Oh man ! Pretty nice stuff! Thank you very much for that.
Most of the routines are about 6 or 7 days, do you have any workouts for 3 or 4 days a week? Your exercise selection that what I am searching for - to get stronger in the mainlifts and build muscle
Most programs are universal in what kind of splits you use as long as it is 4, 5 or 6 days.
I added some extra notes on the āIntro Tabā and the Yellow Tabbed programs are the easiest to adjust to a 4, 5 or 6 Day Split.
I started making them yellow because I knew the early ones were universal but the later were not but after going through it looks like I had more universal then I thought.
Admittedly I did not program with 3 Day splits in mind. I just added a new tab and I will think about it and tinker with it the next few days.
I did start the split for the program and I think that it will line up pretty well as is. I am still going to make a program directly for that program.
Thank you so much man! I do a break for one week anyway !
The 3 Day split looks pretty solid, how do you set up your assistance work BOTSLAYER? Do you add secondary mainlifts like Military Press or Frontsquats?
At the moment I read the Cowboy Method which seems also pretty cool.
Basically I consider Squat, Bench, Deadlift, Barbell Row and Pullups the āMandatoriesā to hit twice a week minimum (substitutions have there place but that is another topic). After that I do what ever assistance work I want or think is going to help with my current goals.
I kind of put the assistance work in tiers. The higher the Tier the more stimulus it will provide so the more important I think it is. As such I fill it in from the top down as I can handle it. The only other consideration is to make sure I do more Pulling Volume than Pushing Volume.
Tier 1: More Compounds such as Squat Variations, Deadlift Variations, T-Bar and other Row Variations, Over Head Press Variations, Lunges etc.
Tier 2: Cables, Machines, Isolation Work
Tier 3: Yoga, Mobility Work, Core Workā¦this tier should be higher
Right now it is mostly tier 3 with a sprinkle of Tier 2 as I am in a Powerlifting Prep so if it isnt the mandatories I consider it Prehab or expendable. I think iso/pump work is about as good as it gets for helping a PLer to stay healthy (aside from mobility/yoga stuff).
In the offseason I will switch to a lot more variety and Tier 1 Stuff as everything will be lighter I should be able to handle more of it.
I thought I made a tab for thisā¦and I did it just isnt even close to started LOL so added to the todo list.
Sorry it took me so long to see this, I was on a hiatus.
Over all I think that program would work, I see how you staggered everything personally I would rather begin the week with heavy legs to be the most recovered for them OR finish with them so that heavy workout didnt affect the rest of the week but that is just personal preference and it depends on what exercise selection you use for each workout (like if Deads are on Back etc).
As long as it takes but if fat burning or conditioning are goals I would lessen rest times.
This is most likely what I will be doing more long term. It is my preferred Split and Frequencies.
GOALS: Maintain Strength in āOffā Season while building muscle Quality and Conditioning.
Also Conjugating a lot more than i usually do to maintain some mental and physical wear and tear of the constant big 3.
NOTES ON RPE I am going to make a strong effort to switch to RPE and I realized RPEās biggest strength is probably for the enhanced athlete LOL. All the programming I have done for nattyās is honestly kind of easy, Their strength doesnt fluctuate much and it is usually pretty easy to find the culprit (sleep/diet/injury). With myself as enhanced even on cycle strength fluctuations can be frequent in both directions and the list of culprits gets a lot longer.
No worries. Youāre sharing what youāve learned for free. I have no expectation of ācustomer serviceā
I may be overthinking this, but another way set this up could look like this.
Monday
heavy bench
light (shoulder) press
heavy rows
light pull-ups
Wednesday
heavy press
light bench
heavy squat
light deadlift
Friday
heavy deadlift
light squat
heavy pull-ups
light rows
So, instead of doing a heavy day and light day for each press/pull/push, I would do 1 heavy (4-6x4-6) and 1 light (3x10-12) movement for each press/pull/push. Which setup do you think would be more effective?
The truth is you are going to just have to try and see what works. If you get achy here or there then back off the intensity and/or volume.
The biggest tip I can give is go slow.
Really what I looked at was just that you were doing a LOT and cramming it into 3 days. I think you can get away with almost anything with 2x per week frequency, but with 3x per week I think you need to be a lot more reserved and add in slowly.
I did reorganize how I would do your workouts and then I made what I would prescribe to somebody looking to do a 3x per week program.
Check out ā3 Day Splitā for a couple notes and then thisā¦
Biggest notes are I take a much more minimalist approach with pressing and that is from my personal issues with my shoulders and the general idea that people are generally impinged from poor postures and too much pressing and I add pull to every day.
You could easily halve the Pull work to just Barbell Rows with Bench and Pullups with Press.
I tend to go overboard on an activity/hobby until I feel like Iāve mastered it, or at least have gotten as good as I want to be. So, yea, I do tend to over-program and push too hard too often. Still working on the whole moderation thing!
Itās like you know me. Iām your typical desk jockey with the posture and mobility to prove it. Iām working on it though. Lots of face pulls, external rotations with bands, downward dogs, hanging out in a āthird world squatā position.
I really like what you laid out. It looks like a lot of the novice linear progression routines out there, but more intelligently programed with RPE. Thanks for taking the time to put this together!