Author Topic: chasing athleticism  (Read 940642 times)

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LanceSTS

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #885 on: May 14, 2013, 01:47:38 pm »
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That's not why I'm doing them (for joints). That's a reason to do them but not THE reason because there are many different reasons that are important depending on the person and their needs. Having said that my point stands. Think of boxing  out for the rebound after the 2nd free throw. Specificity of pause squats is obvious. In general rebounding without an initial dip. A block attempt also.

Uhh... I'm actually Raptor on this one!  With this line of thinking you are jumping on the path to bosu-ball balance squats...  Pause squatting is not similar to boxing out during free throws or blocking someone at all.  You never want to let your stretch reflex go in sports; even in a block start there is a ton of active pressure on the blocks before the start; this is exactly the opposite effect of what you are trying to train in the pause squat.   Squatting is will always be a GENERAL strength exercise, don't get in the habit of choosing your lifts because they somehow remind you of a basketball move...

Despite all this.... The pause squat is a fantastic exercise.  As far as 70%... Likely the most you can do initially but it will certainly climb up past 90%...  You should be prepared for carryover disappointment.   I was stuck on a 405 lb back squat for a long time (eg I could get it on a good day and not on a bad day)...  I pause squatted exclusively worked my way from 315 to 405 in the pause squat.... Was very excited to finally let myself do a non-paused squat and throw up 500...  Instead I got pinned with about 425...  An efficient pause squatting is almost as good as a reactive pause squatter.  The main improvement was to my form; pause squatted allowed me to never worry about my depth, etc.   

I'm not sure what to make of your front pause squatting.  I favor the combination of back-pause squatting and non-paused front squatting.  I really wouldn't want to sit in the hole a bunch with tons of weight on my shoulders.  That would get old real quick.  Also, in your front squat your depth is excellent but you don't have a relaxed bottom position.   The HSI group (Jon Smith and Maurice Greene) sometimes does them in the westLA weight room, I don't know how much stock you can put into John Smiths advice (he is a bit weird) but he really tries to get the athletes to get into an almost relaxed zen position at the bottom of the squat; hams on calves; don't LOSE your breath or tightness but be relaxed and go to a special place... He has the athletes get to that position and then uses a starter to shock them into exploding the weight up...  Really awesome the extent that they turn it on...  Then again that group has girls breaking 10.8... So, yeah they must be doing something right.   

I love it. I was actually gonna ask you about Maurice because I read something online where someone was saying the paused squat carries over to 'start strength' which is important out of the blocks for sprinters.  Thought you might have your own take on that.

Yea i see what you guys mean about functional training and the perils of mimicking sports moves in the gym.  But i dunno. It seems like IT should carry over to sports when the movements are kinda similar. Take the push press - Lance argues well that it's a good lift for builing strength & power for basketball players. I can see that without having any experience training basketball players or trying it out myself. It seems like it ought to work. If a 80kg basketball player can throw up 100+kg for reps in the gym, he's probably gonna find it helps when chasing a rebound or a block or something. Right?  Same with the paused squat, maybe the similarity is superficial and it doesn't cross over but maybe it does. I guess the danger is building a whole training regime around these things - that's probably a trap many sports trainers and what not probably fall into - that's a valid point. But then I'm clear that lifting in the gym is about building general strength and it just happens to help with certain facets of athleticism. And in that relationship if we can select exercises which help more than less then that's a good thing.

For example I was sold on teh benefits of the RDL - I gave that a decent shot of around 9 months of consistent training. Worked up to a decent poundage and I had good form (i think). But it gave me no benefits whether in the gym or outside. So i've tossed that lift. And it's possible that in a different context it would have helped but at that time it didn't. I can see paused squats helping me a lot right now because I need to clean up form - and for the main reason which is why i'm doing them - because lance suggested it lol - to help keep myself progressing in the gym because i was getting frustrated with not making easy progress with just front squats.

Btw that description of paused squat description of the HSI group sounds awesome. I would love to be in that stage someday with my front squats.

Running out of time gotta lift so i'll finish my post later.

Also Kingfisher's post was the best thing i've read on this site for a long time. It was deep and enlightening - kinda still in awe at it!!

Its not that there is some magical quality about paused squats that make them sport specific, the sport specific part is that they make your legs fucking strong.  Youre getting longer time under tension in the stretch portion of the lift, and killing the bounce that usually makes that portion easier.  Front squat with a pause is awesome in that it takes more of the lower back out of the lift, and REQUIRES it to drive from the LEGS.  People can get away with shitty squatmorning front squats when they can bounce out of the hole and not have to spend any time in that end range, pauses will correct this. 

Think of how much time we spend in the bottom of the squat, its very minimal.  Pauses double and even triple this time each rep, so youre getting 2x the t.u.t. in the most beneficial portion of the lift, the stretch.
Relax.

Raptor

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #886 on: May 14, 2013, 02:35:20 pm »
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Yeah it reminds me of the 1&1/2 squats some people do, where you go all the way down, then up to parallel, then back down, and then all the way back up, that constituting a rep.

entropy

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chasing athleticism -- W7D1
« Reply #887 on: May 15, 2013, 02:05:27 pm »
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Training
FS 3x117, 4Fx111, 5x105
PFS 2x5x90 (PR)
PHBBS 5x100 (PR)
OHP 5x60.5, 3x64

FS notes:
Made the right choice to attempt PR of 4x117 instead of 4x117.5. But I didn't have a PR in me today. I've lost my mojo, front squatting doesn't feel the same anymore. I think i've started over thinking it - which is not necessarily a bad thing, it just seems to be getting in the way of progress.

BS notes:
Ugly set really. I might lay off heavy backsquats completely until my hips are ok - this set sucked, broke the shit out of my hips. NO MORE BACKSQUAT GREED UNTIL I'M HEALED UP.

OHP notes:
Progress is nice and welcome.

Good news is i've managed to finally string together 2 days of dietary compliance. Now that im in the groove i'll be sure to stay the course til i'm back to 75kg.
Goals: Cutting to 6-8% bodyfat

entropy

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chasing athleticism -- W7D2
« Reply #888 on: May 17, 2013, 08:17:26 am »
0
Training
FS 4Fx117, 2x119.5
HBBS 3x115
PFS 2x5x95 (PR)
BP 6Fx84, 5x83.5

FS notes:
No PR today either.

Paused front squats are interesting. I haven't had leg soreness like this before from anything i've done in a gym with a barbell.They are definitely a leg exercise. But as yet it has not carried over to normal front squats so that's a bit disappointing. I was expecting to PR my front squat at least but nope. Early days? We'll see.

BS notes:
Before abandoning BS I thought to try squatting facing the front of the rack rather than the back. Yeah I guess it's different, kind of still bothered my hips though.

BP notes:
Failing bench outside the rack is fucking scary. I got my brother to spot me on the 2nd set.

That'll do pig, that'll do. Til next week.
« Last Edit: May 17, 2013, 08:49:34 am by entropy »
Goals: Cutting to 6-8% bodyfat

LBSS

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #889 on: May 17, 2013, 12:09:59 pm »
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come on now. you've been doing paused squats for what, a week? two? and you've got t0ddday and others in here talking about how small the carryover is to normal squatting. you had a run where you were PR'ing every workout but that's not gonna be the normal course of events. relax, be patient.
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

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Raptor

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #890 on: May 17, 2013, 03:16:01 pm »
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You probably had more soreness because of the longer TUT you get from doing that pause and trapping more blood plasma to generate more soreness in that process.

If anything, that indicates a better potential for hypertrophy.

entropy

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #891 on: May 24, 2013, 11:31:47 pm »
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Last week I was setting PRs. This week i'm weak as fuck. Really starting to hate this lifting shit, it's so ephemeral. Miss one workout and it all goes away, like cinderella at midnight. I've collected a bunch of injuries too. Have gotten pretty demotivated.

My last workout which I didn't log while on the road was osmething like

FS 1x110, 3Fx115
PS 5x95, 5x90
OHP 3x60

Have to heal and recover another pec tear again. And my hips are still not 100%.
« Last Edit: May 24, 2013, 11:33:54 pm by entropy »
Goals: Cutting to 6-8% bodyfat

entropy

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chasing athleticism -- W8D2
« Reply #892 on: May 25, 2013, 09:15:41 am »
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Training
FS 1x112.5, 1x115, 1x121 (PR), 3Fx115, 5x102.5, 5x100, 5x97.5
BP 6x50, 6x60, 6x70

FS notes:
Kinda had no business putting 121kg on the bar, but I wanted to get some confidence back by setting a PR - i wanted a double but this was a maxish single. Thinking for the meantime while i'm rehabbing and shit, i'll stick to volume with lots of medium weight 5s and the rare heavy doubles & triples to set strength PRs while the psychological block of 120kg looms - I can't seem to break past it. It may be because at that plate boundary the delta from under <120kg is too large. So the plan is to get PRs in double and singles over 120kg and triple just under 120kg.

Happy to get around 20 squats in - without hurting my hips. Front squats are the shit. Let me stay with them exclusively til im healthy. Also, I noticed my left quad was burning/domming as i went thru this workout. I'm very much left leg dominant. I wish there was a way to balance this out and my right leg stronger but the only way I can think of is a leg press machine which I obviously dont have.

While healing and rehabbing my pec and hips no more backsquats and no more paused squatting - it hurts my hip too much as much as I was starting to like them. I really want to bench. I might try a light set just to keep myself familiar with the movement? Sucks because I was so close to PR territory and my goal of 6x86 :( I mean i was practically a few workouts away from a 100kg max - which has eluded me forever thanks to my long skinny arms and not-build-for-benching leverages.
« Last Edit: May 25, 2013, 09:42:59 am by entropy »
Goals: Cutting to 6-8% bodyfat

entropy

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #893 on: May 26, 2013, 01:23:00 am »
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Doms in hamstrings & faintly in glutes. As far as I can tell that's the only lower soreness i've got after my layoff workout. Quad and glute soreness absent - surprisingly enough. Deep ATG front squats do work hamstrings pretty good.
« Last Edit: May 26, 2013, 05:24:36 am by entropy »
Goals: Cutting to 6-8% bodyfat

entropy

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #894 on: May 29, 2013, 04:31:30 am »
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Took 3 days off for resting & healing. Hips and pec feel good. Not 100% normal yet though. Will see how it goes squatting. The main thing to watch out for is failure - because i think it is when I fail squats that I disturb my hip muscles the most. Going to continue this deload period I am on for a little longer. When healed i'll be able to train harder than ever so I just need to be patient now and bid my time. Laying off stimulants as well. Been caffeine free since saturday. Will only use stims at most 1x a week.
« Last Edit: May 29, 2013, 04:43:35 am by entropy »
Goals: Cutting to 6-8% bodyfat

Raptor

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #895 on: May 29, 2013, 06:41:03 am »
0
Why don't you use a lower % of 1RM to work with.

For example do your 5 rep sets with your 7RM. It will improve everything - form, recovery and speed, and prevent injuries (due to better form).

entropy

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #896 on: May 29, 2013, 08:11:35 am »
-3
Why don't you use a lower % of 1RM to work with.

For example do your 5 rep sets with your 7RM. It will improve everything - form, recovery and speed, and prevent injuries (due to better form).

And get weaker? What's the point?
May 29, 2013, 08:11:35 am - Hidden. Show this post.
Goals: Cutting to 6-8% bodyfat

entropy

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chasing athleticism -- W9D1
« Reply #897 on: May 29, 2013, 08:13:25 am »
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Training
FS 1x102.5, 1x110, 4x105, 4x103.5

lol
Goals: Cutting to 6-8% bodyfat

Raptor

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #898 on: May 29, 2013, 08:20:42 am »
+1
Why don't you use a lower % of 1RM to work with.

For example do your 5 rep sets with your 7RM. It will improve everything - form, recovery and speed, and prevent injuries (due to better form).

And get weaker? What's the point?

Weaker? How so? How do you define strength? What's the goal of your training? Pure neural strength? Muscle gain?

What do you see wrong in what I suggested? You think lowering a load and promoting better form, better recovery, more safety and better speed will make you weaker?

entropy

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Re: chasing athleticism
« Reply #899 on: May 29, 2013, 08:52:08 am »
-3
If I take weight off the bar and do more reps I'll get weaker. Yup. I believe that completely. If I want to maintain or improve my strength I have to maintain or add weight to the bar. I can't see a way to circumvent this :/
May 29, 2013, 08:52:08 am - Hidden. Show this post.
Goals: Cutting to 6-8% bodyfat