Showing posts with label powerlifting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label powerlifting. Show all posts

Monday, October 10, 2016

Don't Be An "A"Hole

Alternate Title:
Don't call yourself a strongman if you are NOT!!!


The inescapable theme pervading modern strength training is the idea of "work Your Weaknesses". Very good and practical advice for elite lifters and strength athletes, however for the less advanced it may, in fact, be problematic at best.


   ...…...How can addressing your weaknesses ever be a "bad" idea you ask.......


Let's say Strongman "A" is new to strongman and new to strength sports in general. "A" competes in a local event and does well in the NOVICE division. After reviewing his performance "A" identifies overhead pressing as his prevailing weakness.
   
        ………...Sounds Logical So Far You Say.................


"A' now prioritizes his training to bring up his OHP to the standards of his other events
(strengths), But remember "A" is a novice and his "good" events are likely abysmal by national standards! So now after a full training cycle "A" is (potentially) a rounded novice.............not MY idea of a well developed long term goal!




I submit that "A's" better course of action would be to implement a more basic and rounded training protocol with the goal of bringing up  his body weight and general strength to a more "nationally" competitive level. It is my experience as a coach that often just training to be STRONG for an extended period of time has the unexpected (too many) effect of "smoothing out" weaknesses!


So many times an "A" type lifter will come to me for coaching and say something like "I'm 100kg and my OHP (or whatever) isn't as good as the other 105kg guys" My response is always YOU NEED 5kg BEFORE YOU CAN MAKE A COMPARISON! 5kg is a WHOPPING pile of muscle, even in unrelated/ correlated muscle groups it will have a measurable impact on OHP performance! Trust me as a coach, no amount of shoulder specialization will pile on 5kg of raw muscle!!!!


My goal here is not to question the value of knowing and evaluation your weaknesses, but rather to question the standard (the prevailing standard that is) definition of weakness!


As a rough guide, I'd say if you do not have a minimum of a double bodyweight squat and deadlift and perhaps a bodyweight or better bench press you may not use the term "Strongman" to describe yourself no matter how many times you've competed!.


B.Chavez
Evil Genius Sports Performance, 2016©
Find Us On The Web At:

Thursday, June 2, 2016

NOT BECAUSE IT'S BETTER!


In my mind powerlifting died two and a half decades ago . What today people think of as powerlifting is to me a frightening undead zombie that was once a wonderful and noble sport. The vast and varied causes of powerlifting's demise is a topic of much debate on the subject I Almost  never turn my thoughts too  for fear of crying!

The deadlift has been the one holdout that has (somewhat) survived the onslaught of equipment and rule changes to (mostly) resemble the original intent! Sadly now even that has begun to fail us, Instagram and YouTube are replete with “Record” deadlifts that CLEARLY would have been red lighted (and Laughed at) for scooping in the 1970’s &80’s. But sadly the lights turn white and the crowd goes wild…………………..and yet another piece of my soul dies a quiet death!


For this reason, I've come to cherish STRONGMAN STRENGTH RECORDS like the upcoming strongman log and deadlift championship.

Not Because It’s Better


But because the near total lack of rules IDIOT PROOFs it to a degree that even the social media generation can grasp. Fortunately, the concepts of “Locked Elbows” or “Standing Erect” are JUST within the acumen of this ilk. I truly wish I wasn't so damned negative but 35 years of witnessing the decline of strength sports have made me so!

For now STRONGMAN STRENGTH RECORDS are the only ones that hold any interest and dare I say any respect with me. I short, NOT BECAUSE IT'S BETTER, BUT BECAUSE IT'S HONEST (FOR NOW)!


B.Chavez is available for programming and nutritional consultations
Email EvilGSP@gmail.com Or Find Us On The Web At:
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Thursday, May 19, 2016

I'm here to tell you it's HARD


B.Chavez,
©2016 Evil Genius Sports Performance


will ferrell erection anchorman.jpg
………....to pull with a stiff bar............and it should be! Whimsical titles aside I really do believe in the premise of using the LEAST Advantageous lifting conditions for base (off Season) training.

The late great genius A.Jones of Nautilus Sports Medicine fame was quoted many times saying "never make an exercise easier, make it harder!". Safety is one thing, but if you are using a specific piece of lifting apparatus just to be able to say your training weight is 700lbs rather than 650lbs you could be (ARE) setting yourself up for heartache on event day. Especially if you're forced to do things the "HARD WAY".

We seem to have entered an era where weight on the bar is far more of a prize than progress at one chosen endeavor!

Growing muscle and developing strength beyond the physiological norm is about applying stresses not finding clever ways to avoid them! I'm not campaigning against the use of flexible deadlift bars................ I'm merely trying to point out that by avoiding and even criticizing stiff bar pulls I have seen of late on many different social media outlets you are most certainly putting your long-term progress at a distinct disadvantage.Picture.jpeg

I have even recently witnessed vids of famous puller (and his washing machine) doing 2-inch deficit deadlifts while using a bar with 3 inches of bend! Is behavior such as this good for pulling progress or just good for social media attention?

Individual criticism aside, my strong suggestion to you dear reader is to stop making TRAINING depressions based on load used and/or facebook likes and seek out HARDER MORE CHALLENGING modes of training! If you are truly strong come event day no apparatus or lifting condition will be a disadvantage!

B.Chavez is available for programming and nutritional consultations Email: EvilGSP@gmail.com
Or Find Us On The Web At:

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

A Few Of My Favorite Things!

This is the continuation of a  serial style segment titled "a few of my favorite things". 

The intended purpose of for this series is to both allow me to do "mini product reviews" as well as bring you market awareness of some of the industries more niche products and items I like that I feel you should be aware of!

 B.Chavez 

The Gregg and Joe Show: 
(formerly known as Xtreme Radio) has begun. Co-hosted by Gregg Valentino and Joe Pietaro. This is a total entertainment show that includes interviews with celebrities, comedians, and professional athletes.

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/the_gregg_and_joe_show  

An EvilGSP weekly "must listen"!

Find Us On The Web At:
http://www.youtube.com/EvilGSP 
http://www.facebook.com/TeamEvilGSP  
https://www.google.com/+Evilgsp 
http://www.instagram.com/teamevilgsp  
https://twitter.com/TeamEvilGSP 

Sunday, April 17, 2016

A Few Of My Favorite Things!

This is the continuation of a  serial style segment titled "a few of my favorite things".

The intended purpose of for this series is to both allow me to do "mini product reviews" as well as bring you market awareness of some of the industries more niche products and items I like that I feel you should be aware of!

 B.Chavez

MET-Rx High Protein Pancake Mix
Product Description
Flavor: Original Buttermilk
These pancakes are light and fluffy, with only 2.5 grams of fat per serving.
Each serving also provides several key vitamins and minerals needed for muscle metabolism.

An EvilGSP breakfast 3-5 days/week!


Find Us On The Web At:
http://www.youtube.com/EvilGSP 
http://www.facebook.com/TeamEvilGSP  
https://www.google.com/+Evilgsp 
http://www.instagram.com/teamevilgsp  
https://twitter.com/TeamEvilGSP 

Sunday, April 10, 2016

A Few Of My Favorite Things

This is the continuation of a  serial style segment titled "a few of my favorite things".

The intended purpose of for this series is to both allow me to do "mini product reviews" as well as bring you market awareness of some of the industries more niche products and items I like that I feel you should be aware of!

 B.Chavez


The 4-Hour Body: 
An Uncommon Guide to Rapid Fat-Loss, Incredible Sex, and Becoming Superhuman


A great book that every person should at least read if not own! Think of it as an "owners manual" for the human body!


Find Us On The Web At:
http://www.youtube.com/EvilGSP 
http://www.facebook.com/TeamEvilGSP  
https://www.google.com/+Evilgsp 
http://www.instagram.com/teamevilgsp  
https://twitter.com/TeamEvilGSP 

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

A few of my favorite things

This is the beginning of a new serial style segment titled "a few of my favorite things".

The intended purpose of for this series is to both allow me to do "mini product reviews" as well as bring you market awareness of some of the industries more niche products and items I like that I feel you should be aware of!

 B.Chavez



The 4-Hour Chef:
The Simple Path to Cooking Like a Pro, Learning Anything, and Living the Good Life

A great book that every person should at least read if not own! Cooking as a life skill, not just recipes!


Find Us On The Web At:
www.youtube.com/EvilGSP
www.facebook.com/TeamEvilGSP
www.google.com/+Evilgsp
www.instagram.com/teamevilgsp
www.twitter.com/TeamEvilGSP

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Explosive Ordnance Disposal

Explosive Ordnance Disposal

...................................or How To Blow-Up Your Deadlift

B.Chavez,
©2015 Evil Genius Sports Performance
High-frequency training has been popular on and off for the last 100 years.  For the most part, Olympic lifting has been the major standard bearer for frequent relatively low volume training protocols and for good reason.  Weightlifting (snatches and C&J) are very high skill endeavors lending themselves well to protocols that offer a high degree of neurological reinforcement (practice).

Strongman as an organized sport is perhaps less skill intensive than weightlifting but still high on the list compared to  static strength sports like powerlifting. Strongman may not be as skill specific as some sports, but it is FAR more skill-diverse than most.

With this diversity in mind, a high-frequency training scheme seems most agreeable to "covering all one's needs" in a single training split.

Enter EOD training

Training a complex full body motion like a deadlift or one of its many strongman analogs does require a high degree of management, but it's worth it to BLOW UP YOUR DEADLIFT.

The general outline for this protocol is obviously fairly simple to do some form of strongman relevant pulling every other day. The reality is more than a little bit more complex, determining which pulls to do in what volume is the real trick.

As with all training decisions past data is key to making informed choices. After reviewing your training records, I suggest you choose your 3 worst strongman pulling events and build your personal EOD protocol from there. Be sure to taper the training volume as the rotation progress as recovery isn't infinite.

An example might look SOMETHING like this

   * Monday powerlifting style pulls (5 sets of 5) and other strongman training
   * Tuesday non-pulling strongman training
   * Wednesday axle deadlift (3 sets of 5) and other strongman training
   * Thursday non-pulling strongman training
   * Friday car deadlift one set to failure and other strongman training
   * Saturday non-pulling event practice
   * Sunday REST

B.Chavez is available for programing and nutritional consultations Email: EvilGSP@gmail.com
Or Find Us On The Web At:

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

EDDIE - Strongman

An EvilGSP MUST SEE!

Truck mechanic, husband and father of two, Eddie Hall wants to be the World’s Strongest Man. This feature documentary vividly illustrates the sacrifices that this extremely driven man must make to chase his dream. He will stop at nothing. He trains, eats, sleeps and breathes strongman, competing all over the world and breaking records. He faces not only gargantuan competitors, but his own inner demons as he strives to leave behind the scars of his teenage years.

This film gets under the skin of a man totally dedicated to becoming the greatest and offers an engrossing snapshot of an unforgettable character, Eddie - Strongman.

Featuring appearances from Arnold Schwarzenegger, Hafthor Bjornsson ("Man Mountain" from Game of Thrones) and multiple World’s Strongest Man winners Bill Kazmaier, Geoff Capes, Brian Shaw and Zydrunas Savickas.

Monday, December 7, 2015

STRONGMAN NIRVANA!

B.Chavez,
©2015 Evil Genius Sports Performance

OK, the smart people (ME) have been polled and the vote is in .........YES, YOU DO NEED TO DEADLIFT.

How much of this vile thing must I do you may (should)  be asking yourself. Sadly the answer to that is not simple, straightforward or uniform. To begin to answer, I will state that I'm going to limit the majority of my discussion to the sport of competitive strongman for many reasons including the forum and the fact the Deadlift protocol for general strength training and powerlifting vary vastly from one another much less from competitive Strongman.

Powerlifting prowess is tested in a very uniform and systematic manner. Powerlifters are tested in the three competitive lifts ONLY (a major reason I'm suspicious of training methods that measure progress in "special" or non-contest lifts) this makes preparing much more simplistic and streamlined.  Strongman, on the other hand, is just the opposite, the events are in fact and by design derivatives of uniform lifts. A strongman events will have "a press", "a squat", "a deadlift" and so on. This obvious but somehow overlooked point should be proof enough that a strongman competitor needs far greater with and berth "pulling prowess" than any other variety of strength athlete.

ASIDE from the Variety within the individual events themselves (axles, logs, odd objects etc) take the moment to look at the knee-hip angles involved in most strongman events and you will see much more deadlift-like mechanics than you might initially believe.

  • Log & axel cleans begin with a ground-based pull.
  • The low position of a stone lift is surely deadlift-like
  • The Tire flip is a "pulling based" movement!
  • The "pick" and setup in the farmers-walk is more like a deadlift that not.
  • Even a loading medley has deadlift like ground-based lifting.
  • A yoke walk outwardly resembles the squat, but the shallow knee-hip angle and extreme torso stabilization rings of DEADLIFT strength!

All the above points SHOULD lead one to believe the deadlift is not just needed but fundamental integral to a well-designed strongman training regimen. As to how much daily, weekly, monthly pulling a prospective athlete needs to do........................that is a very (necessarily) individual question! That is not to say the answer is whatever you want it to be.........................IT MEANS YOU NEED TO THINK! Like any SCIENCE based subject, there is a rough formula that when "filled-in" you get a very solid starting point towards a refined applicable answer.

Things you may need to consider before developing you Strongman Deadlift Protocol:

  • Are you presently a good Puller? (you may not need to spend additional resources on something you are already "good" at)
  • Age (age can vastly affect recovery rates)
  • Experience as a strength athlete (Do you have well-developed motor pathways?)
  • Limb length/body type (would excessive pulling be damaging to you "structure"?)
  • Nutritional status (again a recovery issue)
  • Pharmacological status (drugs=Recovery)
  • General health (yet another recovery based consideration)
  • Any other relevant (to you) factor.

With a rough understanding of the above points (and others), you should be able to begin to see an outline for your protocol emerge from the data. If you are young, healthy and have a "safe" pulling body -type it would not be unreasonable to be doing a deadlift derivative almost every single training session! On the other hand, if you are older, "clean" or have a very unfriendly pulling body-type you may only be able to effectively deadlift once per week. Consider the HONEST data and follow it where it leads and you will likely find the path ends at or near STRONGMAN NIRVANA!

B.Chavez is available for programing and nutritional consultations Email: EvilGSP@gmail.com
Or Find Us On The Web At:
https://twitter.com/TeamEvilGSP

Sunday, November 29, 2015

Deadlifts?

B.Chavez,
©2015 Evil Genius Sports Performance

Evil Genius Sports Performance consults with strength athletes from all over the world, but the one question that seems to hold on border or language barrier is “Do I NEED to deadlift?”

Well, fuck me running with a big rubber DICK!!!!
I would have never even thought of such a question!

Louie Simmons, Robert Oberst the Tooth Fairy, I don't know who is to blame for this incredible disrespect for what I think is the single most fundamental demonstration of human strength! No matter the guilty party let me be as explicit as I can in my answer to this question…………………………....YES, YOU DO!

let me offer some (I think unneeded) explanation for my response:
  • In the sport of powerlifting the deadlift is one-third of the event, therefore, %33 or better of your effectiveness at the sport…...so yea you HAVE TO DO IT!
  • In competitive strongman almost every contest has an event like the car DEADLIFT or the 18-inch DEADLIFT or possibly an axle DEADLIFT……..notice a pattern (ie the word DEADLIFT)
    • Sub-note on the sport of strongman, it's called STRONGMAN and STRONG people DEADLIFT (to a large degree that's why they are strong)!

Deadlifts like squats and presses do come in a vast array of types so “what” deadlifts should I do is a valid and likely important question that I love to discuss with clients. Should I deadlift is never a question I'll consider.

So in short YES you do NEED to deadlift, so shut up and pull!

B.Chavez is available for programing and nutritional consultations Email: EvilGSP@gmail.com
Or Find Us On The Web At:


Friday, November 20, 2015

Building Blocks!

B.Chavez,
©2015 Evil Genius Sports Performance
The tried and true methods of block periodization have gained and lost favor in a strangely rhythmic cycle over the last 5 decades. Block periodization gave way to a dozen (or more) derivatives some having value others......well not so much!

Evil Genius Sports Performance has spent years developing training strategies predicated on  the basic ideas of BLOCK periodization. Sure there are other viable  periodized models, but the ㏄simplicity of the basic block model is so modular and adaptable it has almost infinite applications.



To properly explain Block Periodization and its near infinite applications would take volumes well beyond this modest article, but in its most simplistic form "B.P." is just breaking training into BLOCKS of time with definite and singular goals assigned to each. This simple yet powerful strategy makes training by definition very focused, allowing for very precise tracking and measurements of training variables (load, volume, duration, etc). The purpose of each BLOCK is to strategically enhance some aspect of ability or performance characteristic that can and (ideally) will result in peak competitive performance on "game day".

The focus of this particular article is something we at EvilGSP affectionately call a "Building Block". Tricky DB (douchebag) name aside a building block is most likely the singular most valuable tool available to aspiring early and intermediate athletes of almost every sport.

What is a BUILDING BLOCK you ask? An EvilGSP "BB" is a block of training time dedicated purely to the BUILDING of lean mass and "strength potential" in the fundamental athletic muscle systems. Ok, I can hear you now "You can’t re-brand Bodybuilding" and sell it as something new and clever! To this, I say YOU ARE CORRECT, a properly designed and applied BB does take its cues (at least fundamentally) from classic Bodybuilding but is and must be far more specific and focused. Classical bodybuilding (should) give no regard to athletic performance just the building and presentation of the lean muscular form, A noble and interesting goal for sure but of little value to sports performance you say? Yet again I say, "You are Correct", but the tools and techniques bodybuilders have developed over the last century should not be dismissed so lightly.

Who can argue that at least to a degree (a sizable one at that) muscular size predicts contractile force? Lever and neurological differences make size strength comparisons between differing subjects impossible, but if YOU get BIGGER you got STRONGER! With the above statement in place, who knows the techniques of "bigger" better than the world of Bodybuilding. I'm not suggesting that strength athlete much less athlete at large stop what they're doing and become closet bodybuilders, just that they recognize the wealth of hypertrophy based knowledge bodybuilding  has to offer!

So the amalgamation, the synthesis of Strength Training, Periodization & Bodybuilding leads to the EvilGSP "Building Block". Not the indiscriminate offseason bodybuilding type acquisition of mass but the very precise and discriminant accumulation (hypertrophy) of sport specific muscle systems! As an example let's say an early intermediate powerlifter was to implement a 10-14 week "Building Block" as part of a larger (periodized) off-season training plan. This protocol would actually begin during the last competitive cycle, with careful evaluation of relative strengths and weaknesses in the 3 lifts. After identifying what needs to "Grow" (triceps, mid back, glutes, etc) a hypertrophy based training scheme borrowing deeply from tried and true bodybuilding strategies would be designed to target (very specifically) the outlined "weaknesses".

General Building Block (bodybuilding) training protocols
  • A higher degree of Muscular isolation
  • high volume training(20-30 sets per muscle/session
  • High training frequency (2-3 sessions per muscle /per week)
  • Low training loads (%40-%60 of max)
  • High training pace (low rests periods 60-90 seconds)
  • Reduced repetition speed (high time under tension)
  • Full and even exaggerated range of motion
  • Accentuated eccentric contractions
  • the integrated nutrition and restoration to support the above points

The above protocols would then be employed in the creation of a coherent and highly targeted hypertrophy centric training cycle or “Building Block”.

*A word of caution with this and any block periodized training model, the acquisition of lean mass and strength potential does not ensure the effective utilization of said potential. Transitional and Preparatory blocks should be employed to effectively bring the newly acquired hypertrophy to bare on your chosen athletic endeavor.

B.Chavez is available for programing and nutritional consultations Email: EvilGSP@gmail.com
Or Find Us On The Web At: