Strength Training of the Eastern Bloc - Powerlifting. Powerlifting check
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Means we must do more and more in the course of our powerlifting career!
Also in powerlifting, if you do not do something, or do not train, then you will lose it slowly.
PRINCIPLE OF FATIGUE MANAGEMENT
It is important to understand this principle. The higher the stress on your recovery capacity, the longer the recovery will take.
So your appeal is too high and the next day of training too early, then you will slowly lose weight physically because you train too much. If your training stimulus is too small and the break between days is too long, you will also lose weight physically. So remember. Timing is important here! (timed coordination)
Principle individual differences
Many training programs ignore the law of individual differences. Not every body reacts immediately to the stimuli and volume. For example, some need 5 sets more squat to make progress than other people.
Not everyone can handle the same job.
Biomechanical conditions also influence the training and progress. By way of example, longer legs alter the leverage and, accordingly, adjustments need to be made, which muscles you train more to force further progress.
SUMMARY
The following points must be looked at to see if a training plan is good.
specification
There must be a lot of heavy squat, heavy bench press and heavy deadlift.
overload
You have to constantly overload your body with more weight, repetitions or sets. No new stimuli, no new adjustments.
fatigue management
Temporal coordination of workouts is important. If the stimulus is too high and there is not enough rest, you will probably get into overtraining and break down. If the stimuli are too small and the breaks too long, then you come into the lower training and will dismantle or stay the same.
individual differences
A plan should be set to your own differences. Each body needs a different dose of stimuli, exercises or volume. Also in view of biomechanics.
VOLUME, FREQUENCY, INTENSITY
Now let’s talk about variables that we can modify perfectly. That's volume, frequency and intensity.
Intensity
The intensity is one of the most important factors. This does not refer to how hard you try, but how heavy the weights are in relation to your maximum weight. For example: You can move Max in the squat 100 kilos exactly once. Now a set of 80 kilos is made, which now corresponds to 80% intensity.
Intensity and Specification
Training in the 90% + range, which corresponds to 1 to 3 repetitions, the training effect will be primarily neural in nature. Simply put, your nervous system will improve its overall efficiency through the maximum levels of muscle compartment. In addition, the coordination of this compartment will improve, leading to further performance improvements.
A huge part of the power used in moving a maximum weight will be neuronal in nature. In order for a program to be able to meet the specification threshold for powerlifting training, you must train frequently or often in the training cycle at the appropriate time in the 90% + range.
As we move the repeating image from top to bottom, the training effect shifts slowly from neuronal efficiency to muscle-building and then muscular endurance. This is mainly due to the fact that low repetition rates are predominantly restricted by force, while higher repetition rates are more influenced by metabolic fatigue factors such as ATP depletion, lactic acid threshold and other endurance components that are not necessarily relevant to powerlifting.
Intensity and Muscle Growth
Probably not less than 75% with only a few exceptions. Muscle building is a necessary component of sustained, consistent progress in powerlifting. You cannot push out an infinite amount of technology and general neural efficiency. At some point you need a bigger engine to drive faster and further. In a good powerlifting program, a lifter will spend time in the 75-85% intensity range. This corresponds to sets of 4-8 repetitions and builds up a larger musculature.
You get what you train. If your training consists of nothing but sets of 5, you will get a nice mix of strength and size. However, 5s are optimal neither for strength nor size. So, spending some time in this area is beneficial but spending solely on this area would make a program non-specific to powerlifting. You have to train hard.
Remember, intensity determines training effect. For powerlifting we want the training effect to be an increase in maximum power production and that involves very heavy weights.
Volume
To quote Mike Tuchscherer, “when the intensity determines the training effect, the volume determines the size of that effect”.
For example, if you expose your skin to sunlight, you will probably get a tan ("a training effect"). If you stay in the sun for a minute, you might not have done enough to provide adequate "stress." The body must not be forced to compensate because you have not overloaded it. If you stay in the sun for two hours, you will get a lot of "stress", but it will probably be too much and you will probably burn. Both are not a good result.
More importantly, there are a wide range of possibilities in the middle. If you spend 15 minutes in the sun, you will get a degree of tanning; If you spend 30 minutes in the sun, you will get another level of tanning. In this case, the time in the sun is our "volume" of stress and the level of tanning is the "size" of the training effect.
In training, we can define the volume in a variety of ways: the number of total reps in a workout, the number of sets, or we can calculate "tonnage." Tonnage is nothing more than the calculation of the total repetitions and sets that you have moved through the weight. For example, if you bend 100x5x5, then you have accumulated (100 * 5 * 5 =) 2500 kilos as total tonnage.
The more tonnage accumulated, the greater the training effect will be. But that also determines the longer you have to wait before you can train again. As with everyone, there is an optimal dose-response relationship.
Introduction to Frequency
Frequency