Monday, December 26, 2011

Football First String Weight Workout - Hardcore Routine

!±8± Football First String Weight Workout - Hardcore Routine

This weight workout is called 100's because it only consist of four different exercises, and doing all four 100 reps! These directions must be followed exactly as written! You will for sure see great improvement in size and muscle. For this routine you will need a watch with a second hand, and weights. Before getting started read the entire workout plan, and get all your weights together, The four exercises for this routine are as follows:

Bench Press (to be done with 50% of your body weight, for example if your weight is 200 lbs. the weight you should perform this exercise with is 100 lbs.) Note if using dumbbells the combined weight of both dumbbells should be 50% of your body weight.

Curls (to be done with 25% of body weight) to be done with curl bar, or barbell, or dumbbell. But remember the combined weight of both dumbbells must equal approx. 25% of body weight.

Press behind neck (to be done with the same weight as above 25% of body weight.) this exercise is often referred to as Overhead Extensions.

Sit Ups (do whatever situps you can do best remember you are doing 100 of these.)

Day #1 through Day #3 Bench press 100 reps in 12 minutes or less (do as many sets and reps as needed to complete 100 reps on the bench press, within 12 minutes.)your weights should be set at 50% of your body weight.

Curls Standing,100 reps in 12 minutes or less (same rules apply as above do as many sets and reps as needed to complete 100 reps within 12 minutes)your weights should be set at 25% of your body weight.

Press behind neck or Overhead extensions 100 reps within 12 minutes or less (same rules apply as above use as many sets and reps as needed to complete 100 reps.) your weights should be set at 50% of your body weight.

Sit Ups complete 100 sit ups within 5 minutes.

Day 4 through Day 5

Cut back your time on all the exercises from 12 minutes down to 10 minutes, but keep your same time with the sit ups at 5 minutes.

Day 6 through Day 10

Raise all your weights by 10%, (so instead of being at 50% your now at 60% on the bench press and 35% on curls and press.) Keep your time frame the same at 10 minutes for each exercise,and 5 minutes for situps.

Day 11 through Day 16

Raise all your weights by 10%, (so instead of being at 60% your now at 70% no the bench press and at 45% on curls and press.) While keeping the time frame the same at ten minutes, and 5 minutes for situps.

Day 19 through Day 22

Cut time frame down to 8 minutes for each exercise. 5 minutes for situps.

Day #23 through Day #26

Raise all your weights by 10% (instead of being at 70% your now at 80% on the bench press, and at 55% on curls & press.)

Day 27 through Day #30

Raise your weights by 10% (to 90% on your bench press, and 65% on your curls,and press exercises.)

Day #31 through Day #34

Raise your weights by 10% (to 100% of body weight on bench press, and 75% for your curls and press.)


Football First String Weight Workout - Hardcore Routine

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Tuesday, December 20, 2011

200 Pound Easy Grip Olympic Weight Set with Bar and Collars

!±8± 200 Pound Easy Grip Olympic Weight Set with Bar and Collars


Rate : | Price : | Post Date : Dec 20, 2011 15:51:03
Usually ships in 3-4 business days

Includes 155 pounds worth of weight plates and a 45 pound weight bar for a total of 200 pounds. This 200 lb. set includes (1) 7 Foot Olympic Style Bar, (2) 35 pound plates, (2) 25 pound plates, (2) 10 pound plates, (2) 5 pound plates, (2) 2.5 pound plates, and (2) spring collars.

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Sunday, December 11, 2011

Troy's VTX Premium Grade Olympic 300 lb. Weight Set GOSS-300V

!±8± Troy's VTX Premium Grade Olympic 300 lb. Weight Set GOSS-300V

Brand : Troy | Rate : | Price : $419.00
Post Date : Dec 11, 2011 17:38:16 | Usually ships in 4-5 business days


The 300 lb. Olympic Weight Set comes with Troy's VTX GO-V 2" Premium Grade "Wide Flanged" Grip Plates with a Gray Finish

More Specification..!!

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

bench columnist 205lbs

My body weight is about 140ish.height is about 5 6 or 5 7 and im sixteen years old..and my max on the bench press is 205lbs.the bar is an olympic bar which ways 45 lbs and i have a 45 and 35 lb weight on each side..add it up.

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Friday, December 2, 2011

Do Dead Lifts With Tiny Weight Increases To Build Strength Like Milo of Croton

!±8± Do Dead Lifts With Tiny Weight Increases To Build Strength Like Milo of Croton

Pretty much anybody who has read much about strength training is aware of the story about Milo of Croton. Supposedly, Milo had a calf. He reportedly would dead lift the calf up off the ground and carry it around on his shoulders everyday. He continued this habit until the calf became a bull. His strength was acquired relatively easily. To him, the bull did not seem to be increasing in weight very rapidly because he lifted it daily. His strength increased slowly over a period of time.

Milo simply picked up something everyday, similar to performing a dead lift. As the calf grew bigger and stronger, Milo got bigger and stronger. If Milo could pick up a calf everyday, what is your excuse for not doing something equivalent every day, such as dead lifts? If progressively increasing the weight, at a slow pace, worked for Milo, why would it not work for you?

Milo lifted his calf everyday, so there was a never point where the calf seemed like it weighed too much. Cattle do not grow five pounds everyday. They may grow one pound or two pounds per day. On some days they may not grow at all. Growth happens in spurts.

People step into the gym to do dead lifts and they attempt to increase weight by increments of five pounds. How logical is that? If the calf grew five pounds per day, Milo never would have been able to dead lift it. It makes no sense to even try such a thing.

I know five pounds is the smallest weight increase possible with standard Olympic plates, unless the gym happens to have plate mates. However, you can put anything on the bar to increase the weight. I have heard of people buying flat washers from the hardware store and hanging them on the bar from some shoe strings. Washers do not weigh much. In fact, the ones they used were only weighed a few ounces each. If you make manageable increases, over time, you will get pretty strong. If you could dead lift something yesterday, there is no reason you could not lift a few more ounces the next day.

If you want to be big and strong, you must train, but intelligently. There is no way around it. It is no wonder people burn up their nervous system. They are trying to increase their dead lift poundage entirely too much at once. If you are trying to make yourself do more than you are capable of doing, of course your body will fight you. You can do dead lifts every day if you want, but do it smart! Increase your weight slowly.


Do Dead Lifts With Tiny Weight Increases To Build Strength Like Milo of Croton

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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Front Squats Are a Great Exercise For Abdominal Development

!±8± Front Squats Are a Great Exercise For Abdominal Development

The basic power lifts are great for overall body development and actually impacts your core or abdominal muscles. The power lifts are the squat, the dead lift, and the bench press. There are other lifts that has a huge direct impact on our abdominal muscles. One of those lifts is the front squat. The front squat specifically works on the front quadriceps. You can also feel this lift impact your front shoulders and even back. If you are doing it correctly and the weight is heavy enough, you will feel it directly on your abdominals. You will feel it affect your abdominals more than doing a hundred crunches. One area of your body it impacts that is beneficial for those who want to have six-pack abs and look slim is the side abdominal muscles. These are the muscles that pull your gut in. Let us take a look at the front squat.

The front squat is best performed with an Olympic bar or a barbell bar. You can position your hands like you are doing a clean (palms facing you with the wrists bend toward you). But, the best way I believe for your arms to be in is crossing your arms in such a way that your right palms rest on your left shoulders and your left palms rest on your right shoulders. The barbell will rest on your front shoulders. Keep your elbow up and head up so that the barbell will not roll off. Start light at first to get the feel. If you are just starting, you can feel this front squat exercise just with the 45 pound Olympic barbell. Now, if you have skinny shoulders, you may feel a bit uncomfortable with the barbell resting on your front shoulders. It would be a great goal to beef up your shoulders by doing shoulder presses, bench presses, and other shoulder movements to get some size on those shoulders to act as pads for your body to do front squats. As you are going down, inhale and keep your heels down. As you are going up, exhale and still keep your heels down. Look up at all times. It is tempting to look down. But, your body will always go in the direction your head is positioned. Besides the future looks bright so keep your head up because you are doing front squats.

As you do heavier weights with front squats, you will get stronger. You will notice also that your abdominal muscles are getting quite a workout- especially the side part of the abdominal muscles. Start doing some front squats as part of your routine for six-pack abs.


Front Squats Are a Great Exercise For Abdominal Development

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Saturday, November 26, 2011

How to Warm-up Your Young Athletes

!±8± How to Warm-up Your Young Athletes

This may be among the most controversial and misunderstood topics within the entire youth development industry.

Warming up for sport or activity is, in essence, preparing the body for the task it is about to do. This includes increasing body temperature and improving the efficiency of the nervous system (which controls movement). Warm-ups can generally be classified into two categories:

General - Incorporates a broad assortment of movements in order to prepare the body as a systemic unit. Arousal of an appropriate 'mental attitude' for the upcoming competition or practice is a valuable component of this phase.

Specific - Involves precise actions or exercises relating to the particular sport. This serves as a more accurate neuromuscular preparation for the movements and tasks about to take place in the game or practice.

There are two misleading notions regarding warm-up design that are generally believed to be true by many coaches, trainer and parents:

Aerobic activity is the best choice as a warm-up exercise.

Static stretching must precede all workouts, practices or games in order to reduce the potential for injury.

The 'aerobic activity' phenomenon is a wide spread myth to say the least. Soccer, football and baseball coaches often send their athletes on 5 - 10 minute jogs around the field prior to the start of a game. Likewise, Personal Trainers will habitually have their clients 'warm-up' on a stationary bike or treadmill prior to a strength-training workout. This type of pre-event warm-up equates to dogmatic practice without any analysis of what the warm-up is meant to supply. Specifically, a warm-up must elevate body/muscle temperature to a certain point, increase both respiration and blood flow as well as enhance nervous system activity thereby heightening coordination and movement aptitude - this must all be done to level at which the athlete is not fatigued but prepared.

With aerobic-based warm-ups, energy reserves may be diminished and the ability to exhibit speed, strength and motor control lessened. This is quite problematic considering most sports and workout programs involve either displaying speed and strength abilities or are designed to enhance speed and strength capacities. More over, if a given training session is geared towards upper body strength exercises, how does running on a treadmill or riding a stationary bike prepare the body for the specific neuromuscular demands about to be placed on it?

With static stretching, it must be understood that any type of prolonged, held stretch can actually CAUSE injury. The concept of flexibility as a whole is largely misunderstood in contemporary sport performance (and fitness for that matter). The notion that static flexibility exercises are necessary as a pre-event habit in order to both prevent injury and prepare the body for movement are two primary incorrect 'facts'.

Firstly, static flexibility exercises can disturb the stability of joints to a point that may actually serve to increase the potential for injury. Acting on nerve transmissions from the brain and spinal cord, muscles serve to move joints through various ranges of motion in order to produce a desired task. Understanding the laws of human motion, their exists a delicate balance between mobility and stability within the context of any movement. A muscle's job then (in conjunction with both ligaments and tendons), is to produce movement (mobility) while protecting a given joint from 'over-movement' (stability). 'Over-movement' refers to uncontrolled motion that exceeds the natural limits of a joints capacity - this could result in acute trauma of varying degrees of severity. This mobility-stability interplay can be disrupted if statically held stretches are performed prior to a period of physical exertion.

The other primary factor to consider is that static exercises of any kind cannot be judiciously thought of as precursors to a movement-based activity. All sports and training exercises involve movement in varying extents. Slow and easy-paced multi-directional movements, sudden bursts of speed and maximal strength efforts are all part of either sport participation or training programs. It is only sensible to prime the athlete specifically for what they are about to do - Prepare To Move By Moving To Prepare.

In reality, understanding the concepts of warming-up for sport could be a book unto itself. How to design an efficient and functionally-sound warm-up is based on several factors including -

Type of activity

Duration of activity

Age of Athlete

Injury History

Exercise history

*Adapted from 'Facts & Fallacies of Fitness' by Dr. Mel Siff

Here is what a general warm-up may look like for an adolescent athlete (of virtually any sport):

Movements are performed for 20 - 30 feet. Walk back to the starting point and begin again.

Jog X 3

High Knees X 3

Butt Kicks X 3

Carioca X 2 each way

Back Pedal X 3

Lunge Walk X 3

Walking Hip Thrust X 2 each leg

Walking Skips X 2 each

High Skips X 3

Skipping Bounds X 3

Tempo Runs X 3

Movement aptitude is taught and perfected during warm-ups. It is not enough to simply 'go through' the motions - coaches and trainers must teach adequate movement habits and force productions skills.

For both lower and upper body strength training days, I will incorporate a specific movement complex prior to the actual lifting exercises:

Lower Body

These exercises are performed with a 45-pound Olympic bar without any other external loading. Each exercise is performed in sequence one after the other.

Good Morning X 5 reps

Overhead Squats X 5 reps

Back Squats X 5 reps

Front Squats X 5 reps

RDL's X 5 reps

Perform 2-3 sets

These exercises are specific preparations for the movements the athletes are about to perform and elicit a more particular neuromuscular response. Again, impeccable form is both taught and practiced during these movement complexes.

Upper Body

These exercises are performed with 3 - 5 pound dumbbells and are performed in a sequence or circuit type manner.

Rainbow Arc X 5 (start in anatomical position, raise your arms in a rainbow-type motion until the dumbbells touch above your head)

Shoulder Press X 5 (standard)

Forward Arm Circles (standard)

Crisscross X 5 (start with dumbbells held at 90 degrees of shoulder abduction, ensuring that the scapulae are retracted and depressed. Horizontally adduct until the dumbbells reach the sagittal midline of the body. Perform a quick over-under crisscross with the dumbbells and return to the starting position)

Bent Over Fly X 5 (standard)

* Perform 2 - 3 sets.


How to Warm-up Your Young Athletes

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

380lbs Max Bench Press - One Rep

380lbs bench press - one rep. No liftoff or shirts - a truly unassisted max. (though the spotter was close by just in case) I'm glad I didn't need him! Humming sound is an industrial fan. 45lb olympic bar 45 lb weight x 6 25lb weight x 2 5lb weight x 2 2 1/2 lb weight x 2 www.hguols.com http

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Sunday, November 20, 2011

135 lb. Pounds 1 set of 7 Reps Military Press

This is me doing a Military Press set of 7 reps with 135 lbs. It is a 45 lb. olympic size bar with plates on the sides (45 lbs. on each side) making it a total for 135 pounds. With this lift you want to start at your neck and press all the way up. You then slowly want to bring it back down to your neck and press up again all the way above your head. It is a great lift for your shoulders. Good range of motion here is key so you do not hurt your shoulders. A stand up Military Press is going to tighten your stomach and sides as well. A very good lift that I personally recommend.

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Monday, October 17, 2011

The Deadlift!

!±8± The Deadlift!

The deadlift works more muscles than any other common exercise in the fitness center. The only movement that works more muscles are the Olympic lifts. The deadlift is a movement that focuses on pulling from the ground and involves a very simple technique. In fact, the deadlift is so easy that it can be taught and worked with proper resistance in as little as one session.

When performing the deadlift, just like any other exercise, there are a few guidelines:

1- Approach the bar

2- The Olympic barbell should be loaded with plates about the size of your conventional 45 lb weight plates, so that the range of motion is no greater than it needs to be.

3- The bar should appear to cut your foot in half. Make an imaginary line over the middle of your foot and put the bar in it.

4- When your approach the bar and the feet placement is lined up grab the bar and bend your knees.

5- Once the knees are bent, stick your chest out.

6- During the concentric contraction (the pull), make sure the bar is rubbing up against your shins.

7- You will have a red line coming up your tibia; it's fine, you did the right exercise.

8- During the eccentric phase, the hips should lower the weight to the knees and the knees should break once the bar reaches the knees.

9- The bar should always be behind the shoulders as you bend over.

10- This is how you deadlift.

The deadlift works and overloads the entire lower body. Every small and large muscle in surrounding the tibia and femur are overloaded. The quads act as synergist and are activated during the phase where the knee is being extended; the hamstrings also work part of the pull, in order to extend the hip (the lockout) at the top. With this in mind, most of the work the hamstrings do is eccentric. You should feel it during the eccentric phase working the hamstrings the hardest. The gluteus maximus does most of the work during the lift, as well as the erector spinae and lower back muscles. The traps, triceps, forearms and lats contract isometrically in order to pull.

The deadlift is also an excellent grip and core movement. Most of the core muscles actually have a job to do during the concentric part of the lift, such as the lower back and spinal erectors.


The Deadlift!

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