I've begun to start following a fair amount of pro's recently, and noticed they mainly train very similar during their "offseason".
Many, if not most, train a weekly day split..
I understand it's true that our bodies grow outside the gym, but why do they use such little frequency?
Is it that their supplements or major food intakes keep their body growing between workouts the entire week?
On this board the recent trend seems to be that training a muscle as often as possible(once recovered) is optimal, yet some of the biggest guys only hit say their back or chest once a week.
Anyone have any input on this?
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01-19-2013, 11:18 PM #1
Explain to me so many Pro's Offseason routines.
Last edited by Shredthetics; 01-19-2013 at 11:24 PM.
IG: @West_Whey
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01-19-2013, 11:28 PM #2
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if this is your diet plus the supps they take they can train however they want and still grow
I have been getting several request about my former mass gain diet i used to do when i was starting in bodybuilding, when nyou are young your body works very fast and you dont hold as much fat, that was my case, so i used to go up to 270 and then go down to 220, my idol was Dorian Yates and if he was doing it i was as well.... I still have the opinion that if some one wants to step to the heavys he has to go high in calories, and then worry about get lean like in the old days several pros used to do, like dorian, lee priest, etc, and some amateurs and pros still does.
Here is the original Post.....enjoy it and please dont kill me, just take what you thing is usefull for you and if think nothing is usefull on this diet and you cant adjust it for your needs so PLEASE DONT KILL ME LIKE YOU USE TO DO HERE...I am just answering to request of some good fellas Pms beacuse the original thread is no longer active or somewthing....
This is a diet to gain 40 to 50 pounds of body weight in 3 months for a 220 pounds client about 9 to 10 % bf. You can go up to 260 lbs. with 14%
Doesnt matters the fat you get , we work on low down the body fat latter. Ask Dorian, Sombaty or Lee Priest , how they gain size!!!!!!!!!
OFF-SEASON DIET
·30 minutes before first meal : 6000 mg. BCAA, 10 gr. glutamine, 10 gr. creatine.
1.- 14 Egg whites 2 yolks, 2 cups of Oatmeal (no cooked)
1 banana, 3 toasted bread, 100 gr. of jelly,
omega–3 2000 mg., 2 gr. of C vit, 1000 iu. E vit
2.- 2 cups of Weight Gainer (1.200 calories)
3.- After workout:
100 gr .maltodextrin, 2cups Whey Protein,
10 gr. Glutamine, 10 gr. creatine, 6000 mg BCAA.
4.- 300 gr. of chicken breast, 600 gr. of rice.
5.- 125 gr. pasta (no cooked)
300 gr. of lean meat, 2 gr. vit C, 2000 mg omega-3
6.- 300 gr. of lean meat
500 gr of baked potato, 1 cap Soy Lecytine, E vitamin.
7.- 1 ½ cup of dry oatmeal
10 eggs whites, 1 yolk, 50 gr. of turkey ham
Calcium 1 gr., 5 mcg zinc, 6000 mg. BCAA, omega-3 2000 mg.
10 gr. of glutamine
8.- 2 cups of Weight Gainer
% of Calories aprox: Protein: 27% ( 500 gr.),
Carbs: 56% (850 gr.), Fats: 16% (120gr.)
Total Calories aprox: 6.480 cals. a day.
3 times a week eat 3 Big Mac, Large Pizza, Ice Cream plus the diet to get 10.000 cals. a day.
Health Plus Colum Cleanse once a day.
I designed this diet long time a go when i went to train with Mike Mentzer at the Venice Golds Gym back 1994, we were talking how Dorian was eating and he teach me a lot about off season nutrition, he wasnt a believer in supplements but i put them in my diet and it worked.
I use this diet with some of my pupils that needs to jump to the next class or when they need to increase their weight to get in the top of their weight class.
In my case i did it several times and after i started with Victor Munoz (Victor Martinez trainer), he told me "Heinz, you already did your work, you are thick and big but you look like a football player, so from today we are going to reshape your body and just add solid mass pound per pound and stay lean the whole year....You did great but say good bye to your off seasons!!!
The best way and the faster way to get big is like this IN MY OPINION, then you think in get lean.
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01-20-2013, 12:44 AM #3
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01-20-2013, 12:53 AM #4
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01-20-2013, 01:07 AM #5
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01-20-2013, 01:11 AM #6
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01-20-2013, 09:11 AM #7
Are you talking about training offseason vs competition season?
They usually lift the same way.....just lighter weight during competition season to maintain size or even still gain size through the use of negatives/controlled reps. Mind/muscle contractions. This helps to prevent possible injuries and focus on appearing at their shows. Also low body fat and dehydration plus some others also increases the chances.
Honestly this is what I hear. I might be 100% wrong
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01-20-2013, 09:19 AM #8
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01-20-2013, 09:31 AM #9
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Their supplementation keeps muscle protein synthesis elevated for much longer periods of time. On moderate supplementation, it may still be 'optimal' for higher frequency. Optimal is pretty hard to quantify though, because there are tons of factors even things like psychological satisfaction with your routine
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01-20-2013, 09:40 AM #10
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01-20-2013, 12:14 PM #11
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01-20-2013, 12:36 PM #12
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01-20-2013, 12:46 PM #13
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01-21-2013, 12:39 AM #14
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01-21-2013, 01:52 AM #15
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01-21-2013, 02:16 AM #16
This.
Not sure what you are talking about.
99% of the champions and most successful people in the business train on a 3on/1off, 4on/1off, 6on/1off,etc training each body part 1.5-2x a week.
I have actually spoken in person or on the phone with several people listed above, and I am very aware of how they trained.
Phil Heath...2x a week, Ronnie Coleman 2x a week...Haney 1.5-2x a week, Arnold 2x a week(3x a week during pre-contest,but he was really using that for cardio),Zane 1.5-2x a week,
Levrone 1.5-2x a week, Ferrigno 1.5-2x a week, the list goes on and on.
Pretty much the only top Mr.Olympia that did NOT train on this frequency was Dorian Yates during the LAST YEARS of his training, when he already had spent years and years training on a 1.5-2x/week frequency(not to mention he was pouring glasses upon glasses of cranberry juice into his body everyday) + essentially hit his genetic threshold.
It should be 100% common knowledge by now, both scientifically and by anecdotal evidence, that 1.5-2x a week is by far the superior training method, ESPECIALLY for a natural trainee.
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01-21-2013, 02:27 AM #17
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01-21-2013, 02:35 AM #18
Now:
pros offseason: Lots of Dat Dere celltech + lots of food (too much fat and water retention) + weights (less frequency)
pros contest prep : Eat clen, Tren Hard, + 2/3x week weights + SEo/Esclinine/synthol
In Ahnold's time:
Pros offseason : less or none dat dere (shrink down a bit), less food/normal food weights(less frequency)
Pros contest prep : DAT DERE to the MAX, More protien rich food, 2/3xweek weights more volume, grow into show. (levrone did this post 1994 prc tear too)
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01-21-2013, 10:24 AM #19
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01-21-2013, 10:32 AM #20
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Pretty sure Cutler hits the gym once per day to hit each body part once per week. He usually trains around midnight. Ronnie did train twice a day though. He had a morning and afternoon gym session and hit each part twice a week. Either way I don't think that following what a particular pro does will be best for you. Everyone is different.
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01-21-2013, 10:50 AM #21
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01-21-2013, 11:10 AM #22
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01-21-2013, 11:22 AM #23
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I trained full body 4x/week and had another day for the stuff that didn't get as much direct work. I'm not saying everyone can do that, but I think most can at least do 2/3x weekly and be fine on recovery. Your body becomes conditioned to the work load you put it under. Do you think long-distance runners started out able to run at a good pace for miles on end? No, but they conditioned their body to become accustomed to the workload. It is the same with every sport. People have to build up to the point where they can continually perform at a high level with small periods of recovery.
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01-21-2013, 11:44 AM #24
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01-21-2013, 11:45 AM #25Kai Greene, Phil Heath, Cedric McMillan, Lionel Beyeke, Shawn Rhoden
"Looking up at goals once only found in my dreams can only make me think of those who looked down upon those dreams. The only time you should ever look down upon another person, is when you are extending a hand to lift them up." - kai greene
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01-21-2013, 11:48 AM #26
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01-21-2013, 11:49 AM #27Kai Greene, Phil Heath, Cedric McMillan, Lionel Beyeke, Shawn Rhoden
"Looking up at goals once only found in my dreams can only make me think of those who looked down upon those dreams. The only time you should ever look down upon another person, is when you are extending a hand to lift them up." - kai greene
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01-21-2013, 11:57 AM #28
No.
Some people don't use common sense: recovery is at least as important, or even more important than training or diet. In some cases training a bodypart every 10 days can prove to be the best solution.
Waiting for the "48-72-96 hours is enough for the muscle recovery" argument...
Actually the muscles grow thanks to the overcompensation, meaning there is extra time needed for this. And for a natty this is a longer process since steroids have mainly a recovery role, rebuilding the muscles faster and strnoger.
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01-21-2013, 11:58 AM #29
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01-21-2013, 12:07 PM #30
- Join Date: Sep 2010
- Location: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
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Yeah and that's where common sense comes in. Everyone knows their own body and should adjust accordingly. Plus, what makes you happy = longevity and that is more important than momentary optimization. One of the reasons, I stopped lifting as heavy and frequently was due to joint pain. Benching heavy 3/4x weekly took a real toll on my shoulders and so I decided to curtail it. Now I'm back to a split(ish) routine. Back/bi, Chest/Tri, Shoulders/Legs, Repeat, then an off day. High volume, some heavy sets(3-5RM), but mostly working a little lighter and focusing more on contraction, tempo, and working the muscle. With 30 sets for each muscle group(which means 70-80 per workout with added accessory work), you don't need to go super heavy every set. By the end, you are pretty toasted regardless of how heavy you went.
Same thing as what I was trying to say in the other thread about science/experience. The science can point us in the right direction, but you still need to use your own discretion to make decisions towards what works for you and your life. TBH, not everyone needs or wants to maximize to the nth degree. Some people just wanna look good with their shirt off.
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