Author Topic: chasing athleticism  (Read 940685 times)

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ChrisM

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1830 on: June 08, 2014, 10:04:23 pm »
+1
I agree with that, yes, but just because its more genetically limited doesn't mean it wouldn't help. I mean, if you never train it it's obviously nowhere near your genetic potential or limit. So I still say you stand to gain a bit.
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Raptor

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1831 on: June 09, 2014, 07:05:04 am »
+3
Remember when I wrote that long post regarding LBSS and his issues? And how I said he doesn't get too much run-up or tendon contributions, if any? Well, he's better than you. Look at his bounding. He's complaining about how much he sucks at bounding, yet to me, they are really looking good. Not world-class triple jumper bounds, but they aren't terrible at all.

For you to invest into more reactive stuff, where you get contributions from the tendons as well and where you fine-tune your CNS and muscles to respond to a prestretch by generating more power, and adapting to that, is for you to get athletic. You don't really see athletes squat all day long and then walking towards a spot and doing a weak jump, don't you?

So, you must decide what your "primary sport" is. Remember, we strength train to get stronger FOR jumping, not the other way around. Strength work is basically assistance work.

It won't hurt you to do 2-leg bounding focusing on speed, and basic plyo work (sprints, bounds, donkey ankle bounces (reactive work for the Achilles)).

At some point you're going to find some out of nowhere power that you didn't know you were capable of generating (especially at the level you're at right now) and really "get it". But you gotta put in the work. Yes, it will suck initially. You will be slow and it will be really depressing. It will be hard to imagine yourself getting better at it. But you gotta GO GET IT.

Does that mean you must give up strength work? Not at all. It's just that you need to limit strength work to un-fatiguing sets and leaving the gym fresh, so that you can actually do what you're training to get better at - jumping and actually moving around (running, sprinting, getting on a fast break, getting past your man etc).

For that reason, I personally plan on doing "Easy Strength" like Dan John was proposing. Squat everyday, but choose sets and reps depending on your feeling in that day. You can go with something like 2x5, 5x2, 3x3, or 6x1. When you feel really good, go for "sort of a max", meaning a heavy single but not a maximal single. Feeling tired? Go with 3x3 with your 5RM, or do an easy 1x10 with a very light weight.

This will keep you fresh. And being fresh is what allows you to both recover and adapt to the stimuli you present your body with (which is strength by squatting and strength expression (power) by jumping), and to do high quality plyo work (jumping, sprinting, bounding).

I'll write more about this soon on my website, and it will all make sense, hopefully.

LBSS

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1832 on: June 09, 2014, 11:46:26 am »
+3
entropy, you weren't around for the heyday of adarq's training, but he used to do HUGE volumes to train reactivity and tendon strength. like half tucks for sets of 100 and stuff like that. everyone has a ceiling for all their attributes, but few people are near their ceiling for any one attribute. so, you and i are slow dudes. but why would that mean we can't get faster? why would that mean our tendons can't get stronger under pressure? why would that mean we can improve our movement efficiency? we've both gotten stronger through lifting (and we've both regressed, too). but we've also both put too much emphasis on squatting at one point or other. for me, the point is to dunk. for you, it's to be better at basketball.

you love squatting, and so do i. even when it's depressing it's comforting. but it's time to switch up the grind, man.
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

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Raptor

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1833 on: June 09, 2014, 01:06:58 pm »
+3
From "Easy Strength":

Quote
The difference between exercising and training is having a point. Exercise is done to waste
energy—burn calories—or to “blow off steam,” excess mental and physical energy, and tension.
Training is done in order to improve something—strength, endurance, neuromuscular control, etc.
Exercise is a singular event with an immediate goal.
The success of training can only be judged by changes over time in performance. Exercise doesn’t
have a point beyond the immediate session—if you leave the gym a sweaty mess, it was a good
exercise session or “workout.” If you show up every day and breathe hard and get tired and sweaty,
you may consider yourself to be successful at exercise. By contrast, training can only be judged as a
success if it works—that is, if after an appropriate amount of time you can clearly show improved
capacity for physical work. You may show up every day and push and pull and grunt and sweat and
even limp to your car—but be terribly UNsuccessful at training, if over time you are not getting any
stronger, faster, leaner, more agile, better at your chosen sport, etc. . . .
Swinging a weight around with the express goal of becoming extremely fatigued is what I would
do if I had a lobotomy. With a frontal lobotomy destroying my ability to plan over the long term, I
would believe that the goal of exercise was achieving a certain specific response—I would search
for the immediate effect of exercise. I would forget that as biological organisms, we not only respond
in the short term to a stimulus but also adapt in the long term to the sum total of stimuli we are
presented with—so long as we are able to recover. The idea that anything that made me horrendously
fatigued, to the point of nausea, vomiting, dehydration, hyponatremia, and even rhabdomyolosis,
would constitute an effective—or “killer”—workout would appeal to my zombie-like, shortterm-
thinking mind. I would strive in my workouts for “failure,” or forcing my body to stop working.
Fascinated by the immediate effects of exercise and unable to plan, I would work at top voluntary
intensity every time I exercised, always attempting to maximally disrupt my body functions. I would
also be unable to follow a program, so I would change exercises constantly, attempting to “confuse”
my body and prevent it from “getting used to” my exercise sessions. I would change aimlessly,
regardless of whether the exercises were useful or dangerous, choosing them solely based on how
bad they made me feel. . . .
If you want pain, learn Muay Thai. If you
want to learn about failure, play golf. If you
want to vomit, drink syrup of ipecac. If you
want to become stronger and more fit,
train appropriately.

Dr. Mel Siff:

Quote
To me, the sign of a really excellent routine is one which places great demands on the athlete, yet
produces progressive long-term improvement without soreness, injury or the athlete ever feeling
thoroughly depleted. Any fool can create a program that is so demanding that it would virtually kill
the toughest marine or hardiest of elite athletes, but not any fool can create a tough program that
produces progress without unnecessary pain.

Professor Thomas Fahey, one of the top American sports scientists, wrote:

Quote
A few years ago, I did some experiments with the college basketball
team that involved them only doing single, doubles, and
triples for whole body lifts (cleans, snatches, overhead squats,
bench press, standing press, etc). They got very strong but had
plenty of energy for playing basketball. They were in and out of
the weight room in 20–30 minutes.

Pavel Tsatsouline:

Quote
Steve Baccari is a stickler for perfect form, and he discovered that
none of his fighters could do 5 perfect deadlift reps. Doubles hit the
spot. Some fighters with perfect technique are allowed to do triples.
Interestingly, 2 is the most preferred rep choice of the Russian
National Weightlifting Team.
Two or three is a great rep range to emphasize in an Easy Strength
program. Four or five is where neural training and muscle building meet, which means you could end up
with some hypertrophy. This is out of the question in sports like boxing.
Singles, doubles, and triples are pure nerve force training. Singles, however, are very demanding on the
nervous system. Do a few, but don’t abuse them. Dan John lifts ten times in two weeks. Only two of
these workouts are singles and only one comes close to his max.
Hence, doubles and triples rule when it comes to Easy Strength with zero mass gain. But if your sport
does not punish muscle gain, don’t be afraid to train with fives more often. Regardless, go easy on the singles.

Quote
Soviet weightlifting champion and authority Robert Roman demonstrated that recovery is rapid and
soreness is minimal after low-rep, low-set heavy lifting. Just what the doctor ordered for an athlete.
High-rep training can be painfully ineffective and inefficient in building absolute strength. A friend of Dan’s
undertook a valiant effort of pushing his deadlift to 405 x 20. When he tested his 1 RM, he got—425.
Strength and power gains are superior with heavy low-rep training. Dyachkov had two groups of athletes
squat. One repped out to failure with 70% 1 RM, and the other did low reps with near-max
weights. When it was all said and done, the high-rep group improved their squat by 13.7 kilograms and
the low-rep group gained twice as much: 26.,3 kilograms. The standing vertical jump was measured, as
well. The “reppers” improved by 8.7 centimeters and the “near-maxers” by 13.3 centimeters.
« Last Edit: June 10, 2014, 03:41:49 am by Raptor »

Raptor

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1834 on: June 10, 2014, 04:08:00 am »
+1
Quote from: entropy

Legs were jelly, had no desire to front squat heavy but i forced myself to attempt a 132kg max single anyway

i had meant to do triple with 130kg but wore myself out before i could attempt them

A string of failures today when I should have done a lot better. Oh well. I prob picked the wrong weight after getting that 2nd very good triple, should have done doubles with 135kg after that, or maybe just one double and then another double with 132.5 or something like that instead of failing 2 doubles!

Im getting that dreadful about-to-hit-the-wall feeling as I aproach 120kg though

That 130 was a max effort lift though. I think i repeat it until i can get the 130kg easier

I wanted to do triples or doubles with 135-137.5kg, in reality the 135 doubles were close enough to 2RM that i had no business thinking of doing more sets

My goal from last session was to do a PR of 8x120kg today -- but -- having failed the 4th rep of 130kg

so i thought go for the 7x122.5 PR instead, and came close but failed the 7th

It's been so long since i front squatted 130kg but we're back there albeit it's a ugly grindy max right now rather than easy warmup


In contrast:

Quote
In the classic text on training the prototypical power athlete, the high jumper, Dr. Vladimir Dyachkov
offered a timeless recipe for Easy Strength training. The Distinguished Coach of the USSR advised to
stop the strength training session when the athlete starts feeling fatigue or starts experiencing a loss of
speed or a decrease in muscle elasticity. Dyachkov stressed that high-caliber jumpers have no business
training to failure. He also recommended that the athlete limit his reps with heavy weights to 1 or 2 and
to stay with 3 or 4 even with light weights.
By the way, Vladimir Dyachkov was no armchair quarterback. He was the USSR champion and record
holder in the high jump, the 110 m sprint hurdling, and the pole vault. Dyachkov won his last national title
at the age of 41, and his showdowns with Ozolin in the pole vault are legendary.

Quote
For the record, I have no interest in what you “could have” made. Please, no failures on max
deadlifts. Just make the lifts! For whatever reason, max DLs seem to take a ton out of your CNS,
and it doesn’t come back easily. Max DL misses seem to take even more out of the body. So again,
make the damn lifts!
I don’t suggest more than 2 max attempts, and most people are only good for 6 DLs in a heavy
workout. So, I consider that warm-up with 135 for a single part of the 6. If you don’t know how
to deadlift perfectly or at least properly, don’t use a max as a teaching unit. Please, know what you
are doing when you grip the bar, and leave it all on the table for these few attempts.
Does it work? Oh, absolutely. I love to tease men who are using an exaggerated vocabulary
about some minute fitness detail and tell them that they are almost as strong as my homecoming
queen with a 355 deadlift. So, save those max efforts for max efforts!

On the other side of the spectrum we have this:

Quote
The heavier the athletic implement, the more power gains an athlete can squeeze out of more
strength and vice versa. A javelin thrower will hit his point of diminishing strength returns sooner than a
shot putter, and a weightlifter will never hit his. But good luck finding an event in which strength is not
needed. German scientists Jürgen Hartmann and Harold Tünneman stress:
It should be noted that movements of negligible resistance are a rare occurrence in sports. Body
mass must be overcome explosively by sprinters and swimmers on starting, by fencers at flèche, and
by volleyball players when jumping at the net. Boxers, fencers, and javelin throwers must be able to
develop considerable strength to accelerate their equipment in addition to the resistance of the
mass of their arms (approximately 5% of their body mass).
An advanced athlete needs to get stronger in the time-deficit zone. One way to do this is what
Zatsiorsky termed the dynamic effort (DE) method, back in the 1960s. According to him, this method “is
used not for increasing maximal strength but only to improve the rate of force development and explosive
strength.” The parameters for DE training offered by Professor Verkhoshansky are 5 to 10 RM
weights lifted for sets of 3 to 4 reps and with the focus on the maximum rate of force development.
Fred Hatfield pioneered the use of DE as a combined modality for developing both explosive and
absolute strength: compensatory acceleration training (CAT), or maximally accelerating a moderate weight
throughout the concentric range of motion. His recommended protocol is 60% to 85% for 5 x 5 of
squats or other big and long movements with 5 minutes of rest. Dr. Squat assures:
Powerlifters who are using this technique have never failed to add well over 100 pounds to their
squat . . . in three months or less. Many football players I have trained claim that they are coming off
the mark far more explosively than they had ever done before, and basketball players are jumping
as much as five or six inches higher than before. . . . This technique requires very concentrated effort
on your part. You must concentrate! Concentrate on exploding every inch of the way through the
movement—not just initially or at the top, but all the way.

The examples are endless. Do with this information whatever you feel is right.

entropy

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chasing athleticism -- W6D1
« Reply #1835 on: June 10, 2014, 06:18:00 am »
-2
Training
FBS 3x120, 1x130, 0Fx133.5
BS 1x135, 1Fx137.5, 3Fx130, 5x122.5, 7x120
BP 4x82.5, 5x80
CRLZ 8x42.5(PR), 8x40

Squat notes:
Another bad day for squats smh. I didn't get any goals done, just more failures.

The FS warmup triple with 120kg was the exception but still, it's only 120kg which i could probably have repped for 5 back when i was stronger so it's not even that special. Hell my 3 rep PR is close to 130kg so why would i be excited about 120kg anyways.

on BS, still can't double 137.5kg. Which means my 2RM is prob only 135kg or so which where i've been stuck since last week. Misloaded 125kg as 2.5kg on one side only, so as a result it was effectively only 122.5kg which is disappointing that i only did 5 reps. Rookie mistake. Next time perhaps. Need to get myself unstuck.
« Last Edit: June 10, 2014, 09:19:34 am by entropy »
Goals: Cutting to 6-8% bodyfat

entropy

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1836 on: June 10, 2014, 09:43:18 am »
0
Quote from: Brent kimmy
I used to do this, back when I still scoured t-nation for useful articles, thought Dan John was more than a high school PE teacher

^ lol

relax raptor, that overtraining, HIIT nonsense is bs. Naturals have to work hard and lift heavy/hard to make progress. You read too much nonsense from people who like selling their easier sounding pussy training bs off as wisdom
Goals: Cutting to 6-8% bodyfat

Raptor

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1837 on: June 10, 2014, 09:49:45 am »
0
Quote from: Brent kimmy
I used to do this, back when I still scoured t-nation for useful articles, thought Dan John was more than a high school PE teacher

^ lol

relax raptor, that overtraining, HIIT nonsense is bs. Naturals have to work hard and lift heavy/hard to make progress. You read too much nonsense from people who like selling their easier sounding pussy training bs off as wisdom

Not at all. Naturals can't afford to work as hard as people taking steroids, or as genetically gifted people. Why? Because they lack the recovery abilities of those people. If there's anything that steroids or good genetics does, then it's great recovery, among other things.

So a hard gainer actually needs to work less in order to maximize recovery.

The fact that you list endless failed attempts does nothing but to prove your continuous road towards overtraining and ultimately, failure and even health risk.

entropy

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1838 on: June 10, 2014, 09:55:25 am »
0
Its not how it works though in practice when you're taking steroids. I don't know much about steroids but I do know the training is completely different from naturals. You do less intensity and more rep sets, pump work, like bodybuilding when juicing. It leads to more muscle growth that way, that's what i've read, have no direct experience obviously. I do know that I need a lot more volume and intensity to make gains. A lot of these guys don't tell you the full story of what supplements they had their guys on.
Goals: Cutting to 6-8% bodyfat

Raptor

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1839 on: June 10, 2014, 10:05:39 am »
0
Yes but you need more volume for what? Is strength your current focus, dissing everything aside? Because yes, a higher volume, assuming you recover well enough, is better for strength gains, as is a higher exposure (frequency). But the question is - do you recover well enough for you to progress? If doing more work was the answer, then we'd all be squatting 8 hours/day 7 days a week and be the best athletes in the world.

It's the recovery where you grow, but you already know that.

And your display of failed attempts can mean one of two things: overtraining or just poor judgement on choosing your weights. And even if it is "just poor judgement", that will eventually lead to overtraining. You staying under a maximal weight (or even heavier) bar very often and failing will eat a ton out of your CNS and your recovery abilities. If you don't deload soon, bad stuff will happen.

entropy

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1840 on: June 10, 2014, 10:11:34 am »
0
I write F in my log but what you dont know is the quality of F, some F are where you are defeated completely mentally and physically. Other times, you just dont finish the rep because it might be too ugly to go thru with it and you just bail on it. Qualitatively and quantitatively you can have different modes of failure. Im still getting used to maxing out every time i squat. I want to have a decent repeatable max i hit every time with good form and ease. That's more useful to me as an athlete (wannabe) than peaking out for a max like a PL would, once every so many months at a meet or whatever. I need to have a good repeatable max because as an athlete that's more useful than a temporary peak i hit very rarely..

now if i can get my ducks in a row and start progressing nicely while keeping my bw low, i'll start seeing some gains outside the gym
Goals: Cutting to 6-8% bodyfat

Raptor

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1841 on: June 10, 2014, 10:16:27 am »
0
Yes, but if that's your plan, don't MAX out... "kinda max out". Go 95%. Don't go full 100%.

Go for a daily max. Work up in weight set to set in your warm-ups until you get to a weight that is heavy, but not grinding. If you do this, you won't blow up your CNS, you'll give your body the time it needs to adapt (and to adapt to an actual lift instead to adapt to failure) AND you will be able to repeat this more often (more good exposure = more adaptation) while still being fresh enough to do other stuff.

That's the point I'm trying to make. If you really want to max out literally, do it every once in a while. Train submaximally, but say every month or so max out and see where you are and how you've adapted. Then back off significantly after that max out day, doing easy stuff for a while (say, for 3 days after your max-out day use 80, 85 and 90% on your max single instead of that 95%).

entropy

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1842 on: June 10, 2014, 10:23:14 am »
0
Thing is raptor, you need to do actually do the maxes to adapt to doing them often. That's the whole point. And yeah this will mean sometimes you don't get them (for whatever reason), but eventually your maxes and your goals will coincide. It happened last time i did RSR, i would work up to a FS max (130-140kg) then do a BS max (150-155kg) followed by my BS RSR workouts. It worked beautifully. I am not happy with my current maxes though, so i will keep trying to push them up. Which is what i did before when they were lower, i progressed them up over time.

To give you an idea, i was getting psychologically defeated by even approaching my FS maxes the last 4-5 weeks. And then this week, today, something different happened, i unracked the bar, and just squatted it. And it went ok. My body has adapted and made 130kg a normal, regular max i can hit every time. This will happen with my BS too once i figure out the right mix of attempts, i think i might drop the doubles and triples and just do the max followed by sets of 3-8. 
Goals: Cutting to 6-8% bodyfat

Raptor

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1843 on: June 10, 2014, 10:40:26 am »
0
Well, good luck, we'll see how this goes.

But my understanding is that you're focused 100% on strength work right now, with no basketball, plyo or any explosive work whatsoever.

And when and if you get strong, you're going to come back to power work and see your strength numbers drop once again, and get you depressed once again.

You need a way to maintain your power and movement efficiency in a strength block, and a way to maintain your strength in a power/plyo/dunk block.

entropy

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #1844 on: June 10, 2014, 10:51:11 am »
0
I agree, my athletic work happens on the treadmill :) I did a 10min session after lifting last week for the first time. I'll add another session this week and make it 2x a week. Also slowly up the time/speed/incline. Hopefully that's enough to keep my fitness/athleticism. I don't really want to do any more than that though. It's too much hassle going outdoors in the winter lol and i cbf driving to the indoor basketball, esp when never know if it will be available etc. Dunking is also fairly boring when you're not doing anything new that you haven't done so many times before. Last time I did RSR1 and RSR2, which is like, 3 months, i hardly if ever jumped, and still i was able to dunk even when my bw got close to 100kg. So i do believe just squatting is enough to keep my athleticism. HOpefully the treadmill will make up the difference and keep my fitness as well..
Goals: Cutting to 6-8% bodyfat