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Topics - Dreyth

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31
I'm doing RDL's right now to hit my hams harder and also because I feel that there's (currently) a less injury risk in doing them.

But I want a great, compound exercise that I'll be doing for years on end like the squat... I can't see myself doing 455lb RDL's in the future. I mean how safe is it to unrack the bar, walk backwards with it in ur hand, and then probably have shaky form doing RDL's? Not only that, but I don't even know if I'm hitting the same depth every time. There isn't as much consistency.

Do you guys recommend I just deadlift instead? I kinda miss doing it too...
I feel like there's a stigma to deadlifting around here.

32
Pics, Videos, & Links / un-even pecs (very annoying)
« on: March 16, 2012, 07:33:18 pm »
This sucks!!!!!!
My left pec is so much bigger and more filled out than my right pec!
Here's a pic:




Then what I did was:
I chopped off one half of my body, copied the remaining half, and flipped it to have equal pecs on both sides.
I did this with each side of my body.

Look at the difference!




Two left pecs are on the left, and two right pecs are on the right.



How do I even begin to fix this?

33
Article & Video Discussion / Another new Kelly Bagget Article
« on: March 02, 2012, 04:42:30 pm »
This is part 2 of this article:
http://www.adarq.org/forum/article-video-discussion/new-kelly-bagget-article/




Quote
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VAznRTj4sQM&feature=related

Note the simultaneous plant that occurs with both feet after the jump stop.

Here is a video of the step-close method

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zOi4DT1er_4http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1xV3mB47Bn0

Exercise 2: Bridge: Do 2 sets of 30 second hold Video Demonstration:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pOvkwrzJTNA

Exercise 3: Side Bridge Progression: Do 1 set of 30 seconds/side Video Demonstration:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uHvcQ_rR1lk

Exercise 4: Alternating Glute March: Do 2 sets of 20 reps (10/side) Video Demonstration:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JsJAGZ4Ufg0

Exercise 5: Seated Hip Flexor: Do 2 sets of 5-10 reps/side with a 3-second hold at top Video Demonstration:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxkbqUa28BY

Exercise 6: Standing Hip Flexor/Glute: Do 2 sets of 5-10 reps/side with a 3-second hold at top. Video Demonstration:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qND3gHvrjkA

Exercise 7: Prone Leg Lift: Do 50 reps /side Video Demonstration:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L3AS6gYLEL4

Exercise 8: Bulgarian Split-Squat Hold: Hold for a total of 1 minute per side. Video Demonstration:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9wkw3H3bNfk

Stretching (these stretches should be done every day)

Broomstick overhead squat 2 x 10 reps Kneeling rectus femoris/quad 2 x 20 second hold http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s_hQSJVIN3c

Calf 2 x 20 second hold Wall ankle mobility drill 2 x 15-20/side

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UozK7jNFmU8

Hamstring 2 x 20 second hold

Groin 2 x 20 second hold

Hip Flexor 2 x 20 second hold

Put all that stuff together and in my experience you'll have a REAL DIFFICULT time not adding 2-3 inches to your vert in a very short period of time.

Good luck!

Enjoy!

-Kelly


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34
Article & Video Discussion / New Kelly Bagget Article
« on: February 21, 2012, 12:52:15 pm »
Adarqui is mention in it as well.

It isn't on the website yet, but I'm on his mailing list. Been a long time since I read something from that guy.

Here's a copy/paste

Quote
I apologize for my lack of newsletters as of late as well as the delay in getting the VJ Bible 2.0 out. I had planned on having it released by now but I had some personal difficulties that kept me occupied a couple of months that prevented me from working on it as much as I would have liked. Fortunately, things are back on the right track and I'm now in the process of finishing it up. In the meantime I wanted to give newsletter subscribers a first look at a special VJ Bible 2.0 promo that will be released along with it. It is called, "12 modern tricks for higher jumps". I'll give you the first 6 now & the remaining 6 next week.

Enjoy!

Trick #1 - Use caffeine judiciously

Low grade stimulants like caffeine can give you an extra boost if used intermittently and judiciously. They increase stimulatory neurochemicals like nor-adrenaline and that can give you a little bit of an extra muscle recruitment and rate coding boost. The key thing is if caffeine's going to be effective you can't use it all the time and it works best if you cleanse your system of it for a few days before using it. I recommend you take 3 or 4 days and consume no stimulants - make sure you're not taking in anything that has "disguised" caffeine (guarana) such as NO explode, red bull, or other common energy drinks and obviously lay off "obvious" caffeine sources such as coffee and pop. After you've been off the caffeine for 3-4 days it'll be much more effective. I recommend about 200 mg of caffeine about 45 minutes to an hour before you really want to set a PR type performance. You can either take a caffeine pill (no-doz or generic caffeine), drink a big cup of strong coffee, take in a big mountain dew, or use one of the common "energy" drinks on the market like Red Bull or NO Explode. You'll definitely feel it. You can also add in natural stimulants like l-tyrosine (3000 mg is the common dosage) or acetyl-l-carnitine, (1500 mg) but honestly, with a good dose of caffeine on dormant receptors those things aren't gonna add much in the way of noticeable effects.

Trick #2 Low grade dehydration/carb depletion

Here's a little trick that can be quite effective you've probably never heard of before: Short term weight loss via either dehydration or short term caloric restriction can temporarily improve vertical jump performance via a loss in bodyweight. Longer term weight loss via caloric restriction and the things that come along with it tends to have negative effects on strength and power, as does prolonged weight loss thru dehydration, yet in the short term (as in days) a loss in bodyweight can improve VJ performance. I've known about this for years but it's not something I've talked about much. In a vertical jump it can be enough to give you an extra couple of inches - not a TON but definitely noticeable. Over the years I've been amazed at the number of athletes I've s een hit PRs the day after a night of fairly heavy drinking - I believe the dehydrating effects of alcohol have a lot to do with it. The positive effect of low level temporary dehydration or weight loss has also been confirmed in research.

The key is the temporary weight/water loss can't be TOO MUCH - no more than about 3% of your bodyweight - anymore than that and you negatively affect strength and energy too much. So if you weigh 100 lbs that's only 3 lbs. If you want to dehydrate yourself in an effort to increase your vert I'm not gonna tell you how to do it and it's not something I recommend. Too much dehydration can be dangerous and someone will think since a 3% drop in bodyweight is good a 10% drop is even better and run into all sorts of problems. I'll just tell you it can work and it's not hard to find information on how wrestlers and other athletes do it. Just make sure if you do decide to dehydrate yourself it's not something I'm recommending.

Ho wever, I can tell you how others have done it thru short term caloric restriction. It only takes 2 or 3 days. For 2 or 3 days simply consume about a gram of protein per pound of lean body mass and little else. A typical individual might consume 600-800 calories per day with most of that coming from protein. A typical diet would include something like 6 hard boiled eggs, a glass of milk, a piece of bread, half a pound of grilled chicken breast, a big salad, and half a pound of broccoli. Other than unlimited water that's it. Follow that for 2-3 days, or until your scale weight is down about 3%. Keep in mind the weight you lose will mostly be water weight and glycogen depletion and most of it will come back as soon as you start eating normally again. As far as exercise goes, you can do some stretching, shooting, lifting, and other light to moderate activity, but it's probably a good idea you don't try to do TOO MUCH like a marathon or full court basketball. Next, after 2-3 days have a good sized high carb meal to get some energy back into your brain, then go out and test your jumps. Most likely you'll be getting up higher and will continue to do so for a couple of days.

Trick #3 Use Squats For Delayed Potentiation

Here's something else a lot of people aren't aware of: A low volume of barbell training has a tonic effect on the nervous system that can temporarily improve performance several hours later. What happens after a fairly intense session of weight lifting is the nerves that fire muscle motor units become stimulated. This allows the stimulated muscles to fire at a reduced level of neural stimulation, which is a positive thing. Any activity you do while the nerves and muscles are in this state will tend to become enhanced. The problem with this is there's also a lot of fatigue that occurs from the weight training used to induce this state in the muscles, so the effect is not immediate. You have to let the fatigue dissipate first. However, the good thing is the fatigue doesn't stick around all that long. After a few hours the fatigue from the weight training will be mostly gone but the neural stimulation will persist. The best way to take advantage of this is to lift weights, wait 4 to 6 hours, then do plyos and/or jumps. Virtually any sorta barbell squat training will create this tonic effect but for my money I prefer a workout like this:

A.M. Session: Squat 6-8 reps of 1 @87.5% of 1rm (use a weight you could do 4 reps with if you had to) Rest 4-6 hours

P.M. session Jumps for max height

Trick #4: Use extended warm-ups in quality warm-up situations

Here are 4 important things pertaining to warm-ups you should be aware of:

A: Most people don't warm up nearly enough

B: Most people get their best warm-ups on accident

C: A standing vert requires significantly less warming up than a running vert, which typically requires less of a warm-up than a sprint. A warm-up that is optimal for a sprint is TOO MUCH for a jump, in my experience. A warm-up that is optimal for a running vert (bilateral) can be too much for a standing vert. So before you determine what type or how much of a warm-up to do you should determine what type of event you're warming up for

D: Adrenaline (competitive situations) definitely helps with your warm-up

To that end the best chance you have of hitting a running vert PR are things like full court basketball games when you're surrounded by your peers. The extra adrenaline you get from being around your peers and the competitive environment tends to promote quality performances. In my experience the best warm-up is a light dynamic warmup followed by 15-20 minutes of full court basketball or similar endeavor. All the dynamic warm-up stuff is ok on its own but not as good as actually getting out and participating in sport. Here is an example of coach Andrew Darqui demonstrating what I consider a quality dynamic warm-up:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Um5jnjFav7Q

35
Injury, Prehab, & Rehab talk for the brittlebros / Curing jumper's knee?
« on: February 04, 2012, 12:55:32 pm »
I now have patellar tendonitis in both my knees, but much more so in my left knee. I plant LR when I jump, and it hurts the most when I jump. When I jump, it hurts both knees. If I don't warm up before squatting, it hurts a lot when I squat (only left knee here).

It's extremely annoying because I can't practice my jumping and my squat progress has stalled. My reps on the squat are done VERY slowly so it won't hurt as much, plus I'm contracting the abs MUCH more to stay stable.

Does anybody have any advice on how to fix it? I don't want to get rid of the pain, I want to get rid of the problem. Thanks.

36
Post finished. I don't understand how I went from 405x4 to 335 in about a month.

Here's some squat history:.

Basic set up:
Heavy day - 1x4, 2x7
Light day - 1x2
Heavy day - 1x4, 2x7

Eventually i switched from mon-wed-fri to mon-wed-sat because it fit my schedule better.
By the end I deloaded. Notice I started from 335x4 to 405x4 in just 7 weeks or so. A lof of my log data deleted so not everything is 100% accurate until the 4th week. But I DO recall gaining 10lbs a week on my 4RM.

Mon - 335 x 4 | 295 x 7 | 295 x 7
Wed - 340 x 2
Fri - 345 x 4 | 300 x 7 | 300 x 7

Mon - 350 x 4 | 305 x 7 | 305 x 7
Wed - 355 x 2
Sat - 360 x 4 |310 x 7 | 310 x 7

Mon - 355 x 4 | 315 x 7 | 315 x 7
Wed - 360 x 2
Fri - 360 x 4 | 320 x 7 | 320 x 7

Mon - 365 x 2
Wed - 365 x 4 | 325 x 7 | 325 x 7
Sat  - 370 x 4

Mon - 375 x 4 | 330 x 7 | 330 x 7
Wed - 375 x 2
Sat - 380 x 4 | 335 x 7 | 335 x 5

Mon - 385 x 2
Wed - 385 x 4 | 335 x 7 | 335 x 7
Sat - 390 x 4 | 340 x 7 | 340 x 5

Mon - 395 x 4  | 340 x 7 | 340 x 7
Wed - 395 x 1
Sat - 400 x 4 | 345 x 7 | 345 x 7

Mon - 405 x 1
Wed - 405 x 4 | 355 x 3
Fri - 365 x 1

Mon - 405 x 4 notice i did this TWICE, it was a consistent 4RM
Wed - 365 x 1
Fri - 405 x 1 (de-loading)

Tue - 405 x 1 (de-loading) but 405x1 felt VERY difficult
Fri - 405 x 1 (end of de-load)

Tue - 405 x 1 VERY difficult, thought I would go for 405x3 but couldn't
Sat - 355 x 5 | 355 x 5 | 355 x 5 extremely difficult

Tue - 345 x 5 | 345 x 5 | 345 x 3 Couldn't even do 3 sets of this
Sat - 345 x 5 | 345 x 5 | 345 x 5 Barely went up

Thu - 335 x 5 | 335 x 5 | 335 x 5 Continued decline in weight, this was near failure




HOW DOES THIS HAPPEN?!

What could be the cause for my plummeting squat gain?
FWIW, I was the same weight of the 405x4 thru 355x5. THEN I started to cut weight (lost 3 pounds so far, that's it).


37
Pics, Videos, & Links / Squat 405x4
« on: December 27, 2011, 03:34:45 pm »
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IdwHh95AHJc" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IdwHh95AHJc</a>


fuck yeah

weighed 204lbs at time of squat (in socks, boxers, shorts, tank top).
Even though I squatted in shoes I took them off when I weighed myself lol, wouldn't make sense to count them.

usually weigh 208lbs (shoes, socks, boxers, sweatpants, tank top).
In this case it makes sense to count my shoes because I jump with shoes and it would have a negative effect.

The shoes and sweatpants add a lot of weight I guess.

I'm at about a 2.18x bw squat now if I'm at 445lb 1RM and 204lb bw. I want to get to 2.25x bw (in clothing) and that should get me to a 40" running vertical FOR SURE with practice.

When I was at 2.06x bw squat, I jumped my highest at ~38". I was 175lbs and maxed out 360-365

38
Currently at 405x4. I think I'm about to deload and then go for 405x5 just to get the "unofficial" milestone and put it on youtube. It should also get me at an estimated 455lb 1RM.

Within the next 6 weeks or so, I want to lose around 10lbs of bodyweight, maybe 15lbs. I'm creatine loaded so I know I can lose a lot of water weight so 15lbs won't be much of a stretch.

Anyone know of a good routine to maintain squat 1RM? I'm thinking something like this:

Max: 455lbs

Mon - Work up to 405x2
Wed - Work up to 385x1, drop to 335x8
Fri - Work up to 405x3

39
Pics, Videos, & Links / Chris Hickson 800lb deadlift
« on: December 12, 2011, 10:48:44 pm »
Holy crap I can't believe Hickson used to post on our forum and keep his TRAINING LOG here. Where has he been?

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQi8xUZ0V90" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQi8xUZ0V90</a>

40
From today:

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yai6mosC9Bs" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yai6mosC9Bs</a>


In 5 weeks, I went from:
335x4 at 204lbs, to
385x4 at 208lbs.


This was my squat schedule:

Mon - 1x4 (88%), 2x7 (77%)
Wed - 1x2 (88%)
Sat - 1x4 (88%), 2x7 (77%)

Every time a Monday or Saturday workout came up, I added 5lbs to the bar.
I've done this successfully for the past 9 workouts in a row.

I've read a lot about how mixed rep ranges are supposedly the best for gaining strength, and I have to say, my gains here are actually better than my gains that I had on smolov jr out 5 weeks.

In smolov jr, I went from a 335lb max to 385lb max in 6 weeks.
In this rep scheme, I went from 335x4 to 385x4 in 5 weeks.

That's one week less and the 50lb gain is on my WORKING sets, not max, which means possibly 55-60lb gain on my max.

 :ibsquatting: :ibsquatting: :ibsquatting: :ibsquatting: :ibsquatting:

41
Injury, Prehab, & Rehab talk for the brittlebros / Very bad shoulder pain.
« on: September 10, 2011, 11:08:41 pm »
My friend injured his shoulder benching. He said he was benching powerlifting style (slight back arch, elbows slightly tucked).


He got up to a 5RM, and on the last rep, his right arm was higher than his right (thus the bar wasn't level) and he felt some pain in his right shoulder. He didn't want to fail the lift since he didn't have a spotter, so he muscled up the rep and then he heard a loud crack and he had plenty of pain.


Currently, he experiences NO pain in these movements/poses:
- "Jesus pose"
- The Y pose from the YMCA
- Any movement where the hand is still below shoulder level causes no pain.

He experiences the MOST pain in these movements/poses:
- "Hitler pose" and higher


Sorry for the unorthodox pose explanations there, no offense intended, but that was the easiest way I could explain it.


Anyone know what may have happened and how to treat the shoulder?
From what I know, he has zero postural problems and is VERY flexible and mobile.

42
Pics, Videos, & Links / More vids/pics of events i go to
« on: September 06, 2011, 11:48:34 pm »
Some people might like to see them so here we go. I went to electric zoo festival in NYC... mindblowing. So memorable.

I hate that cheesy house music (afrojack, avicii, swedish house mafia) but I LOVE trance (ferry corsten, above & beyond, ATB).


Edit: Not sure why these aren't coming out widescreen even though their HD vids.


<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=imUS7wq3HDM" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=imUS7wq3HDM</a>

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=URaof3RxF1s" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=URaof3RxF1s</a>

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oa3QadWFLRg" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oa3QadWFLRg</a>

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PaZa0dZihLk" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PaZa0dZihLk</a>

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qPC-kJYBaew" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qPC-kJYBaew</a>


this ones for adarqui:

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mpwmWkTBPPU" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mpwmWkTBPPU</a>

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QXL4TPzuA5Y" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QXL4TPzuA5Y</a>

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lhC0fGls8" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2lhC0fGls8</a>

43
Pics, Videos, & Links / Before/After pic of me (25lb drop in 6 weeks)
« on: August 12, 2011, 03:47:20 pm »





From 211lbs to 185lbs in 7 weeks. Lol, and in my log I wanted to get there by september 10th.... murdered that goal.

44
News, Announcements, & Suggestions / facebook on adarq?
« on: June 25, 2011, 06:31:47 pm »
We can like comments now? since when?

45
Pics, Videos, & Links / progress pics, +35lbs
« on: June 21, 2011, 06:20:23 pm »
nvm

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