I know Wendler specifically states to not substitute exercises by any means, but I need to do as such for the bench press. My boxing gym has a whole area for lifting, but there are no appropriate means for legitimate bench presses. I could do incline presses, but I’ve heard are looked down upon.
Floor Press
[quote]CodeOrangeKid wrote:
I know Wendler specifically states to not substitute exercises by any means, but I need to do as such for the bench press. My boxing gym has a whole area for lifting, but there are no appropriate means for legitimate bench presses. I could do incline presses, but I’ve heard are looked down upon.[/quote]
Incline presses would be fine, as long as they are with a barbell.
Weighted pushups.If you are concerned about not being able to continuosly add weight do them with hands on a rung of a squat stand/rack and feet raised on whatever.Throw a dipping belt round your shoulders and voila,load away.
A gym w no bench press, I’ve heard of and seen gyms without squat racks and cages but never this
^ Agreed.
But the best variation will be Floor Press or Incline Press 100% for sure.
Dips, floor press, incline press. I’d rather do dips if I couldn’t do bench.
[quote]CodeOrangeKid wrote:
I know Wendler specifically states to not substitute exercises by any means, but I need to do as such for the bench press.[/quote]
I quickly scanned the 5/3/1 manual but I missed the section where Wendler said he’d drive to your gym and kick you in the nuts if you didn’t flat bench. I did, however, see several mentions that a key component of the program is focusing on big, multi-joint exercises.
And there’s this nugget o’ knowledge:
Are there any other lifts that I can apply the 5/3/1 loading scheme to?
“You’ll be surprised by my answer, and how I came up with it,” says Wendler.
"I tore my labrum and my rotator cuff, and I need to get the bone shaved down. In other words, I can’t press for shit. But I still love to train.
So with pressing out of the question, I started applying 5/3/1 to some other big lifts. The first one I tried was barbell rows."
The result?
"I started at 225 pounds for 10 good reps. Six weeks later or so, I was up to 285 x 16.
So yeah, you can apply 5/3/1 to other lifts, and yes, it even works with barbell curls."
Wendler cautions not to overdo this scheme â?? don’t try to perform 5/3/1 with four different lifts per workout â?? but as long as they’re major barbell lifts, don’t be afraid to experiment with things like barbell rows, barbell curls, and power cleans.
“Just please don’t email me looking for help applying 5/3/1 to lateral raises and triceps pressdowns.”
So, yeah. Incline press would be a fine way to go.
Who are these people and what do they look like?
^
I seriously cannot stop laughing. Thanks Chris.
Side note, did you know that on the iPad, when you type Chris it wants to change it to Christ?
[quote]Chris Colucci wrote:
[quote]CodeOrangeKid wrote:
I know Wendler specifically states to not substitute exercises by any means, but I need to do as such for the bench press.[/quote]
I quickly scanned the 5/3/1 manual but I missed the section where Wendler said he’d drive to your gym and kick you in the nuts if you didn’t flat bench. I did, however, see several mentions that a key component of the program is focusing on big, multi-joint exercises.
And there’s this nugget o’ knowledge:
Are there any other lifts that I can apply the 5/3/1 loading scheme to?
“You’ll be surprised by my answer, and how I came up with it,” says Wendler.
"I tore my labrum and my rotator cuff, and I need to get the bone shaved down. In other words, I can’t press for shit. But I still love to train.
So with pressing out of the question, I started applying 5/3/1 to some other big lifts. The first one I tried was barbell rows."
The result?
"I started at 225 pounds for 10 good reps. Six weeks later or so, I was up to 285 x 16.
So yeah, you can apply 5/3/1 to other lifts, and yes, it even works with barbell curls."
Wendler cautions not to overdo this scheme â?? don’t try to perform 5/3/1 with four different lifts per workout â?? but as long as they’re major barbell lifts, don’t be afraid to experiment with things like barbell rows, barbell curls, and power cleans.
“Just please don’t email me looking for help applying 5/3/1 to lateral raises and triceps pressdowns.”
So, yeah. Incline press would be a fine way to go.
Who are these people and what do they look like?[/quote]
They’re all fighters with the whole “lean and mean” attitude towards their training, for obvious reasons. The only ones that actually lift are the heavyweight MMA fighters, but there’s only two of them here.
thanks for the info!