2005 archives (page 4)

May 8, 2005

Week 19: City Gym and sore back

Filed under: Workouts

Saturday, 7 May 2005: Coan/Phillipi deadlift, week 6

City Gym from outside

Saturday is obviously the worst day to train in Helsinki. After having looked at a digital camera candidate for Måns at the computer outlet Verkkokauppa.com we headed over to Töölö Gym since the neighbourhood gym is no more. Arriving at their door at 5.30pm, we were surprised to notice that they would be closing in thirty minutes. We jumped into Måns’s car with the auspicious register plate (YAK) and headed over to Hot Gym, a place we vaguely recalled as being open 24h. We were greeted by very hot looking neon lights… and a sign that told us the gym is open on weekends to key card holders only. With Metal Gym being at the other end of Helsinki (besides, I didn’t quite feel up to doing my puny deads at the Finnish powerlifting mecca) the Yak mobile next took us to City Gym, a basement gym located in front of the Radisson Sas Royal Hotel . Turned out they closed at 7pm, so we were on for forty minutes.

City Gym panorama
Gym panorama from City Gym, Helsinki, Finland (click image for full view)

We’ve visited City Gym once before, in the early 90s. I vividly recalled how impressed we were with the modified row machine (modified rows were our life then more or less). Besides that, my memory of the place was rather faint. Seven euros, and perhaps two minutes, later I was walking around looking for a suitable place to do week 6 of the Coan/Phillipi deadlift program. There was no power rack to be found (goodbye good mornings off pins!), but they had two squat racks with a deadlift-friendly area in front of them. My back had been feeling rather stiff for most of the week, perhaps not totally unrelated to a certain early morning deadlift session, but decided to give the old pull a try anyway. I got through the workout OK, but by midnight I could tell it hadn’t done my back any good. The next day, I was feeling a burning pain in my low back. Shouldn’t have done that, shouldn’t have done that. I couldn’t help but worry that this spelled the end to this deadlift cycle. Had I done too much after all?

Deadlift (85%): worked up to 2 @ 120 kg/265 lbs
Speed deadlift (70%): 3x3 @ 97.5 kg/216 lbs (90 sec rest b/w sets)
Power shrugs (65% of current): 3x5 @ 85 kg/188 lbs
Stiff-leg deadlift: 3x5 @ 95 kg/210 lbs
Underhand (reverse) grip lat pulldown: 3x5 @ 95 kg/210 lbs
Bent over row: 5 @ 60 kg/133 lbs (light set)

Total training time: 45 min

May 12, 2005

Week 20: Introducing tsampaPRtable and a decline PR

Filed under: Workouts

Monday, 9 May 2005: Bench

My sluggish brain didn’t really expect any miracles to happen so left the camera at home. Still, I ended up nailing 100 kg/221 lbs on the decline (usual makeshift setup) for a single with a royal pause on the chest. Always a little something for the PR matrix. Speaking of which, as you may or may not have noticed, it is now powered by my little GPLd PHP script tsampaPRtable. Now that updating the table is a breeze, it is time to raise the sails on the bench me thinks…

I was pressed for time, so supersetted the accessories.

Decline bench, wide-grip:
              10 @ 50 kg/111 lbs
              5 @ 60 kg/133 lbs
              5 @ 70 kg/155 lbs
              5 @ 80 kg/177 lbs
              4 @ 90 kg/199 lbs
              1 @ 100 kg/221 lbs

Supersetted:
      Speed floor press (wide, medium, narrow): 6x3 @ 55 kg/122 lbs
      Sets 1-3: Seated cable L-flye: 8 @ 15 kg/33 lbs, 2x10 @ 10 kg/22 lbs
      Sets 4-6: Lying cable curl: 3x8 @ 65 kg/144 lbs

Total training time: 32 min

May 22, 2005

Week 21: Magic wands and interesting camera angles

Filed under: Workouts

Monday, 16 May 2005: Coan-Phillipi deadlift, week 7

father and sonThe deadlift fairy must have waived her magic wand at my sore back. Or perhaps carrying Rufus, now 6.5 kg/14 lbs, around in his Baby Björn carrier has been therapeutic. Whatever the cause, come Monday I felt 100% ready to go again and the workout did not prove this feeling wrong as I easily pulled the target reps on the deadlift. To be on the safe side, I did lighten up the accessories a bit, but also dropped the height of the pins on the good morning to slightly below the navel (near parallel).

This week of the Coan-Phillipi deadlift program equalled that of week 4 in weight, but with slightly less volume overall. Next week I will jump into the deep end with my first 130 kg/287 deadlift in a loooong while. I should be well prepared by now, but, still… tantalizingly scary.

Deadlift (90%): worked up to 2 @ 125 kg/276 lbs
Speed deadlift (75%): 3x3 @ 105 kg/232 lbs (120 sec rest b/w sets)
Power shrugs (70% of current): 2x5 @ 90 kg/199 lbs
Stiff-leg deadlift: 2x5 @ 80 kg/177 lbs
Bent over row: 2x5 @ 60 kg/133 lbs
Underhand (reverse) grip lat pulldown: 2x5 @ 85 kg/188 lbs
Arched back good morning off pins (below navel):
              5 @ 50 kg/111 lbs
              5 @ 60 kg/133 lbs

Total training time: 50 min

Friday, 20 May 2005: Bench

father and sonGot myself a Hama mini tripod for the Canon PowerShot A80 digital camera. With flexible legs that bend in any direction, this tripod is the ultimate accessory for the gym photographer who wants to set up the camera without resorting to strategically placed pencils designed to give just the right tilt (they never do). Predictably enough, after having shot 68 training clips on a shoestring (more or less literally) I could not help myself. From the side, above, below… you name it. Die-hard readers might want to watch the output (4.3M) of this otherwise fairly lame benching session. Alarmingly close to powerlifting porn.

Floor press:
              5 @ 50 kg/111 lbs
              5 @ 60 kg/133 lbs
              3 @ 70 kg/155 lbs
              3 @ 80 kg/177 lbs
              3 @ 90 kg/199 lbs
              1 @ 100 kg/221 lbs
              0 @ 105 kg/232 lbs
Speed floor press (wide, medium, narrow): 3x3 @ 60 kg/133 lbs
Standing shoulder press (zero leg drive):
              5 @ 40 kg/88 lbs
              5 @ 50 kg/111 lbs
              1 @ 60 kg/133 lbs (sudden failure syndrome)
Standing dumbell curl: 6 @ 21 kg/46 lbs

Total training time: 40 min (?)

May 28, 2005

Week 22: Theory yes, practice no-no

Filed under: Workouts

Wednesday, 25 May 2005: Coan-Phillipi deadlift, week 8

Empowered by Alberto’s recent suggestions on my horrendous deadlift form, I tried sinking lower to bring in more leg drive while firing the hip drive as soon as the bar passed the knees. Suddenly the deadlift felt much safer with the realisation that the upper-body-parallel-to-the-floor style is not what the deadlift should be. I made a lot of progress this day… or so I thought until I reviewed the video (1.8M). I had good form at low weights, but it was back to the usual dark arts with the heavier weights. In fact, the heavier the bar got, the more I wanted to stiff-leg it even when my brain vainly fired off stern orders not to. Synaptic failure. I can blame having a nasty groove programmed in deep, but this may just have more than a little to do with my pathetically weak legs. Will need to do something about that and see if can’t get my body to follow my brain better then. Meanwhile, I wither in this zen like state produced by a deadlift which has no form.

Below is the first rep of my 130 kg/287 lbs pull. Hopefully those who like to link to my image and video content from various discussion forums, will for once note that this sequence is not an example of proper deadlift form but rather the polar opposite of it. Surprisingly often I find people citing some video of mine as a good example of a particular exercise even when I expressely state in the blog entry itself that I have a technique problem (my Zercher squat videos are particularly famous in this regard). That said, I don’t mind linking and mostly it is done well, but please do try to get the context right.

whee ho!

 

Deadlift (93%): worked up to 2 @ 130 kg/287 lbs (failed first attempt)
Speed deadlift (70%): 3x3 @ 97.5 kg/215 lbs (120 sec rest b/w sets)
Power shrugs (75% of current): 2x5 @ 97.5 kg/215 lbs
Stiff-leg deadlift: 2x5 @ 100 kg/221 lbs
Bent over row: 2x5 @ 80 kg/177 lbs
Underhand (reverse) grip lat pulldown: 2x5 @ 100 kg/221 lbs
Arched back good morning off pins (below navel): 2x5 @ 80 kg/177 lbs

Total training time: 90 min (?!)

June 4, 2005

Week 23: Double take on the deadlift

Filed under: Workouts

Wednesday, 1 June 2005: Coan-Phillipi deadlift, week 9

whee ho!Up to 135 kg/298 lbs. Actually, the program would have had me do 137.5 kg/304 lbs, but I eased out the slope a bit from the prescribed 2 @ 125 kg/276 lbs, 2 @ 130 kg/287 lbs, 137.5/304 lbs, 140 kg/309 lbs to 2 @ 125, 2 @ 130, 135, 140 since I found a 7.5 kg/17 lbs increase between weeks 7 and 8 a bit too much. Not a major change, but makes things appear a bit more friendly coming back from a serious back injury.

Måns was on hand with his new digital camera and I had mine, so for the first time I present thee with two simultaneous angles of my dead (1.8M). Perhaps things looked a tiny bit better than last week (God knows I tried hard), but still nowhere near good. Up it came though, 140 kg/309 lbs next!

Deadlift (96%): worked up to 135 kg/298 lbs
Speed deadlift (70%): 2x3 @ 97.5 kg/215 lbs
Power shrugs (75% of current): 2x5 @ 97.5 kg/215 lbs
Stiff-leg deadlifts: 2x5 @ 80 kg/177 lbs

Worked up to a single on the bench with 95 kg/210 lbs playing with an extreme arch and feet tucked in under the bench. Not much fun, but at least I got a little bit of bench work ingested into these hectic times.

Total training time: 45 min (?)

June 11, 2005

Week 24: Near miss

Filed under: Workouts

Friday, 10 June 2005: Coan-Phillipi deadlift, week 9

Something funky happened to my right shoulder on Monday as I was playing around with Rufus. There was no real stress on the shoulder as it happened, but it left me with a lot of pain trying to move the arm backwards (forward rotation was easier). It did not feel like a serious problem and indeed, come Friday it felt stable enough for the coveted 140 kg/309 lbs attempt. I got it up to my knees four times to the point where my formless deadlift has me standing with straight legs waiting for the Romanian deadlift finish, but no further. Close. I had really hoped to break 140 kg today leaving me for a true max attempt on the Coan “meet day”, but will now be gunning for it again next week. Needless to say, skipped any attempts at benching this week as I don’t want to risk a shoulder injury.

Deadlift (100%): worked up to 130 kg/287 lbs, missed 140 kg/309 lbs four times
Speed deadlift (60%): 2x3 @ 85 kg (rest as needed b/w sets)

Total training time: 60 min

June 19, 2005

Week 25: Huge miss and off to the green pastures

Filed under: Workouts

140 kg/309 again, but these attempts looked worse than last week. The preparation for this session sucked too, as a freelance project forced me to work non-stop Sunday to Wednesday. I ate sparingly, slept an average of three hours a night (skipped the night totally between Tuesday and Wednesday to meet the deadline) and had way too many energy drinks to keep me going. Mentally, the effects of this rumba made me fail even before I stepped into the gym.

After now having finished the 10 week Coan-Phillipi deadlift program, I have nothing but good to say about it. Even if I didn’t quite make my target, it did serve it’s original purpose of making me get back into the deadlift which I had some serious issues with following my back injury. Given how hard the first 130 kg/287 lbs attempts were, I also think I overestimated my current max when beginning the program. All in all, this gives a good foundation to build on and I am now only 10 kg/22 lbs from my PR as a powerlifter.

With the blog now finally up to speed again, I regret to announce that I will now let it rest for another month as I have decided not to bring my laptop with me to our summer cottage. For once in my life, I will try to have a computer-free vacation, but rest assured that there will be an update of my summer training and continued renovation attempts at Toffe’s Gym. Have a great summer folks!!! Update in four to five weeks.

June 26, 2005

Week 26: Construction site philosopher in training

Filed under: Workouts

Squat racks razed to the ground. Huge rocks unearthed. Long-term readers will recall the mayhem that I orchestrated at my outdoor gym at the end of last year’s summer training season in order to accomodate for a power rack and heavy duty bench that were to be welded out of iron junk. In the end, the promised welder never showed up and the iron was left alone to hibernate under a big pile of snow. Not wanting to spend another rackless summer at Toffe’s Gym, one of the first things I did upon returning this year was to get me another welder who promised to deliver the goods within the first week of July. Meanwhile, I am relegated to training at what can best be described as a construction site equipped mainly with iron, my donkey calf machine and an old Weider bench standing on a level wooden platform. The spruces swaying in the fresh breeze from the sea made sure I still felt like I had just returned to my own little powerlifting mecca.

Tuesday, 21 June 2005: SQ/DL

After the recent deadlift assault, squatting was on the agenda. More specifically, something that would be beneficial for curing the excessive forward lean and leg drive issue that is the sorry hallmark of both my squat and deadlift. I won’t pretend that I will start to do these exercises with a near straight back overnight simply overriding current weaknesses (long back and thighs don’t help much either), but if I could get to the point where I can drive straight up from whatever forward lean I have at the bottom it would be a great start. Once I start to ascend, I must not yield an inch forward, come rain or shine.

Standing out there in the woods at past midnight (blessed be the bright Finnish summer nights) without any kind of rack, my mind wandered in mysterious ways and suggested I try Zercher squats off the floor. This is the way they were originally performed before, according to Louie Simmons on the older Deadlift Secrets video, the much increased mass of the modern powerlifter prevented going that deep. There is really no reason to drop down just to the thigh or just past the knees if one is physically able to go all the way. For one thing, the lift becomes dramatically more challenging thus sparing the poor elbow crooks from heavier weights while really forcing the lifter into an extreme forward lean and deep squat that are sure to overload a muscle or two as the body must work even harder to stay upright. Being the zealot I am, I will henceforth regard everything else than off the floor a partial Zercher squat. ;-)

To the tune of the humming mosquitoes, I slapped one wheel on the bar and found that I was just barely able to go down into a squat deep enough to get the bar into the crook of my arms. What I also found was that 60 kg/133 lbs was already too heavy for me to manage in good form. I dropped down to 50 kg/111 lbs, which worked great although the smaller plates did not permit me to touch the floor between every rep. This is without doubt the most demanding two-legged barbell squat exercise I’ve tried so far. If anyone out there tries the full-range Zercher, I would be more than a little interested in what poundages you can muster up without turning it into a Zercher deadlift. Anyway, if you have three minutes to spare, the nocturnal Zercher action can naturally be found on this week’s video summary (5.2M).

Zecher squat off floor:
            3, 1 @ 60 kg/133 lbs
            5,3,4 @ 50 kg/111 lbs
One-handed deadlift with barbell:
            5 @ 40 kg/88 lbs
            5 @ 50 kg/111 lbs
Stability ball crunch:
            30 @ 5 kg/11 lbs
            2x15 @ 10 kg/22 lbs
Walk outs with arm and leg lift: 5

Friday, 24 June 2005

On the upper body front, I’ve decided to declare war on the shoulders. In my bodybuilding days I came to regard the shoulders as my strongest body part as I could move the same weight on the seated dumbell press as on the incline (32 kg/71 lbs dumbells appeared very heavy back then). Photos from that time also show a guy with huge shoulders and a fairly flat chest.

I do realize the importance of extra shoulder work for raw lifters, but somehow I’ve carried the illusion of shoulders not being a personal problem over the fence into the powerlifting world. Well, I can now bench a lot more than I could back then and it would be naive to pretend that the shoulders are evolving at the same speed as my other muscle groups without doing much extra work for the front delts (always been big on preventive cuff work). As John McDonald pointed out to someone somewhere recently, all the old-time big benchers did tons of shoulder work according to Biasiotto’s and Arndt’s book The Bench Press. I should know that, heck, I’ve even reviewed the book, but blinders are per definition blinders. We raw lifters have a lot to learn from the era before heavy duty bench shirts made powerlifting revolve increasingly around having an overwhelming lockout to augment the drive that the shirt gives out of the bottom. To make things even more plain, it has been clear for a long time now that my sticking point in the bench press is precisely at the point where the delts give over to the triceps. Suddenly the idea that I have seriously neglected shoulder work and that they might be the main hindrance to me pushing up bigger weights on the bench does not appear so far fetched anymore. After all, I have been complemented on my strong lockout more than once and the fact that I can lockout 70 kg/155 lbs more for a triple than I can bench off my chest should tell a listening ear something. ‘Nuff said.

Behind-the-neck press: worked up to 5x5 @ 45 kg/99 lbs over several sets
Close-grip bench:
            10 @ 45 kg/99 lbs
            10 @ 60 kg/133 lbs
            5,4 @ 70 kg/155 lbs
Bench shrug: 3x10 @ 60 kg/133 lbs
Lying L-flye:
            6 @ 11 kg/24 lbs
            15 @ 6 kg/13 lbs

Saturday, 25 June 2005

got a handle on itMy mind continued to bubble towards the end of the week. On an impulse I grabbed a shovel and started digging my way past roots and stones into the ground. Come Saturday, my new pit was basically done except for a permanent top structure. Good enough for the second novelty of the week - handle squats. I first saw these on the Westside Squatting Secrets tape where Louie explained how Westside lifters would complement all the box squatting with belt or handle squats to keep the quadriceps up to par. I grabbed my Ironmind loading pin that I bought last year, threw on a few plates, attached my V-bar handle on it and had a go. Reviewing the ensuing video footage, I was more than pleased with my drive off the bottom as the tendency to lead with the legs was only barely noticable. I love this movement already.

Handle squat: worked up to 5,5,5,4 @ 80 kg/177 lbs
Stiff-legged handle deadlift:
            8 @ 40 kg/88 lbs
            8 @ 60 kg/133 lbs
Bent-over handle row: 3 @ 60 kg/133 lbs (aborted as lower back felt fried)

June 28, 2005

Good mornings in practice (aka primary reason why snapping the back again would be a bad idea)

Filed under: General

Rufus's first swim at the family summer cottage

July 3, 2005

Week 27: Hack, hack, hack

Filed under: Workouts

Monday, 27 June 2005: Bench

Quick and light as this workout might have been, it caused major soreness. Soreness = BIG no-no according to the Westside core litterature I’m wading through. Will elaborate on this later when I start organizing my reading notes. As a side note, this was the first time I ever did plate raises (front raises with a plate held by both hands). Delts, delts

JM press: worked up to 4x10 @ 4o kg/88 lbs
Plate raise: worked up to 2x10 @ 20 kg/44 lbs
Standing barbell curl: 3x10 @ 30 kg/66 lbs

Thursday, 30 June 2005: Squat/dead

anticipationary, stationary...Still a rackless sucker, I had to come up with something else to do off the floor. Perhaps it was because it is one of Ano’s favorites, because Louie Simmons says it is great for deadlift starting strength, or because I told Scott way back that “I’d try them Wednesday“. Be that as it may, figured Hack Deadlifts (aka Hack Squats, aka Hack Squat Deadlifts, aka Behind the Back Deadlifts) would be both fun and instructive to try for the first time. Because the weight is further behind than on the conventional deadlift, I figured this might just be a helpful exercise for learning to lean less forward. This turned out to be partially true, but as the last couple of sets prove (VIDEO 3.1M), it is indeed possible to lean a bit on these as well… first time, first PR at 130 kg/287 lbs. Another keeper for sure.

Hack deadlift (aka Hack squat):
            5 @ 60 kg/133 lbs
            5 @ 70 kg/155 lbs
            5 @ 80 kg/177 lbs
            5 @ 90 kg/199 lbs
            5 @ 100 kg/221 lbs
            2x1 @ 110 kg/243 lbs
            1 @ 120 kg/265 lbs
            1 @ 130 kg/287 lbs
            2x0 @ 135 kg/298 lbs
Straight-legged sit-up on bench:
            20 @ bodyweight
            7,5 @ 5 kg/11 lbs
Arm and leg extension kneeling on stability ball: 12

Saturday, 2 July: Bench

Upped the weight on the behind-the-neck presses. 5x5 @ 50 kg/111 lbs started being tight, but I got it.

Behind-the-neck press: worked up to 5x5 @ 50 kg/111 lbs
Close-grip bench with feet in the air: worked up to 3x5 @ 70 kg/155 lbs
Lying L-flye: 2x15 @ 6 kg/13 lbs
Bench shrug: 2x10 @ 70 kg/155 lbs

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