Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
This is an advanced routine that takes advantage of load/deload phases, failure and sub-failure training, rest-pausing, weight load progression, etc... Give it a go and see if it works for you. Good luck! By: Nathan J. Polencheck
Introduction
After years of trying different routines (DF, HST, DC, Upper/Lowers, Max-OT, Ultra High Volume, Low Volume High Frequency, Full body splits, etc. the list goes on). I have decided to put together my own routine that takes the things that have shown me the most benefit and puts them all together in a nice solid dual phase routine. This routine takes advantage of the benefits of load/deload phases, failure and sub-failure training, rest-pausing, weight load progression, wave progression, high frequency combined with moderate volume, and more.
Disclaimer:
This routine is comprised of advanced training techniques, an unnatural amount of volume, and components that work for ME. I am not going to put money down that this routine will be all you hoped for and more, but I think you will not be disappointed. You will need a few things to do this routine successfully: experience, dedication, an above average recovery rate, the guts to want to train to failure, and the willingness to try some nasty volume work.
Overview
This routine is broken up into two eight-week phases.
Phase 1:
The first eight-week phase focuses on a split that hits body parts twice every seven days, while employing a "3 workout" rotation that hits multiple body parts each session. The eight-week phase is broken up into two mini-phases, four weeks each, that focus on going from a low volume/moderate intensity effort, to a high volume/high intensity effort. This phase utilizes a 3-6 rep range that encourages failure in weeks three and four, and encourages using your heaviest weights, with constant progression. The purpose of this phase is to start in a 'deconditioned' state then rapidly accelerate to the fine line of overtraining, push slightly past it in weeks 4 and 8, and then reset.
Phase 2:
The second eight-week phase focuses on a low-frequency split (one body part per week, one body part per session) that uses wave progression for four core lifts (for example: squats, deadlifts, bench, and shoulder press), and steadily increasing volume as you lower reps and increase weights each week for 3-5 other exercises for that body part (i.e.: 3 sets of 12 one week, 4 sets of 10 the next). Failure is not utilized in this phase, but heavy weights are. Volume will end up being very high with very heavy weights and low reps, but the buildup is gradual so your body will become accustomed to it, rather than overtraining like you would with the first phase's rapid buildup in volume/intensity.
Phase 1
This phase is meant to destroy your body twice during the eight-week phase. Strength and hypertrophy are both achieved through low reps (3-6), workload progression, increased volume/workload, and increased intensity. You should slightly overtrain during the overload weeks. If you do not feel like you are flirting with overtraining, increase intensity. Split 4 days/week, MT/HF Rep Range 2-4 reps for squats, deadlifts, everything else 4-6 reps Rest Between Sets 2-5 minutes (i.e.: as much as you need to hit each set as hard as possible, heavy as possible). Rest pauses are typically 15-30 seconds
The Logbook
You will keep a log book starting at Week 2. You will note how much you were able to lift in each exercise. When that exercise comes around again you will beat it or match it (rep for rep, pound for pound). No maybes. If you fail to beat or match a previous lift two weeks in a row you need to drop it and insert a new movement in its place. This technique reinforces constant strength progression and eliminates plateaus. You will give the logbook a 'break' during your active recovery and baseline weeks, as they will be used for recovery and working back up to the failure workloads that begin in the load week. If you are up to it though, feel free to try to beat your heaviest overload week sets without hitting failure during your baseline week.
Week 2 - Baseline:
Mon: Legs, Calves Tue: Chest, Shoulders, Tri's Thu: Back, Traps, Biceps, Forearms Fri: Legs, Calves
Week 3 - Load:
Mon: Chest, Shoulders, Tri's Tue: Back, Traps, Biceps, Forearms Thu: Legs, Calves Fri: Chest, Shoulders, Tri's
Week 6 - Baseline:
Same as Wweek 3.
Week 7 - Load:
Same as Week 4.
Week 8 - Overload:
Same as Week 2.
NOTE: For weeks 5-8 you can opt to start with Week 3 if you wish to focus more on your chest, shoulders and tri's rather than legs. Upon completion of this eight-week phase start Phase 2.
Legs, Calves: Squats x2 Leg press x1 SLDL x1 Smith Calf x2* Seated Calf x2* Chest, Shoulders, Triceps: Incline DB x2 Decline DB x2 DB Press x1 Side Laterals x1 Rear Laterals x1 Overhead EZ Ext x2 Pushdowns x1 Rev CG Bench x1 Total Sets for 3 workouts: 29
Baseline Week:
Failure: Stay One Rep Shy Of Failure.
Back, Traps, Biceps, Forearms: BB Rows x2 CG Pulldowns x2 Weighed Chins x2 Seated Rows x1 Deadlifts x2 Shrugs x2 EZ Curls x2 DB Hammers x2 Cable Curls x1
Legs, Calves Squats x3 Leg press x2 SLDL x2 Smith Calf x3* Seated Calf x2*
Chest, Shoulders, Triceps Incline DB x3 Decline DB x2 DB Press x2 Military Press x1 Side Laterals x2 Rear Laterals x1 Overhead EZ Ext x2 BTB Pushdowns x2 Rev CG Bench x1
* Perform at least one set with 5 second static holds at the bottom of each rep.
Load Week:
Changes: Add One Set To Two Or More Exercises From Each Body Part. Failure: Once Per Exercise.
Back, Traps, Biceps, Forearms: BB Rows x3 CG Pulldowns x2 Weighed Chins x2 Seated Rows x1 Deadlifts x3 Shrugs x2 EZ Curls x3 DB Hammers x3 Cable Curls x1
Legs, Calves: Squats x4 Leg press x2 SLDL x3 Smith Calf x4* Seated Calf x3*
Chest, Shoulders, Triceps: Incline DB x4 Decline DB x3 DB Press x2 Military Press x2 Side Laterals x2 Rear Laterals x2 Overhead EZ Ext x2 BTB Pushdowns x3 Rev CG Bench x2
* Perform at least one set with 5 second static holds at the bottom of each rep.
Overload Week:
Failure: Every Set. Changes: Revert to BASELINE set totals, but triple rest-pause the last set of each exercise to failure. Example Rest Pause set: 10reps (fail) - 15 deep breaths - 3reps (fail) - 15 deep breaths - 2reps (fail) Back* and Chest movements: 10-12 reps total Calf movements: 10-12 reps, still doing at least one set with 5 sec negative hold Legs*: 10-12 reps total Arm movements: 15-20 reps total Shoulders: 12-15 reps total
*DO NOT rest pause squats, deadlifts, bent rows, SLDLs (stiff-legged deadlift), or other core-significant movements where deep fatigue can lead to bad form and possible injury - add 2-4 failure sets instead.
Back, Traps, Biceps, Forearms: BB Rows x3 CG Pulldowns x1, x1 RPx3 Weighed Chins x1, x1 RPx3 Seated Rows x1 RPx3 Deadlifts x3 Shrugs x1, x1 RPx3 EZ Curls x1, x1 RPx3 DB Hammers x1, x1 RPx3 Cable Curls x1 RPx3
Legs, Calves: Squats x8 Leg press x6, x1 RPx3 SLDL x5 Smith Calf x3, x1 RPx3* Seated Calf x2, x1 RPx3*
Chest, Shoulders, Triceps: Incline DB x3, x1, RPx3 Decline DB x2, x1, RPx3 DB Press x1, x1, RPx3 Military Press x1, RPx3 Side Laterals x1, x1, RPx3 Rear Laterals x1, RPx3 Overhead EZ Ext x1, x1, RPx3 BTB Pushdowns x1, x1, RPx3 Rev CG Bench x1, RPx3 Sets for 3 workouts: 101
* Perform at least one set with 5 second static holds at the bottom of each rep Total