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I've reached My first set of Training Goals Yaaay!:(

I have decided to take pictures for my 'scapbook o' failure' (the scrapbook I can drag out to show people how I wasted another year of my life on a silly project)

Here are the first pics.

A sprinter Must have Powerful Calf Muscles (you run on your toes).

This is my target weight on the calf machine 440kgs (the plates are actually 20.5kgs each so I did 450kg really).

Look at it. It's a son of a bitch cause you got to squat it out till your legs are straight.

pic of the weight.

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This is the hack squat machine with 440kgs (450kgs).

Just like the donkey calf machine I do 8 reps in a row, only 1 or two sets required.

the front quads are obviously very imortant for sprinting, but before I do any free weight squats I have to stabilise the muscle around the knee with these. I don't want to know my free weight squat goal yet (I hope to hell it isn't 440kgs)

This is the Tricep push down thing'o. I actually have a goal of 60kgs on the bar for the lying down french press for 10reps( so far I've stopped at 50kgs) but, I have had a few issues with my elbows in the past, so I'm doing these first.

The standard cable thingo has never got enough weight on it. Thanks to the little bike rack thing we can add some propper weight on to it.

pic of the bike rack.

adrain,

yes the more muscle you have the heavier you get, as they say it weighs more than fat. Power to weight ratio is king in the sprints.

The method of my training however means that I will have maximum strength for muscle volume, unlike the 'deforming' process used in body building. This way you can have realistic goals based on strength rather than how you look in the mirror.

The principle is basically to tear the muscle fibre in larger sections at once rather than tearing it in smaller sections in lots of little places. This means if you train your quads on one excersie you do not go and train them again for a upto a week.

The Do's and don'ts

*Do train heavy, aim for 6 or fewer reps per set.

*Don't do more than 2 heavy sets, even 1 might be ok.

*Do allow your hart rate to drop to 'rest' between sets.

*Don't 'warm up' with a cardio focused workout.

*Don't do ANY weights the next day or any day until you are satisfied your trained muscle groups have recovered. None of this do back monday, chest tuesday crap.

* Don't "hit your muscle from every angle" in the workout. Pick 1 excercise eg; leg press not legpress then squats then extensions.

* Do REST alot. Allow time for FULL recovery.

The best thing about this workout strategy is that it works well on even a crap diet (works even better with a good diet) because of the recovery principle.

depends what your after adrian.

If you want a strength focus, train the way I do.

If you want the become buff then train the usual way.

I gave my wife a series of 3 workouts to settle a bet on the theory I use. We picked Leg press and I said in 3 workouts (6 total sets over a month) I could get her upto 200kgs for 6 reps.

And I did. Thats 30kgs+ a week increase and she had been doing weights etc for many years.

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