make the argument that there is no relationship between size and strength. This argument represents sloppy thinking. Let’s keep going.

Lesson #2

By using powerlifting training methods, it is possible to dramatically increase the strength of muscle mass that was developed through bodybuilding with light/moderate weights. Read that again. This means that a person who develops muscle mass through bodybuilding with moderate poundage can turn to powerlifting and gain significant strength in existing muscle mass.

Many people have major problems with what I just wrote. They think that if a person develops their body using light weights in a bodybuilding routine, the weights they are using reflect their actual powerlifting potential. This is flat wrong. A bodybuilder’s large muscles may possess a lot of power potential that is untapped because of the way he/she trains. A big bodybuilder can change over to powerlifting and dramatically increase the maximal strength of his/her “existing” muscle mass using powerlifting techniques. This has been shown over and over again.

Does this mean that all bodybuilders with heavy muscle mass can be strong by powerlifting standards if they train like powerlifters? Bad question. What it means is this. If we took a group of big bodybuilders and dropped them at the Westside Barbell Club and Louie Simmons trained them, they would probably all experience dramatic increases in their maximal strength. Some would be as strong as Elite powerlifters and some wouldn’t. However, their individual maximal strength limits would increase.

The practical ramification of what I just wrote is this. A person can use bodybuilding with sub-maximal weights to increase their muscle mass and then use powerlifting methods to increase the maximal strength of that mass. Do you agree with that statement?

Lesson # 3

Some people who switch over to powerlifting from bodybuilding do not get bigger even though they are getting stronger. What happens to these people is that they tap into the maximal strength “potential” of the mass they developed through their bodybuilding training. This idea bothers people. They think that if I was one size when I was benching 275 lbs for reps while using a ton of bodybuilding exercises, I will be much bigger when I switch to powerlifting and bench 350 lbs for reps. Not necessarily! You may not be any bigger even though the poundage you are using is heavier. The muscle mass you developed is increasing in strength up to its full potential and may not increase in size.

This is hard for people to believe, but it is absolutely true. Bodybuilding training that produces muscle mass gains actually retards maximal strength development. Switch a person who has trained on a bodybuilding system to a powerlifting system and they can increase maximal strength without gaining additional mass.

Lesson # 4

The amount of muscle mass you carry imposes a “ceiling” on your maximal strength. To continually increase maximal strength, most people must increase their muscle mass. What does this mean? I gained 23 lbs through bodybuilding. I turned to powerlifting and experienced significant strength gains but no muscle mass gains. Then the strength gains stopped.

In my opinion, I tapped out the strength potential of that 23-lb muscle mass gain when I switched over to powerlifting, and I was about as strong as that muscle mass would allow. Looking back, I do not think I could have gained much more strength without gaining more muscle mass. Why is this?

First, I am not a naturally strong person. Some people are born with superhuman strength. I have trained with some of them, and I am not one of those people. So for me, my strength increases come from muscle mass increases. And my 23-lb mass gain was not that great for a guy who is over six feet tall.

Take a look at the training logs of some of the guys who write for EliteFTS.com. I’m going to pick on Matt K for a minute. Matt’s extraordinary training lifts are listed in his training log. They are unbelievable, and they blow my training lifts away. However, consider Matt’s stats for a moment. Ask yourself, “How tall is Matt? How big is his frame? What is his untrained walking around weight?” His present weight is around a lean 250 lbs. Matt possesses far more muscle mass than I did, and every pound of Matt’s muscle mass increases his strength potential.

Consider bodybuilding great Franco Colombu. Here was a guy who was around five feet, five inches, possibly shorter. His walking around weight? Maybe 130 lbs? Born with superhuman strength, he stepped onto the stage at the Felt Forum in New York City on a night that he was competing for Mr. Olympia and deadlifted over 700 lbs for reps! I was there to see it. He gained up to 175–180 lbs in competition form. That’s a muscle mass gain of 45–50 lbs on a small frame. That’s a lot of muscle mass on a small guy with way above average strength potential.

My starting strength? Average. My muscle mass gain? 23 lbs at a height of over six feet tall. How much total weight would I have to gain in order to make muscle mass gains that were proportionate to Matt or Franco? 70 lbs? More? How strong would I be if I could achieve those gains? Do you think it would be possible for me to deadlift 700 lbs if I gained another 40–50 lbs of muscle mass? Maybe.

Stay tuned for part two!
 
Sunday 24th August 2008

Wedding yesterday - 8 hours of sitting on your ass traveling to and back, and at the reception - what a waste of time! And especially those tardy folks on one side of the hall, who decide to turn up late and delay the whole thing 2 hours!!!

Freaking legs/glutes were achey from sitting in the car and reception for so long :(

So Late night, crap asleep, and lots of bad food and drinking....

Don't feel too bad - but not that fresh. Without the BBall yesterday, I don't feel so trashed up from my part time job yesterday morning. A little achey all over, but no major DOMS.

Waist is 34 inches and bodyweight at 88.5kg 194.7lbs

Waist about the same but bodyweight up a ton - hope it's all food and water weight!

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Will need to foam roll to loosen up before I head off to BBall/jump today for obvious reasons.
If things go well today, I will probably keep BBall/Jumps on Sunday from now on. And shift the weights from Tuesday to Wednesday
 
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