I've been training for (4) years and consider myself an Intermediate / Advanced lifter. Started with a body weight of 135 lbs and now I'm 195 lbs.
Over the (4) years, I've trained strictly low reps, heavy weight, and focused on compound lifts and getting stronger every week. Namely, weighted dips, weighted pull ups, dumbell chest presses and ohp, rows, squats, and dead-lifts.
I've got stupid strong and put on over 60 lbs over the (4) years, but my legs have fallen behind.
I've defiantly gained a lot of strength in my legs, but not seeing a lot of development like in my upper body and I need some advice. Should I give up the heavy squats and do light weight or higher reps for my leg training? Any advice is appreciated.
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03-26-2023, 05:45 AM #1
Legs..... Heavy Weight vs Light Weight
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03-26-2023, 07:09 AM #2
It's hard to give decent advice with the information you've provided.
Are your legs behind from a strength or size standpoint? Or both?
What does you current programming look like for Squats and Deadlifts?
About how long have you been running this programming?
What type of squats and deads are you doing right now? Low bar vs High bar, Conventional vs Sumo, something else?
Do you ever do any variations on squats and deads, or are you always doing the same thing?The Flywheel Effect - http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=172103043
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03-26-2023, 09:03 AM #3
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03-26-2023, 07:54 PM #4
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03-26-2023, 08:55 PM #5
- Join Date: Jul 2006
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Progressive overload can be done in a lot of ways. Heavy squats are great until you can't keep doing them. Personally, I like heavyish squats with a lot of pump work through accessory work.
https://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=180003183&p=1635918623#post1635918623
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"225, 315, 405 whatever. Yeah these benchmark digits come to mean a lot to us, the few warriors in this arena. They are, however, just numbers. I'm guilty of that sh*t too, waiting for somebody to powder my nuts cuz I did 20 reps of whatever the **** on the bench. Big f*king deal. It is all relative." G Diesel
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03-26-2023, 09:02 PM #6
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03-27-2023, 05:25 AM #7
If what you're doing isn't working, do something else. Sure you could change your rep range (while keeping intensity high enough even at lower weights). But in this case, it sounds like you're only doing big compound lifts.
So regardless of what you do with your rep ranges/resistance for your current lifts, you may be better off adding in some other lifts/variations (RDLs, trap bar deads, front squats, goblet squats etc.) and isolations (leg extensions, leg curls, calf raises etc.) and see if that changes the results.
Some of your lagging leg development compared to upper body may be genetic as well, but you definitely should be able to grow to a point where you're at least satisfied that you're seeing decent results.
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03-27-2023, 05:33 AM #8
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03-27-2023, 10:07 AM #9
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