As a bonus, if I am decisively proven wrong, I will go directly to my gym and proceed to do 5 sets of 10 lb hammer curls sitting on a swiss ball while wearing my belt and using grip straps and chalk.
B-
Stoke up the fire boys, here it comes...
Standing Overhead Barbell Press
The bench press, is a distant 2nd.
Prove me wrong. I triple dog dare you.
There, I put it out there like a friggin man, and have now donned my fire retardant suit. Bring it.
B-
We counting deads for upper body?
I would say third.
Personally I think inclines are a better mass builder for chest and anterior deltoid.
We counting deads for upper body?
I would say third.
Personally I think inclines are a better mass builder for chest and anterior deltoid.
LMFAO bro!!!
Good thread.
It really may depend on what your physique is lacking. If you have blasting delts and a weak chest, I'd put prority on the chest press as being the "best". If you have a thick chest, and puney delts, i'd go with the OHP as being the "best" for you. Also, the context of your goals makes a difference. If you are a powerlifter, maybe a certain lift of the 2 weakens your overall score too much. And BBing, well same thing.
Make yor case first too bro. You said what you think, now tell us why. THat's what gets the debate going.
If you say something is better than something else, nobody has anything to debate if you don't present your reasoning.
will you be sitting in a squat rack while doing these curls?
Of course to stay healthy and injury free we must balance out the strength of opposing muscle groups so this is hypothetical in the extreme.
Let's say we're only concerned with muscle hypertophy and nothing else. Which upper body exercise done to the exclusion of all others would build the most amount of muscle on the upper body?
I would say the BB bent over row would build more than the overhead press or bench press considering the volume of the back muscles in comparison to the pecs and delts.
For musle mass exclusively I'd go 1st: Bent over row, 2nd Bench press, 3rd overhead press.
What about potential for injuries?
I'd give first place to overhead press, 2nd: Bent over row and consider the safest of the 3 to be bench press.
Best upper body pressing lifts. In this order. I dare you to disagree......
1. Standing Barbell OHP
2. Dips
3. Barbell Bench Press/Barbell Incline Press tie
Flat bench has cause more shoulder injuries than any other lift ever.
What about potential for injuries?
I'd give first place to overhead press, 2nd: Bent over row and consider the safest of the 3 to be bench press.
Disagree completely, UNLESS you're referring to injuries due to technical errors. Bench is the easiest to not screw up on, but assuming all three done with perfect form, I'd reverse your order.
In a lot of ways I agree. Especially with the mass gains from the bent over rows. But the title is the most complete upper body single exercise. And in this case complete means the complete upper body.
B-
UNLESS you're referring to injuries due to technical errors.
Disagree completely, UNLESS you're referring to injuries due to technical errors. Bench is the easiest to not screw up on, but assuming all three done with perfect form, I'd reverse your order.
funfun said:That's exactly what I'm talking about. The exercises easiest to screw up on are more likely to cause injury to the vast majority of lifters. BB bent over rows and overhead presses are pretty commonly screwed up in very damaging ways. A lower back injury is probably not far off when these are done badly, and a low back injury is one of the worst any lifter could wish for.
I find myself agreeing with funfun again.
1. Shoulder injuries can result from dropping the bar too high on the chest
2. shoulder injuries can result from the elbows not being tucked into the body (45 degrees) when lowering the bar
Due to orthopedic issues with the shoulder joint itself it may be that a person may need to adjust their form on one side or the other. The easy solution is just to use dumbells. As I've said before, inclining the body upwards seems to alleviate some of the rotators cuff tendons especially from number 1
It's an assumption to say that form is the reason why a person gets injuries from bench press
You misread my post. I said that bench is the easiest to not get injured on because of form.
The reason I don't like using that qualification is just because any exercise is dangerous with improper form. I get what you're saying, though, and I was just trying to make the point that bench can lead to shoulder dysfunction even when done with good form.
I have to say the clean and press. What upper body muscle is left out the clean and press?
When I was a young guy, I used to power clean until the cows came home. It was my favourite movement. I never saw any discernable development from it other than a slight improvement in my traps.
The problem is that it's a technique intensive high speed movement...pretty much the fastest one of all. I don't believe it has much place in a bodybuilder's routine. As Bill Starr mentioned in his article above, it sets up a strong position from which to press, so if a person is specializing in the military press it may have some value.
Yep I'm working on my OHP and I always power clean the bar.
And since this is the most COMPLETE upper body exercise, deadlifts should be the winner targeting shoulders, back/traps and arms(forearm/bis) and stimulating the most growth.
Do you clean it once and then press, or clean and press every rep?
Properly performed Bulgarian dips on gymnastic rings or iron cross progressions.
Warning you right now to be careful doing them European style especially if you don't regularly do them. Today I decided to try it and kept going up in weight until I went back a little to far and heard my back pop. That's when I dropped one side on my left shoulder and tripped backward, but thank god I caught myself. Right now my back hurts fairly bad and I just hope it doesn't stop legs tomorrow.
When you think about it, there's really no point being obsessed with how much weight you can press. Why bother doing the European style presses which were used in contests back in the 70's. It's nothing more than nostalgia from a bygone era.
Leave the ego at home when you train and be sensible about what you're doing. A strict muscle press makes more sense and is a lot safer than a technique driven competition style lift that hasn't been used for 30 years.
They don't have any use in bodybuilding, powerlifting or olympic lifting.
Why bother doing power cleans either if your never going to compete, and they could come in handy in a strong man competition?
I don't bother with power cleans. I gave them up years ago.
Well there are lots of people who do and I think that doing anything that allows you to add more weight will help your overall strength.
Adding weight in a power movement is usually more about improving techniqe than adding pure strength. You can add weight in a more controlled fashion by doing pure strength movements and eliminate some risk of injury.
If you have no use in competition for power movements (power cleans, snatches, european style military presses etc), why do them?
The first part in bold is false. Improving weight in power cleans will mean strength increases in legs,back and shoulder muscles.
Anyway improving explosiveness through pwoer movements carries over in other sports related activities such as jumping.
The first part in bold is false. Improving weight in power cleans will mean strength increases in legs,back and shoulder muscles.
Anyway improving explosiveness through pwoer movements carries over in other sports related activities such as jumping.
Deadlifts work your lower back, middle back, lats, traps, biceps, shoulders, abs, calves, hamstrings, quads, forearms, neck, chest...
How the heck does your exercise claim to do more than that?
If you read the bold comment again, you'll see the two disclaimers in there. ie. "usually" (not always) and "more about" (not exclusively).
In this thread we're mainly talking about presses, and in this case I was mainly refering to the European press as used in competition back in the 1970's and explained in detail by Bill Starr. Sorry, I should have made that clearer.
Anyway, you mentioned power cleans to demonstate that I was wrong, so let's discuss them briefly. You'll add some strength to the back, legs and shoulders, but only explosive strength specific to explosive power movements. These could help in certain athletic movements, sure, but you're not going to see anyone squating, deadlifting or pressing more from doing power cleans.
Being a bodybuilding forum with a powerlifting following, I'm not speaking about advantages specific to other sports. Other sports will have their own forums with advice on how to improve strength specific to those sports. Of course power cleans will be useful in other sports. I'm not disputing that.
If you read the bold comment again, you'll see the two disclaimers in there. ie. "usually" (not always) and "more about" (not exclusively).
In this thread we're mainly talking about presses, and in this case I was mainly refering to the European press as used in competition back in the 1970's and explained in detail by Bill Starr. Sorry, I should have made that clearer.
Anyway, you mentioned power cleans to demonstate that I was wrong, so let's discuss them briefly. You'll add some strength to the back, legs and shoulders, but only explosive strength specific to explosive power movements. These could help in certain athletic movements, sure, but you're not going to see anyone squating, deadlifting or pressing more from doing power cleans.
Being a bodybuilding forum with a powerlifting following, I'm not speaking about advantages specific to other sports. Other sports will have their own forums with advice on how to improve strength specific to those sports. Of course power cleans will be useful in other sports. I'm not disputing that.
As soon as you said, "If you have no use in competition for power movements (power cleans, snatches, european style military presses etc), why do them?", you changed at least what I was talking about. You asked a question so I'm simply answering that question.
Explosive strength would mean increased fast twitch muscle fibers which would transfer over to other movements. I guarantee you that every Olympic Lifter could out deadlift or squat almost anyone on the forums if not everyone. They could also out jump anyone so I don't see how you could say it doesn't help the other 3 lifts. Not only does it do that, but it improves stamina. Also like gjohnson5 said this isn't specifically a body building forum. It is a body building - weight lifting forum which doesn't mean just body building.
I have absolutely no idea where the first point in bold comes into this discussion. If you want to squat more , then should do squats. If you want to deadlift more , then you should do deads Your statement is like saying you should use a hammer to tighten bolts. I't not the tool for the job....
Secondly, What do you mean a bodybuilding forum? This isnt bodybuilding.com and this is the weight lifting forum...
Earlier you said that power cleans increase strength in the legs. The logical extension of that claim is that cleans would therefore improve your squat/deadlift. Of course, we know that that is not true.
I don't see how one extends a statement like building leg strength from one exercise means X amount of pounds added onto your squat. Makes no sense due to the amount of muscles in the leg and their uses. But I don't think you can say building leg strength from power movements will not add strength in squats without saying power movements don't add leg strength
But I would disagree with that if that what your trying to say
I can't tell if you're intentionally being ambiguous in your phrasing, or if you don't understand the difference between absolute strength and explosive strength.
All I know is that I have yet had my challenge met and I am not sitting on the swiss ball doing curls in the squat rack chalked up with gloves and grip straps.
I originally started this thread on 1/30. Here we are 7 days later, and nuttin'.
I guess the SOHP is the best overall.
I rock!
Now all participants in this thread (except me of course) must wear their lift belts and knee wraps while riding the recumbent stationary bike at the gym and while doing cable pulldowns for one week.
B-
All I know is that I have yet had my challenge met and I am not sitting on the swiss ball doing curls in the squat rack chalked up with gloves and grip straps.
I originally started this thread on 1/30. Here we are 7 days later, and nuttin'.
I guess the SOHP is the best overall.
I rock!
Now all participants in this thread (except me of course) must wear their lift belts and knee wraps while riding the recumbent stationary bike at the gym and while doing cable pulldowns for one week.
B-

But I agreed wit you....
Does that mean I still have to wear my cut-off jean shorts, sleeveless flannel, fanny pack, and work boots, while I do concentration curls on the swiss ball in the squat rack?![]()
I'm gonna put my two cents on here.
I don't agree that OHP is the most COMPLETE upper body exercise. Which is what I believe is being argued here. OHP works the entire shoulder, a little bit of upper chest, the core, and lower back.
Then there is the Clean and Press. Which is technically one single exercise. It works the shoulders, chest, ENTIRE back, traps, ENTIRE core, and on the deadlift phase you are even workin the entire arms. Nothing is being missed by the clean and press.
How can an argument be made that the OHP is more complete than the Clean and Press when an OHP is essentially just a portion of the lift? Not only that but when Clean and Pressing there is more weight on the bar...
I think the TS needs to get his swiss ball ready. I'm gonna go ahead and request it to be done in the squat rack with a spotter.

I don't think anyone will ever agree, so I'm just glad the gym I work out at doesn't have swiss balls. I also don't have knee wraps or a belt and did you mean while doing cable pull downs? I would have to unbolt the bike from the floor and some how get it in a tiny room lol.
lockdownd7 - I don't really understand what you are saying because because power = strength x speed. I could agree that they don't really add muscle mass, but if you are already big or want to stay in a weight class they will definitely help. I also don't see how anyone could disagree that they don't help you coming out of the bottom on deads.
It's ok. Maybe you'll understand some day.
Setting aside the fact that the clean is a specific movement with different muscular recruitment and firing patterns than the squat/deadlift, I've got to reiterate that cleans will not improve strength! Your own bastardized simplification/misapplication of the power equation recognizes that strength is a component of power! Not the other way around!
Do cleans increase power? In the clean movement, yes. But this has less to do with improvements in strength or speed as it does with profiency of the movement. In other words....like anything else, the best way to demonstrate power in an activity is to do that specific activity. That's why your clean increases when you do cleans. Is there transferrance to other movements? Yes, obviously. But is that in the form of increased strength? NO!
Earlier you mentioned olympic lifters, insinuating that their strength is due to their impressive clean poundages. Friend, this is completely bass-ackwards! It is their strength that enables them to clean as much as they do, not the other way around.
What exactly it's power then? And the best way to demonstrate power in an activity is by doing that specific activity... of course it is... how the hell would I know if you have power if you aren't DEMONSTRATING it, maybe you wanted to say INCREASING or another word...
On short term the tranferrance from cleans to other movements it will surely be newly aquired neurological efficiency, but on long term I must say that cleans will have a carry over effect in the form of strength as well, that's why some powerlifting programs have it.
About the oly lifters, it's not only their strength that allows them to lift the way they do, you know that speed and acceleration are part of the equation too.
Congrats...you found a typo. Consider me impressed by your amazing proofreading skills.
Answer me this: if cleans increase strength, then all you'd ever have to do to increase strength was cleans. According to your perspective, that should work. If strength is a function of speed, then you should be able to simply use speed work to continually increase your strength. Umm...no.
Of course. But what you're missing is that you can't accelerate with a load you don't have the strength to lift.
Strength is the ability of the muscle to generate tension. That's it. Cleans will help you develop tension more rapidly, but they will not help you develop more total tension. That is the clear distinction. If you can't understand that strength, as a component of power, is not reliant on power, well I just don't what to tell you! It's like saying that ham is made up of a ham and cheese sandwich!
The typo was that I said "demonstrate" instead of "increase". You'll have to make that change yourself when you print the hard copy to study later...I can't be bothered to go back and change it.I didn't find a typo, basically with that sentence you said nothing, that's why I called you out.
Now we get to the crux of the issue. I was not addressing the usefulness of cleans, I was addressing your bastardization of terminology and lack of comprehension of the formulas you keep espousing.By all means don't think I'm saying that cleans are the holy grail of weightlifting. I defend them as part of a strength program.
What are you talking about? Your examples hold no relevance to the point I was making and show a lack of reading comprehension. Find your max on whatever lift. Now put 110% that 1RM on the bar. Accelerate that load. Have fun, go to town.Lol this sentence has flaws... yes I can push presses, power cleans, snatches... I can use a bigger weight through inercia, momentum, after that it's all acceleration with a weight I couldn't normally lift and it's what oly lifters do they learn to accelerate a weight they can't "muscle" up, sure they work they strength as part of the whole process.
No sir, strength it's the ability to generate as much force as possible with no concern for the factor of time, it's not all about the muscle( there's the tendons and bones abilities too... you know stuff like that)
Power= work divided by time.
And like I said... cleans have helped powerlifters, olympic lifters, strongmen etc, all of them are wrong now and should just throw away the cleans...
Talking about ham MEATHEAD!!!
Here is one website that proves my point:
Box Squat vs. Power Clean Debate Part I: A Strength Training and Powerlifting article from Dragon Door Publications
I'll find more later because I have read many WSB articles on this and if I remember correctly they agreed with what I'm saying. However I do agree that it is not the best, but it definitely builds strength and I don't see how you could say it doesn't. If it doesn't my whole body is sore for no reason then. Are you saying you don't agree that WSB's D.E. day carries over to other movements?
The typo was that I said "demonstrate" instead of "increase". You'll have to make that change yourself when you print the hard copy to study later...I can't be bothered to go back and change it.
Now we get to the crux of the issue. I was not addressing the usefulness of cleans, I was addressing your bastardization of terminology and lack of comprehension of the formulas you keep espousing.
What are you talking about? Your examples hold no relevance to the point I was making and show a lack of reading comprehension. Find your max on whatever lift. Now put 110% that 1RM on the bar. Accelerate that load. Have fun, go to town.
Again, what the hell are you talking about? If we're referring to the strength of a muscle, IT IS all about the muscle!
Congrats on regurgitating the basic power formula. Now if only we could work on that comprehension
And again, as for the usefulness of cleans, I'm not even addressing that. They have their purpose. That purpose is not to increase strength.
I've read that article. It's a nice article indeed. But, again, it doesn't hold relevance to the discussion at hand. I'm not debating or disagreeing with anything other than the lack of understanding in this thread. Since basic logic does not seem to be sufficient, let me offer an extended explanation:
Let's say a muscle is capable of exerting x amount of tension, irrespective of time. That's the absolute strength of the muscle. The problem is that often times, that "irrespective of time" qualification is pretty important, because in any given movement, there are time restrictions. So if we increase the speed at which that tension can be generated, through cleans or whatever, that tension becomes more applicable to faster activities, i.e. activities that have less time available in which to produce tension. That's why poundages increase through DE....it's not that you're generating more tension, it's that you're generating tension quicker.
Well well last time I checked powerlifters, strongmen, etc they all do cleans and why? Ultimate goal... STRENGTH it's all that matters to their sports. Period! I'm done... read all the books you want, study all the theories you want... know-it-all places are all full on EF. No vacancy.
You started with your sarcasm with other members so I felt compelled to analize your posts, glad I did so, while underpressure we can all see who is respectiful and who isn't.
Enjoy!
Lets see....
What hornet's nest can I stir up next???????
B-
I also give up because no matter what this will go on forever, and I can kinda see what your saying. However I still don't think your right and where did you get your information from? Give me some articles or books because I won't ever just trust 1 persons word not matter what. I almost want to just do power cleans for a month for lower body to prove it. If that would get my point across because obviously you need hard facts and I'm the same way.
Let's say a muscle is capable of exerting x amount of tension, irrespective of time. That's the absolute strength of the muscle. The problem is that often times, that "irrespective of time" qualification is pretty important, because in any given movement, there are time restrictions. So if we increase the speed at which that tension can be generated, through cleans or whatever, that tension becomes more applicable to faster activities, i.e. activities that have less time available in which to produce tension. That's why poundages increase through DE....it's not that you're generating more tension, it's that you're generating tension quicker.
needtogetaas - what is your opinion on the subject?
and the rest is history...I flat bench, I dead lift, I MP and I tea bag the floor.
I eat lots of protein and inject my ass a few times week.and the rest is history...
I flat bench, I dead lift, I MP and a tea bag the floor.
I eat lots of protein and inject my ass a few times week.and the rest is history...
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