Wednesday, October 9, 2013

How To Increase Your Maximum Weight On Squat, Deadlift And Bench Press

How To Increase Your Maximum Weight On Squat, Deadlift And Bench Press


by Howe Russ


Learning how to improve your bench press is a tricky and often over complicated affair for most gym members. Many of them spend time focusing on endless sets of cable crossovers and other assistance exercises in a bid to pack on more poundage when they hit the bench but, as you will discover in today's article, the answers to getting bigger compound lifts are actually quite simple.

It is important to understand that while you may consider the figure you can bench or squat to be of huge importance, you can still build a great physique without ever notching up a world record of Olympic standards.

Increasing the three big lifts (chest press, deadlift and back squat) is often a game of working muscles that most guys neglect, such a forearms. The following three techniques will help you to get maximum results in minimum time:

1. Work on your grip strength with assistance exercises focusing on forearms.

2. Reverse warm-up sets are a fantastic technique when used correctly

3. Perform negative reps with a spotter on any lift you wish to increase.

The main problem with men who encounter issues with their big lifts is that the rest of their program is built around looking good, rather than being strong. As a result, they completely overlook the importance of training their forearms and grip strength. Your grip will always be the first thing to tire out on an exercise like Romanian deadlifts, long before your lower back and glutes, so it makes sense to incorporate grip-based work into your routine.

Exercises such as plate grips, wrist curls, reverse wrist curls and reverse curls with an EZ bar will prove to be huge assets in improving your grip.

A good way to boost your bench press technique using a strong grip is to focus on trying to grip as hard as possible on the bar and 'rip it apart'. This allows you to place more stress on the chest and, in return, build more lean muscle with the exercise!

Reverse warm-ups are also fantastic when used correctly. This involves getting yourself warmed up before performing one set with a weight which is actually heavier than you plan to go in your working sets of the exercise ahead. So, for instance, perform a set of just a few reps with 100 kg if you plan to squat 80-90 kg in your working sets. Obviously, it pays to have a spotter at hand when using this technique. The body recruits many more muscle fibers than it usually would for this technique, meaning when you drop the weight and perform your normal working sets you will suddenly find your 80-90 kg lifts feeling rather easy!

Providing you use it safely and sparingly, you can increase any big compound lift using this technique.

The final compound improving technique is eccentric reps, or 'negatives' as they are more commonly known. A negative rep involves a spotter or training partner helping you to perform the lifting (concentric) phase of the exercise before leaving you to slowly perform the lowering (eccentric) portion by yourself. Around half the muscle building results in compound lifts are hidden away in the negative portion of the exercise, so it makes sense to focus on this aspect from time to time.
The importance of diet is just one of the five rules touched upon in the video guide on how to build muscle accompanying today's article.


You should use a weight heavier than you would usually use, due to the fact you are only performing half of the repetition on your own.

While there is certainly no 'quick fix' in the gym, utilizing time tested techniques such as the three you have picked up today is a sure-fire way to boost any flagging compound lifts in the gym. Learning how to improve your bench press or squat is often a case of learning how to strengthen your brute strength rather than spending hours blasting the muscle in the hope of spurring new growth.




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