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Showing posts with label snatch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label snatch. Show all posts

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Hit Your Weak Spots



 If you're a dad, and depending on the age of your kids, you might already have been informed that you simply don't know what you're talking about, that you simply "Don't KNOW". In this case your weak spot, according to your kids is about your inability to KNOW.

 Well that's not what I'm talking about today. Weak spots when it comes to lifting reveal themselves in different ways. Usually it's by what ISN'T progressing.  Say when you first started lifting and all your lifts were going up.  Then when 2 out of your three lifts continue to go up while one stays behind, you can safely say that the lagging lift is now your weak spot.

How do you get that weak spot to improve?

It depends.

If you're like me, I generally don't like accessory work.  But I should.  My lifts would go up.

Let's say your deadlift is really stuck.

Are you doing good mornings?  Rows?  Do you know WHERE in the deadlift pull you fail most often?  Are you doing only one deadlift version?

The WestSide Barbell approach is a great way to develop all-around strength while indirectly benefiting your target lifts. Cycle different deadlift styles to help strengthen the areas that need help.

Here are a few that I've been using with a modicum of success:

  • conventional
  • sumo
  • deficit
  • snatch grip
  • rack pulls
Swap these out on a weekly basis and build in your speed days and max effort days.

Here's a sample week:
  • Sunday: speed press (bench or shoulder) 2 reps, 12 sets bands or chains (initial weight is 50 to 65% one rep max)
  • Monday rest or run Maffetone
  • Tuesday: Max Effort Deadlift Conventional
  • Wednesday: rest
  • Thursday: Max Effort Press (bench or shoulder)
  • Friday: rest
  • Saturday: Speed Squats or speed deadlift (50 to 60%)
  • Sunday: rest
Train hard this week!

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Strength as a Practice



Little efforts, stacked back to back will add up to a large return.  If you are a musician, the time you spend practicing pays off.  First you get the basic notes down, then you get the timing, then you work on the expression.

Lifting can be very similar to practicing an instrument.  Neglect the practice and you will not sound very good.  Or in this case, strength would be the music you are playing and your weakness (or not) simply a sign of how much work you have put into the practice.

Pick 3 to 5 movements and learn them over the next few months.  Practice them.  Look at your training session as a way to move the weight more efficiently.  Treat your strength and conditioning sessions as practice sessions.  Wave load the weights (lift moderately heavy), and don't worry about a specific number.  Some workouts will be tougher than others, and some you will wonder where your strength came from.

I would recommend the following 5 movements types:

  • Deadlift (any variant)
  • Squat (any variant)
  • Press (bench, log, shoulder)
  • Explosive movement (kettlebell snatch, power clean, atlas stone)
  • Bodyweight movement (pull-up, leg raise)
Practice these movements at every workout.  Do 2 sets of 5 reps for each movement.  That's it.  Do this for 2 to 3 months and come back playing some awesome strength music.  

This approach is directly inspired by the "Easy Strength" book written by Pavel and Dan John.  Well worth the read.  I've done the program and saw a huge jump in my weighted pull-up strength.  Might be time to do it again!

So practice.  Make noise.  Clang weights.  Get strong.