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question about pyramids

wannabeBB

New member
I'm wanting to switch up my routine. My husband suggested pyramiding such as 10, 8, 6.
Say for example I do 3 things for one muscle. Do I pyramid all three exercises? Or just the first?
 
I , like Dorian Yates and Mike Mentzer, are from the high intensity low volume school and we hate phyramiding and here is why........too much time and energy is wasted on sub max sets.

As a side.......most top powerlifters no longer phyramid, unless they are training with very low reps (sets of 3). When trying to build a combo of strength and power they stick to sets of 5 in everything. The weight is usually kept the same for the work sets and sometimes allowed to drop so the reps can be made on the following sets. Usually they kept the reps the same since they wait a long time between sets.
This is not to say that they do not warm up..they do...but not in the energy draining phyramiding style. Why put out so much energy with sub maximal sets....you will not be able to give your all in the final sets as a results of this.

You can train hard and you can train long but you cannot train hard and long.

Try this... three progressively heavier warm ups in the squat. Keep the reps LOW at around 5-6 and don't tire yourself out. Now you are warmed up....next pile on as much weight as you can for 12 reps. Work very hard and squat deep. Rest 3-4 minutes and then do it again with the same weight. Go like hell and you'll only manage about 10 reps. Some high intensity men reduce the weight a little for each successsive work set since rest time between sets is limited. Thats two works sets and plenty...

Next go over to the leg press machine and do at most one warm up set and then pile on the weight again and do the same thing as with the squat. Go deep and push very hard....the set will take a long time if you are working hard enough. The only reason I recommned a warm up set for the leg press is because if you go deep there is a different kind of stress on the low back than with squats.....the entire upper thighs are warmed up from the squats.Quads done now go home and rest them for a full week.


Most of the time I do not do any warm ups for the second exercise of a muscle group. For example after stiff leg deads I go right into my heaviest set of leg curls....after incline presses I go right into my heaviest set of hammer declines....after hammer curls I go right into my heaviest set of BB curls....after hamer overhead presses I go right into heavy DB laterals...the list goes on
I will do a warm up set with lying tri extensions, even if done after push downs, since this exercise is somewhat hard on the elbow joint. But If I do dips after push downs then I don't do a warm up set.

So you have to look at the exercise and also you have to consider if you are super prone to injury.Also one must also train VERY strictly and slowly. Never train in an explosive manner or sooner or latter you will suffer a big injury.


Dorian Yates got so damn strong that he was blowing tendons left right and center so in his latter years he did more warm ups just to be extra safe...but he NEVER phyramided.



I highly recommend the book "A Warriors Story" by Dorian Yates

RG
:)
 
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spatts said:
As a PL, pyramiding is not something I ever do. I think that most BB's do it though. I have to disagree about explosiveness, though. The entire Westside method, based on soviet training that is decades old, allows for a max effort and *dynamic* set of each move EVERY week. Perhaps you mean something else by explosiveness. I credit the majority of my muscle mass and strength to explosive training: Sprints, plyometrics, HIT/mod volume training, etc...

On the other hand, for dynamic effort, we do remain at a constant weight, as you mentioned, but NEVER do less/fail on subsequent sets.


One will never reach ones optimal level of strength without explosive training but optimal muscle mass attainment does not need explosiveness.

If you are very resistant to injury then explosive training may be just what the doctor ordered. Just be sure to keep your form absolutely perfect. AND there is a difference between explosiveness and cheating a heavy weight up.....I know you know that spatts ...I am addressing this to others.

I got to 250 fairly lean and very strong pounds at 5'10" without ever using explosive training. Grant it I would have attained higher totals on the big three if I spent time on explosive training, but maybe not ,since i could have been injured. I think a 750 squat, 450 bench, and 850 deadlift is good enough.

RG

RG:) :)
 
spatts said:
AS works wonders, huh? :lmao:



Damn it spatts you are always a step ahead of me. he he he

Yes, I will be the forst to say that I would have never gotten even close to that level of developement without juice.

For examle, the average man at 5'9 or 10" can get to a fairly lean 190 and with true totals of 300-400 and 500 respectively in the big three without juice....but that even takes at least 7 or 8 serious years and usually more.

If one wants to look at what the really big men that never used juice looked like, and the level of power they had, then one needs to leaf through the issues of IRONMAN from the 1950's and early 60's.......THEY WERE WAY SMALLER and nowhere near as strong and it has NOTHING to do with advancements in training.

The biggest classic BBer of the 50's and early 60's was Steve Reeves. Reg Park came on a little latter and so did Bill Pearl and they were both bigger than Reeves, and they both used juice, especially Parks.

Reeves had great genetics and the body of a god........ He had 18 inch arms...and a true 18 inch arm is very big...I always wondered what he would have attained to if he was born 40 years latter and had the benefit of steroids.

Personally I do not like the look of the super freaks of today, especilly the women.
:freak:

Now the body of Spatts ...now thats another story he he he ...don't tell my wife or she will kill me, especially since she has been on Superanabolin and is a bit grumpy.

RG:D
 
Never train in an explosive manner or sooner or latter you will suffer a big injury.

Never have. 01AUG02 will be 31 years of training in an explosive manner. Olympic lifting has a lower injury rate than powerlifting, both of which have a lower injury rate than bodybuilding and recreational lifting. This has been extensively documented, and there are several relevant studies which I have posted in their entirity on this board.


WRT pyramiding, it is a good way to tire yourself out before you get to serious weight. If you really wish to increase the volume with light weight lifting, make the last set a drop set or something.

"No serious strength athlete has used pyramid training since 1964." V.M. Zatsiorsky.
 
Arioch said:


Never have. 01AUG02 will be 31 years of training in an explosive manner. Olympic lifting has a lower injury rate than powerlifting, both of which have a lower injury rate than bodybuilding and recreational lifting. This has been extensively documented, and there are several relevant studies which I have posted in their entirity on this board.


WRT pyramiding, it is a good way to tire yourself out before you get to serious weight. If you really wish to increase the volume with light weight lifting, make the last set a drop set or something.

"No serious strength athlete has used pyramid training since 1964." V.M. Zatsiorsky.


Thanks and good points but I still think it is risky for some.

Also, I think the main reason that olympic lifters and powerlifters are injured less is because they train smarter than most BBers....they don't over train nearly as often because they train with relatively low volume and less days per week than most bbers.

RG

:)

Why do many bbers still phyramid anyway...WTF gives?
 
Don't ask me, I have no idea why most bodybuilders do anything.

But I also will admit that I know nothing about bodybuilding.
 
I guess I am blinded by what my two hero's have said...Mentzer and Yates were both very much against explosive training. They were of the opinion that it is just too risky and not needed for optimal muscular growth. Now powerlifting and olympic lifters obviously need to train in an explosive manner SOME of the time or they will never develope optimal power.

Bro would you agree that powerlifters and olympic lifters do not always train in an explosive manner and if so then why don't they.......could it be that explosive training done all the time is risky for them?
RG:)
 
spatts said:
YES we do train smarter than most....BUT...

I don't think we're injured less for the reasons you gave. We are PERFECT candidates for overtraining. I work out twice as hard and twice as often as I EVER did training "bb style." You'd think my CNS would be on strike. The difference is that I've mastered the art of RECOVERY.

If I didn't go out of my way each and every day to recover, I would overtrained, miserable, and injured.


Yes Spatts you use steroids he he he ... got ya:D
 
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