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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.
spatts said:AS works wonders, huh?![]()
Never train in an explosive manner or sooner or latter you will suffer a big injury.
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.
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.