Author Topic: Bench Press  (Read 6511 times)

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D-Rose Jr

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Bench Press
« on: March 06, 2011, 12:30:13 am »
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Ok so I have heard a bunch of crap about the bench press and it wrecking shoulders, etc.
My goals are to have a stronger upperbody without injuring anything. I am not too worried about numbers.

What would be better? Weighted Dips vs. Bench

I am looking for a time efficient, progress easily trackable, safe, and best bang for my buck.

I like limiting the number of exercises i use for the simplicity and focus it brings to training, so the one with the biggest bank for my buck is important.

Also I am a basketball player, so I probably won't be tested on the bench, so that is something not to worry about?

D4

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Re: Bench Press
« Reply #1 on: March 06, 2011, 12:41:59 am »
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Bench will target your chest better while dips target your arms better IMO.  Both are easily progress trackable, just note the weight progression.  Dips are completely safe obviously, bench press can only be dangerous if obviously you go too heavy and you don't have a spotter. 

I personally like dips a whole lot better, but idk, bench press has the best reputation for upper body strength.  Doesn't mean it's right, but yeah.  I bench press though, cuz my gym doesnt have those belt things to do weighted dips or whatever.
Goal is to dunk.

Vertical needed to dunk: 40"

Current vertical : 38.5"

LanceSTS

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Re: Bench Press
« Reply #2 on: March 06, 2011, 01:14:00 am »
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Ok so I have heard a bunch of crap about the bench press and it wrecking shoulders, etc.
My goals are to have a stronger upperbody without injuring anything. I am not too worried about numbers.

What would be better? Weighted Dips vs. Bench

I am looking for a time efficient, progress easily trackable, safe, and best bang for my buck.

I like limiting the number of exercises i use for the simplicity and focus it brings to training, so the one with the biggest bank for my buck is important.

Also I am a basketball player, so I probably won't be tested on the bench, so that is something not to worry about?

Standing overhead press or push press will give you by far the best carryover to performance with the added benefit of healthier shoulders.  Bench press will go up along with your ohp or pp so you can kill two birds with one stone.  Adding dips as an assistance exercise to the press to get some extra chest and tricep work is good as well if your workout permits.
Relax.

D-Rose Jr

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Re: Bench Press
« Reply #3 on: March 06, 2011, 01:24:52 am »
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I should have clarified a little more Lance. I was reading "the ultimate split" and saw the improvement the dude made while only doing 4 strength training movements. I liked it because of its simplicity and I am a creature of habit. Strength training just feels weird without squats.

His upper body movements were the bench and the chinup.

My biggest question is just doing bench presses and chinup 2-3 times a week as a novice healthy for the shoulders and for maximum upper body strength? (I bench 105 lbs, can do 11 full range chinups, and 9 dips)

This is what I wanted to do 2-3 days of

Back Squat
Pressing exercise (dip, bench, or press) anything i can be constitent with.
Chinup (weighted once I get to 20)
« Last Edit: March 06, 2011, 01:28:53 am by Petey0109 »

mj

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Re: Bench Press
« Reply #4 on: March 06, 2011, 03:15:39 am »
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OH Press is way better for athletic development. Do it standing and its a whole body movement.

But bench is useful if your sport involves pushing (football etc). Bench only wrecks shoulders if you flare your elbows out wide on the descent. BBers do it to target the pec better. A genuine PL type bench really works the outer pec but leaves the inner pec behind.

I reckon if you're set on benching do heavy sets PL style for pushing strength (back arch, feet locked on the ground, heavy) then do some really close grip assistance sets to fill out the inner pec a bit. Don't need to be heavy on the assistance.

Weighted dips will fark your chest (good way) if done with proper form too.

LanceSTS

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Re: Bench Press
« Reply #5 on: March 06, 2011, 03:16:49 am »
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I should have clarified a little more Lance. I was reading "the ultimate split" and saw the improvement the dude made while only doing 4 strength training movements. I liked it because of its simplicity and I am a creature of habit. Strength training just feels weird without squats.

His upper body movements were the bench and the chinup.

My biggest question is just doing bench presses and chinup 2-3 times a week as a novice healthy for the shoulders and for maximum upper body strength? (I bench 105 lbs, can do 11 full range chinups, and 9 dips)

This is what I wanted to do 2-3 days of

Back Squat
Pressing exercise (dip, bench, or press) anything i can be constitent with.
Chinup (weighted once I get to 20)


right, for your pressing exercise you could substitute standing press or push press, that would keep shoulders healthy and give you a better carryover to your sport of bball.
Relax.

D-Rose Jr

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Re: Bench Press
« Reply #6 on: March 06, 2011, 10:46:40 pm »
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Ok so I decided on doing this. Three days a week of

1. Squat
2. Dips
3. Chinups

Progressions
1. Adding more weight. Once I stall 2x I will lower the volume to 2x5. After I stall again I will follow this http://jasonferruggia.com/simple-speed-solution/
2. Add reps. Once I get to 25, I will begin adding weight to it. ( hold db's between legs till I get a belt)
3. Add reps. Once I get to 20, I will begin adding weight.

1. Dynamic Warmup
2. Movement Efficiency Work (line hops)
3. Sprint or running jump
4. Strength

Possible Workout
1. Warmup
2. 3x10 sec Line hops
3. 5--20 yard sprints
4. Squat 3x6 160 lbs
5. Dips: 4, 3, 4, 4, 5
6. Chins: 6, 6, 4, 7, 9


Does this look good for the next 3 months.
For a goal would not missing a workout for three months suffice or would a specific number be needed?

bball2020

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Re: Bench Press
« Reply #7 on: March 06, 2011, 11:01:42 pm »
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ehh i dont really know if overhead press is better than bench press for shoulders Lance, have read and heard about a lot of people not recommended over head press because of potential shoulder problems. Still a bench press with a crazy wide grip and some flaring elbows is bound to cause problems real fast

internal and external rotations can help some, along with a few other prehab movements

Anyone have any good kind of shoulder/upper body prehab routine or anything? Prob should start including it in my routine as dont do much besides some upper body stretches and back foam roll.

LanceSTS

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Re: Bench Press
« Reply #8 on: March 06, 2011, 11:16:41 pm »
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ehh i dont really know if overhead press is better than bench press for shoulders Lance, have read and heard about a lot of people not recommended over head press because of potential shoulder problems. Still a bench press with a crazy wide grip and some flaring elbows is bound to cause problems real fast

If youre talking about joe defrancos views on it, keep reading more articles, like the one christian thibadeau and glenn pendlay wrote debunking the myths defranco talked about in his article.  Olympic lifters have some of the healthiest shoulders amoung any group of athletes, they do a massive amount of overhead work and very little horizontal pressing if any.  Rippetoe has some good things on it too.  I have had soooooo much less shoulder problems since implementing a 2/1 ratio of overhead work to bench work with myself and my athletes that there is no doubt in my mind who is right and who is wrong.  People who a.) dont know how to press correctly ( this is a surprising number, more info is being put out there are still many people doing ohp incorrectly) or b.) have never used a correctly done standing press or push press and dont know what theyre talking about, the limit of their knowledge boils down to what they heard or read from other coaches.

Quote
internal and external rotations can help some, along with a few other prehab movements

the external rotation that occurs at the top of the standing press and push press is one of the MAIN benefits of including the lift in a program involving presses. When the head is driven through and traps shrugged up, the top portion of the press is EXTREMELY beneficial for shoulder rehab/prehab.

Quote
Anyone have any good kind of shoulder/upper body prehab routine or anything? Prob should start including it in my routine as dont do much besides some upper body stretches and back foam roll.

yep, learn to do a standing press correctly and implement them.  







I Don't Agree...
by Christian Thibaudeau - 02/08/2011

Good coaches can sometimes disagree on some points even though they are generally in agreement on other subjects.

And both can boast a wide range of success stories, making them reliable in their opinion (you can't argue with success).

Doesn't mean that one is "more wrong" than the other or that both are going at wr against each other.

Joe DeFranco's latest article includes an opinion that I don't agree with, and I'm saying that while having nothing but tremendous respect for the guy.

He mentions that we should avoid the overhead press if you are trying to build your shoulders. That only one out of X athlete can perform it safely.

Since the overhead press is the cornerstone of most of my programs, I don't agree (obviously).

My shoulders were never healthier than when I competed as an olympic lifter, a time where overhead pressing, the push press and jerk were roughly 25% of my training.

In fact I never had any shoulder pains before going away from doing a lot of overhead work. And as soon as I started putting an emphasis on various forms of overhead pressing instead of bench pressing my shoulder problems went away.

And I'm not the only one, Jim Wendler told me the exact same thing when I visited him and Dave in Ohio.

Glenn Pendlay, who is an amazing coach who works with athletes from many sports also put overhead work at a premium, specifically the push press.

And as a group, olympic lifters generally have VERY healthy shoulders despite doing overhead work for 50% of their training volume.

It is my opinion that those who have shoulder problems when overhead pressing simply use bad technique or have flexibiility issues.
02-08-2011 08:09

Personally I tend to agree with Glenn Pendlay and believe that the push press is the suprior overhead movement. It bypasses the weak zone, which is also the position where most injuries can occur. From experience it's the best movement to build the shoulders.

I also noticed with myself and dozens of clients, that gains in overhead strength are highly correlated with gains in bench pressing strength; I had my biggest bench press gains when I did an overhead press sp
« Last Edit: March 06, 2011, 11:22:38 pm by LanceSTS »
Relax.

bball2020

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Re: Bench Press
« Reply #9 on: March 06, 2011, 11:28:25 pm »
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well obviously you are a big proponent of shoulder pressing

Na was not referring particularly to what Defranco has written(although used to follow him big time so maybe this is where it came from), more on the lines of what James Smith has said on the matter. But a lot of his reasons are because of the potential damage the shoulders take in football. Ill read around some more, although I don't particularly like christian thibadeau and havent read much glenn pendlay. I do know Wendler is a fan of over head pressing, so obvsously IMO he knows a thing or to about lifting.

what ratio do you include back to chest to shoulders?



Two pretty good posts on the matter by James Smith

"Evan, despite the novel characteristics of the 'how much do you bench' as a measure of the US high school male's virility, presses of all variants are popular world wide amongst the globe's elite in a variety of disciplines.

From the standpoint of dynamic correspondence the supine bench press is far superior to the overhead/military press as there is no sport other than weightlifting and strongman that requires athletes to overcome large loads directly overhead and support them in that position; and in reality, post the early 1970s, weightlifting doesn't even include the strict overhead press in competition.

Alternatively, there are a multitude of disciplines that require the athlete to overcome loads, via arm extension in the plane of the scapula. Granted, the bench press is performed supine; however, it must be in order to yield great muscle tetanus.

Due to the supine position and being braced posteriorly, the bench press is not specific to any athlete other than a powerlifter; however, it is generally specific to a myriad more athletes than the overhead press with respect to the direction in which the resistance must be overcome relative to the torso.

The most specific form of pressing in the plane of the scapula, for a multitude of athletes, is when an athlete in the standing/athletic position is able to explode out ballistically, or slower and more tonically, against a load on a pendulum apparatus. The USSR and former GDR popularized such forms of exercise as illustrations can readily be found in much of the literature published by overseas authors.

I have 'rigged' various contraptions with heavy medicine balls in a sack suspended from the top of a power rack.

Perhaps most important to the comparison of the bench and overhead press, the bench press is measurably more orthopedically sound than the overhead press. The IOC and the IWF were wise enough to eliminate the overhead press from competition over 30 years ago for safety reasons as well as subjectivity in judging. Unfortunate that this decision has not influenced more coaches of other athletes."


"
Thanks Alex. I must note, however, that it was not my idea to post the exchange between Coach B and myself.

Any means presents structural stress. Some, however, present greater stress then others when we scrutinize what our skeleton and musculo-tendonous apparatus was designed to do from a mechanical-structural standpoint.

The shoulder (glenohumeral) joint is designed for mobility, not stability. As it stands, any overhead lifting with heavy loads requires great stability about the shoulder joint, shoulder girdle, trunk, etc. As a result, over lifting is 1. the greatest strengthener of the shoulders, and 2. the highest training risk with respect to compromising the structural integrity of the joint.

The very action of complete shoulder flexion yields impingement via the humeral head being jammed into/against the acromin.

Add to that external rotation and abduction such as the overhead position in the snatch and you place the shoulder in its most compromised position.

Granted, certain skeletons are at less risk then others with respect to overhead lifting due to differently formed acromins.

the fact remains, however, that repeated overhead lifting with heavy loads simply presents a higher structural risk to the joint compared to pressing in the plane of the scapula and is, therfore, not justified in the training of athletes who must not overcome large loads overhead.

Mind you that this will be debated ad nauseam by proponents of overhead lifting. "
« Last Edit: March 06, 2011, 11:41:38 pm by bball2020 »

LanceSTS

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Re: Bench Press
« Reply #10 on: March 06, 2011, 11:40:17 pm »
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well obviously you are a big proponent of shoulder pressing

Na was not referring particularly to what Defranco has written(although used to follow him big time so maybe this is where it came from), more on the lines of what James Smith has said on the matter. But a lot of his reasons are because of the potential damage the shoulders take in football. Ill read around some more, although I don't particularly like christian thibadeau and havent read much glenn pendlay. I do know Wendler is a fan of over head pressing, so obvsously IMO he knows a thing or to about lifting.

what ratio do you include back to bench to shoulders?


2/1 vertical pressing to horizontal pressing (this includes push jerk, push press, standing press, as well as snatches even though they are technically not a press, horizontal is all bench press and bench variations ie. floor press, any incline over 30*, etc.)  

vertical pulling is 1:1 with overhead work, horizontal pulling is 1;1 with horizontal pressing, rear delt work (high horizontal pulling) is ~.5:1 horizontal pulling to pushing.  

  The main problem with what james smith is saying is that hes looking at the ohp as a detrimental lift to the shoulders, imo and many others it is not only not detrimental, but will help keep an athletes shoulders healthy throughout the season.  Bench press is obviously useful for football athletes and part of the combine tests, but balancing the horizontal pressing with vertical pressing is a good idea imo and will not only help the shoulders stay healthy and mobile, but help the bench as well.  
« Last Edit: March 06, 2011, 11:43:16 pm by LanceSTS »
Relax.

bball2020

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Re: Bench Press
« Reply #11 on: March 06, 2011, 11:48:38 pm »
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different opinions I guess, obviously all guys mentioned have a ton of experience and knowledge. I personally like a lot of what Smith says as I have met him and talked with him various times, and hes know his shit big time. guy is real smart and truly brings that "attention to detail" . Not to mention anyone that has made it through hell week(twice and been iron man i think) is good to go in my book but thats a different story.

Still encourage anyone to try either way out for themselves and go from there, one would be a fool to except anything as straight gospel

One part about defrancos piece I like is train back like body builder, at least to general sports population, too many people bench bench bench and neglect back work.

LBSS

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Re: Bench Press
« Reply #12 on: March 06, 2011, 11:54:48 pm »
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Ok so I have heard a bunch of crap about the bench press and it wrecking shoulders, etc.
My goals are to have a stronger upperbody without injuring anything. I am not too worried about numbers.

What would be better? Weighted Dips vs. Bench

I am looking for a time efficient, progress easily trackable, safe, and best bang for my buck.

I like limiting the number of exercises i use for the simplicity and focus it brings to training, so the one with the biggest bank for my buck is important.

Also I am a basketball player, so I probably won't be tested on the bench, so that is something not to worry about?

Standing overhead press or push press will give you by far the best carryover to performance with the added benefit of healthier shoulders.  Bench press will go up along with your ohp or pp so you can kill two birds with one stone.  Adding dips as an assistance exercise to the press to get some extra chest and tricep work is good as well if your workout permits.

this is total horseshit. you should do weighted dips for 3-5 reps total, superslow (e.g. 4s eccentric, 2s pause, 6s concentric). bench, ohp, db bench, all that shit will just waste your time. pretty much only superslow, very heavy weighted dips are the way to go.

that, and ATG squats.
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

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LanceSTS

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Re: Bench Press
« Reply #13 on: March 07, 2011, 12:00:35 am »
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Ok so I have heard a bunch of crap about the bench press and it wrecking shoulders, etc.
My goals are to have a stronger upperbody without injuring anything. I am not too worried about numbers.

What would be better? Weighted Dips vs. Bench

I am looking for a time efficient, progress easily trackable, safe, and best bang for my buck.

I like limiting the number of exercises i use for the simplicity and focus it brings to training, so the one with the biggest bank for my buck is important.

Also I am a basketball player, so I probably won't be tested on the bench, so that is something not to worry about?

Standing overhead press or push press will give you by far the best carryover to performance with the added benefit of healthier shoulders.  Bench press will go up along with your ohp or pp so you can kill two birds with one stone.  Adding dips as an assistance exercise to the press to get some extra chest and tricep work is good as well if your workout permits.

this is total horseshit. you should do weighted dips for 3-5 reps total, superslow (e.g. 4s eccentric, 2s pause, 6s concentric). bench, ohp, db bench, all that shit will just waste your time. pretty much only superslow, very heavy weighted dips are the way to go.

that, and ATG squats.


rofl
Relax.

TheSituation

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Re: Bench Press
« Reply #14 on: March 07, 2011, 12:32:23 am »
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this is total horseshit. you should do weighted dips for 3-5 reps total, superslow (e.g. 4s eccentric, 2s pause, 6s concentric). bench, ohp, db bench, all that shit will just waste your time. pretty much only superslow, very heavy weighted dips are the way to go.

that, and ATG squats.

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