So I was talking to the guy that runs the gym that I go to, and I can tell this guy pretty well knows what he's talking about. Apparently he's been into lifting for a while, and we started talking about legs. He said that what a lot of experts believe is that legs have what they call and endurance muscle, and to build mass in legs you need to break through it when weight training. So what he said to do was use three sets; 10, 8, and then a drop set of 6.
I just thought it was interesting and what everyone thought about that.
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Thread: Leg theory I heard
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01-14-2007, 04:36 PM #1
Leg theory I heard
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01-14-2007, 10:55 PM #2
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01-14-2007, 11:30 PM #3
Legs are all slow-twitch (oxidative fiber). This type of muscle fiber is stimulated through high reps 10+ reps. Legs have little fast twitch fiber in them, so sets of 6 reps will not do very much in the way of stimulating growth. So i tend to disagree with this bloke u were talking too. Also, most professionals are seen performing sets of at least 15 reps, so i would follow their lead and stick to a higher rep range. Just to clarify, you cannot drastically change the ratio of fast to slow twitch muscle fiber in any given bodypart. So this guys logic seems rather flawed.
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01-14-2007, 11:36 PM #4
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01-15-2007, 04:24 AM #5
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01-15-2007, 03:00 PM #6
thats not very true.
and its been proven that u can train fast twitch muscle fibers to act like slow twitch but you cant do the opposite. That's why its more likely you'd be able to train and become a long distance runner then a good sprinter.
I have an article with research done on this topic but I can't find it right now..when I do i'll post it
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01-15-2007, 07:52 PM #7
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01-16-2007, 09:14 PM #8
Who says legs are slow twitch? It completely depends on the person.
A sprinter has predominantly fast twitch muscle fibers. Thats why they can, well, sprint!
Heavy squats + Heavy deads + food = Leg growth.
And FYI; most "professionals" are on so much juice that as long as they bust ass, they'll grow.
Heavy for growth. Period.
My legs grew like hell doing 5-3 rep squats and deads. The 20-rep squat program worked ok, but not as well as heavy deadlifting.
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01-17-2007, 01:09 AM #9
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01-17-2007, 01:13 AM #10
Use your brain mate! since we could walk, our legs have had to endure us standing on them and walking around. Our legs then naturally have a tendency to build oxidative(endurance muscle fiber). BUT, if, at an earlish stage of development, you begin sprint training, you can obviously alter the ratio of fast to slow twitch. But once fully developed, it is more difficult to change this ratio. And when i posted that, i was assuming we all arent sprinters here.
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01-18-2007, 08:51 PM #11
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