MataUm said:
actually there are people that squat 400 lbs and have small legs. They are called Olympic lifters. Go take a look at them.
Truly, nothing personal man, but I have several problems with this reasoning.
1--It is a hasty generalization*:
"If a few Olympic lifters have 'small' legs, and these lifters train a certain way, then said training doesn't yield size gains."
That's really jumping the gun. You're looking at a small sampling of people, then assuming the same is true of the majority.
An analogy:
Jeffrey Dahmer was a serial killer. He ate his victims.
Therefore, serial killers eat their victims.
BZZZZZZZZZZZZT. He was one uber-sicko among sickos, but most serial killers, evil fucks that they were, didn't EAT their victims. Asshole Dahmer was an exception to the rule (may he rot in Hell).
2--It is a false dichotomy*:
"Either you train like an Olympic lifter and have 'small' legs, or you train like a bodybuilder/with higher TUTs and get 'bigger' legs."
In other words, why are you ignoring
other factors that affect growth, like diet and genetics?
(*You can find a crude summary of these informal fallacies here:
http://www.podmonkeyx.com/LogicalFallacies.asp. If you want to know more about fallacies in general, just give me a shout...they're infinitely useful.)
3--Do you have any specific examples of these small-legged Olympic lifters?
I don't want to be a total dick, but I've learned to not simply take people's word when an argument hinges upon these sorts of premises...too often something that
seems superficially acceptable isn't.
4--"Small legs" seems arbitrary. How do you define "small," and relative to what, exactly? To a certain bodybuilder's legs?
5--How do you explain the multitude of Olympic lifters who don't have "small" thighs? (They exist, don't they?) Do they train differently than the people you're thinking of?
Also:
Highly doubtful. Manipulation of diet won't accomplish that much.
Again, with respects, I have to ask...are you joking? For that matter, what does "that much" entail?
Think about what this would mean. It'd mean that growth occurs irrespective of energy requirements, so a person who eats maintenance-level calories and <80g of protein daily could grow at a rate comparable to someone who eats a large kcal surplus and >2g/kilo bodyweight of protein, if all other things are equal.
We know that ain't the case.
Again, however, let's not limit our focus to training OR diet: genetics play the biggest role in whether or not someone can develop appreciable strength and/or size. I'd argue that the small Olympic guys you're thinking of are simply not inclined to have big thighs, regardless of how they trained.