Te los dije ya sabe porque el sensie esta big 7 Classic - TopicsExpress



          

Te los dije ya sabe porque el sensie esta big 7 Classic Exercises You Should Avoid 409shared thisBob Cicherillo, 2000 NPC USA SupeYou dont have to do anything. The goons in the gym say you have to train balls-to-the-wall heavy on squats, bench presses and other compound classics if you want to be a hardcore bodybuilder. Thats a load of B.S. You dont have to do anything except what works best for you, and the surprising truth is many free-weight basics are not the safest or most efficient lifts for building muscle mass. Because Ive been training for 25 years, people assume I work out old-school style with mostly barbells and compound lifts. Its true that I trained that way for many years. However, Ive also learned a few things over the past quarter century, and Ive readily adapted to the advantages of modern bodybuilding. Most important, Ive figured out what works, what doesnt and what can be improved. If you think weight training has sacred cows that are exempt from criticism, stop reading now, because some of them are about to become hamburger.SQUATS Lets start at the top, with the so-called King of All Exercises. For advanced bodybuilders, this is more like the King of All Back Breakers and Butt Builders. Like most trainers, I did squats for years, and Im of two minds regarding their effectiveness. Its a good fundamental exercise for some, if kept in check. The problem is that too few people keep them in check, and many people just arent built for them. Along with the bench press and the deadlift, the squat is one lift in which guys really pile on the plates for low reps. The bottom line is if youre always going heavy, eventually there will be a straw that breaks the camels or, in this case, the bodybuilders back. It happened to me. Heavy squatting was the primary reason I had lower back surgery in 1998. Consider what youre doing when squatting. You have a heavy weight on your traps, sometimes more than 500 pounds, pressing down on your spine. Then you bend down, putting your lumbar region in a vulnerable position, not to mention the strain on your knees and even your shoulders, from holding the bar. All of this is compounded if youre my height or taller. If youre Lee Priest or Dexter Jackson, you can do squats all day with good form and little discomfort, but if youre over 510, its tough to do them without bending forward too far. Gym rats blindly worship at the squat racks because thats how its always been. The funny thing is I know guys whove been training more than 10 years who still squat because they say they need the legs. They havent figured out that if it hasnt worked by now, it aint gonna work. The longer youve been training, the less you should squat. In addition to the injury factor, once you have a foundation of mass, the squat can harm your appearance. It expands your hip flexors, glutes and upper thighs, which arent typically areas in which experienced trainers need more size. Over time, I think squats outlive their usefulness. Instead of traditional squats, I do hack squats and leg presses. Theyre better than squats for muscling up the quads and targeting different areas, and theyre safer, too. I believe in full ranges of motion, all the way down and all the way up for these movements, and for leg presses, I take a relatively wide stance. The taller you are, the wider your stance should be. PRESSES BEHIND THE NECK Unlike squats, I have absolutely nothing positive to say about presses behind the neck. No one should ever do them. They combine my two least-favorite factors: a straight bar and a behind-the-neck motion. Anything behind the neck is the worst: presses, chins and pulldowns. Its an unnatural and unsafe position. You may be able to get away with these as a beginner. Kids tell me I do presses behind the neck, and my shoulders dont bother me, and I always say Talk to me in five years if youre still doing them. Instead of these, I recommend military (front) presses or dumbbell presses, both of which work front delts much more safely. I never lower the weight below chin level. Youll notice this is about as far as you can go without your shoulders dropping. All thats happening between your chin and your chest is an upper-pec movement and a whole lot of potential damage. I usually perform military presses on a Smith machine, which lets me roll my palms back and find a more natural position. Dumbbells allow for greater freedom of motion, and I typically do partial Arnold presses, starting with my palms facing each other and twisting my wrists on the way up so my palms face forward.BARBELL ROWS I cant think of a good reason to do bent barbell rows. Again, youre using a straight bar, which forces your hands and, consequently, your arms into a somewhat unnatural position, and again your lower back is vulnerable. T-bar rows are better because you stand more upright, putting less strain on your lumbar region, and you can usually take an angled or parallel grip. One-arm rows are also good, as long as you dont go too heavy. The best thing for those of us whove had back problems is a rowing machine with a chest pad. That will take virtually all the lower-back action out of the movement.DEADLIFTS I wont condemn deads and say you should never do them, but too many people end up gaining little muscle for all the straining they do and the injury risks they take. Supposed bodybuilders load up a bar just to see how much they can lift. Thats not bodybuilding and, as with squats, many guys just arent built for deadlifts (the ideal shape is short with relatively long arms), so this becomes a strength exercise that hits the glutes and legs as much as the back. Instead of traditional deadlifts, I prefer top deadlifts. You can do these on a Smith machine or a power rack. Set the safety catch or support bar so the bar cant go below knee-level. That way you focus mostly on your back instead of legs, hips and glutes, and you reduce the risk of injury. BENCH PRESSES For some odd reason, people take it personally if I say the bench press sucks. They consider it blasphemy. Youve got to bench to be hardcore, they say. I hate to break it to them, but most pro bodybuilders havent done free-weight bench presses in years. Are you going to tell Tom Prince or Jay Cutler theyre not hardcore because they dont bench? The problem is that unless you keep your shoulders down and back and maintain the precise groove for every rep, free-weight bench presses place too much pressure on shoulders. Again, the taller you are, the more this is amplified. Theres also the possibility that youll suffer a pec tear by doing bench presses. Think of how often you hear about guys popping pecs while benching and how rarely pecs are torn doing anything else. I need two hands to count the number of top bodybuilders whose careers have been shortened by bench- press injuries. People bench primarily to answer the question, What do you bench? Thats not enough of a reason for me. Id much rather do whats best for building pec mass, and there are at least 10 exercises superior to free-weight benches, starting with incline presses, machine bench presses and dumbbell flyes. As with shoulder presses, I avoid the lowest position in any chest press.BARBELL CURLS Heres another exercise I never do, and its all because of that devils tool - the straight bar. Straight bars put too much pressure on inner elbows. If you have elbow pain, chances are its from a straight bar. Using a straight bar to perform curls forces you into an unnatural position. If you stand talking to someone, your knuckles or palms arent facing forward unless youre planning to clock him or beg for money. The natural position for hands at your sides is with your palms facing each other, and the natural position for a curl is for the thumbs to come up higher than the pinkies, which a cambered bar approximates. Instead of barbell curls, I do cambered-bar curls in most biceps workouts. There are many other curling lifts that I like, and Im a big advocate of workout variety, but Ill single out dumbbell preacher curls as an excellent exercise. Dumbbell preachers both restrict your movement (by bracing your arms against a bench) and provide for more freedom, as you can rotate your wrists.LYING TRICEPS EXTENSIONS Heres a lift you should avoid just based on its nickname: skull crushers. Thats taking no pain, no gain way too far. Again, lying triceps extensions are typically done with the dreaded straight bar. Worst of all, each rep starts and stops with your head as the base. Thats not good, at least not for those of us who like our heads. If you want to do a two-hand free-weight extension, do French presses (while seated, lower the bar behind your head), which at least wont bounce off your forehead, and always use a cambered bar. While were on the subject of triceps, dont use a straight bar for pushdowns, either; use an angled bar or rope instead. Have I gotten across the message to avoid straight bars? MODERN ADVANTAGES The common link among all the classic movements I dislike is that they were invented a hundred years ago before anyone had much knowledge of training, and they were just making it up as they went along. You dont see anyone doing one-arm kettledrum presses anymore. Other ancient exercises should be obsolete as well. I suppose we could still crank-start our cars, but I prefer to just slip my key in the ignition and turn it on. Trainers need to take advantage of the many modern tools they have at their disposal and not be too concerned about what others think is hardcore. You can be hardcore with Nautilus, Hammer Strength, Strive or whatever the latest computer-designed contraption is. Why not incorporate as many tools as you can? Too many guys get this ridiculous hardcore mentality, which ends up limiting their muscle gains. There is no rule that the more noise you make or the faster you drop the weight the quicker youll grow, and theres no rule that you have to do certain exercises just because theyve been around since the Sig Klein era. Its a new millennium. Training hardcore today doesnt mean limiting ourselves to the same movements our great-grandfathers performed. It means having the stones to say there are no sacred cows in bodybuilding, and it means doing only what works best for you to build maximum muscle. Sponsored ContentYou May Like Top Ten YouTube Ch…American Live Wire How Famous Have Aged O…Funlyest 7 Warning Signs Your T…Allwomenstalk Urgent Message To …Just For Meby TaboolaFROM THE WEB Ouchhh!! (37 P… (Funlyest) Wom… (Just For Me Today) 10 … (American Live Wire) Accord… (Daily Health Post) No Man Will … (Lifegooroo) ZACK KHAN INJURED 8 Tips for Great Abs 10 Power Foods for Size & Strength 8 Ways to Burn More Fat Grow Muscle, Burn Fatby TaboolaPromoted Content COMMENTS RELATED Phil Heath Visits Muscle Maker GrillFrom One Legend to AnotherGasparis Simple Solutions - SquatBattle for the 2014 Arnold 212 Title!Arnold Expo Madness: Zack Khan CONNECT WITH US Copyright © 2014 Weider Publications, LLC, a subsidiary of American Media, Inc. All rights reservedShareThis Copy and Paste- See more at: flexonline/training/news/7-classic-exercises-you-should-avoid#sthash.3hdRuKsW.dpuf
Posted on: Sat, 15 Mar 2014 05:11:49 +0000

Trending Topics



Meh

Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015