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Showing posts with label squats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label squats. Show all posts

Important Tips for Bottom Position Squats

Like all great champions, John Grimek always did plenty of squatting. Heavy leg and back training is the Royal Road to Muscle and Might!


Hail to the Dinosaurs!

I got an email from Nick C., who wrote:

"Hi Brooks!

I'm planning on starting a leg specialization
program that will use the bottom position
squat singles you prescribe in workout no.
39 in Chalk and Sweat.


I'm going to start with 6 x 5 with regular
Olympic squats, followed by five sets of
progressively heavier singles in the bottom
position squat.


I was wondering how you would suggest
increasing weight for this routine. Should
I try to add 5 or 10 lbs. to my top single
every week or every other week? 


Should I also be adding weight at the
same rate to the regular squats?


I guess I really want to know how you
did your weight progression on this
program when you had such great
success with it."


Thanks for your question, Nick, and
have fun with your squat program. It
will build some serious strength and
muscle. As I mention in Chalk and
Sweat, I added almost 200 pounds
to my squat by using bottom position
squats.


BTW, in case anyone is unfamiliar
with them, bottom position squats are
performed in the power rack. You set
the bar on pins placed so it is low
enough that you can get under the
bar and start the squat from the
bottom. 


It's much harder than the conventional
way of doing squats -- which is why it
is so effective.


Of course, it's an ADVANCED training
technique. Don't use it unless you can
handle at least 300 pounds for sets of
5 reps in good, deep form.


Some people find that pause squats work
just as well or better for them than bottom
position squats. Personally, I prefer bottom
position squats for powerlifting squats
(low bar, starting from parallel), and
pause squats for OL squats (high bar,
donkey to grass full squats). I also
prefer pause squats for front squats.


As far as progression goes, do this:

1. Start light and easy and use the first
four to six weeks as a break-in period. 


a. You need to start light on the bottom
position squat. It's much harder than you
think it is. 


b. Let me repeat that - start light!

2. After you start to feel comfortable with
the exercise, train it hard and try to add five
pounds to the bar every week for as long
as you can.


3. At some point, your gains will slow
down, and it will become harder and
harder to add the five pounds. When
that happens, change the progression
to five pounds every other week. Do
that for as long as possible.


4. Try adding weight to your regular
squats at the same rate as the bottom
position squats at the start of the
program, when the weights are light.


a. When the weights get heavier, your
poundage increases on the regular squats
will be slower because the bottom position
squats are a new exercise for you, and they
have much more room for improvement.


You can try two workouts a week when
the weights are light, but one workout a
week will probably work better as the
weights get heavier.


I hope that helps, and again, have fun on
the program!


Yours in strength,

Brooks Kubik

P.S. I cover bottom position squats and other
super effective strength and mass builders
using the power rack in these books:


Dinosaur Training: Lost Secrets of Strength
and Development

 


Chalk and Sweat

 

2.  My other books and courses are
right here at Dino Headquarters:


Hard-copy and PDF

http://www.brookskubik.com/products.html

Kindle

http://www.brookskubik.com/kindle.html

P.S. 3. Thought for the Day:

"Set high goals, and work hard to achieve
them."


-- Brooks Kubik

Before You Leave - Check These Out! 
Brooks Kubik's Kindle Books

http://www.brookskubik.com/kindle.html

We have over 25 books and courses in the Kindle store - including these little monsters:









 
For even more Kindle books by Brooks Kubik, visit:

































Squat Q and A - Part 2

Yes, that's Bob Hoffman performing a hip lift with Warren Lincoln Travis' famous stage dumbbell - which was billed as the World's Heaviest Dumbbell - and may very well have been exactly that! Travis is standing in the background, watching closely.


Hail to the Dinosaurs!

Here are more questions I've been getting about
squats and related exercises. I thought I should
share them, because whenever one person emails
me with a question, there are probably several
hundred other trainees with the same question.

So let's get going!

Q. I've seen videos where trainees drop into a
 deep squat and then bounce back up. Is that
the best way to do squats?


A. It's definitely not the way I do them! Dropping
and bouncing lets you handle more weight than
doing a squat with a controlled descent - but you
put your knees, hips and lower back at serious
risk every time you do a drop and bounce rep.

To me, it makes much more sense to use a little
less weight on the bar, perform your reps under
control, and aim to be lifting for the next 20, 30,
40 or 50 years  - instead of hurting yourself and
ending up not being able to squat any more.

Q. I've read that squats stimulate your body to
produce more testosterone. Is that true?


A. Absolutely - and that's one of the reasons why
squats are such a remarkably effective exercise.

It's also why older Dinos need to keep on doing
squats - or to find alternate exercises for the legs,
hips and lower back if for any reason they can't
do squats. Leg training stimulates the production
of testosterone - and that's critical for older Dinos.

Q. Are Trap Bar deadlifts (or Trap Bar squats, what-
ever you call them) a good substitute for squats?


A. If possible, you should include both exercises in
your training program - but if you can't do squats
or you don't have squat stands, the Trap Bar is a
great alternative.

Many of our older Dinos can no longer do squats,
but they thrive on Trap Bar deadlifts.

Q. Can you give me any other good exercises to
use if I can't do squats?


A. I can do better than that. I covered this topic
in detail in a four-part series back in the Dec 2015
to March 2016 issues of The Dinosaur Files.

And I didn't just tell you what works for me as
an older Dino (although that was part of it). I
did way better than that.

Before running this series of articles, I asked the
Dinos for feedback - and got a ton of it.

Over 50 Dinos who can no longer do squats and
have had to find good replacement exercises sent
in responses - and the series includes all 50-plus
of them.

If you figure that each of those Dinos has an
average of 20 years of training experience (of
course, some have much more, and some have
less), that means this series gives you the
accumulated wisdom of over 1,000 years
of serious, no-nonsense, real world strength
training.

It's the most detailed series I've ever seen on
effective, real world alternatives to the standard
back squat - and on ways to work around age
related dings and dents or old injuries and keep
on training productively and effectively.

If you missed these the first time, around, I urge
you to grab them now - and study them closely.

I know that they will help you enormously.

These issues are all available in PDF format in
the PDF Products section of the Dinosaur Training
website:

http://www.brookskubik.com/products.html

The PDF's are printable, so you can print and save
them in your collection.

So if you're looking for real world information
on fun and effective squat alternatives - or on work
arounds for older trainees - look no further. We've
got you covered.

As always, thanks for reading and have a great
day. If you train today, make it a good one!

Yours in strength,

Brooks Kubik

P.S. If you're an older Dino, grab a copy of Gray
Hair and Black Iron - it's a must read for anyone
over the age of 35:

Gray Hair and Black Iron

 

P.S. 2. My new course on heavy partials is
selling like hotcakes - and readers are loving
it. Go here to grab a copy:

Dinosaur Strength and Power Course
No. 2 - Heavy Partials




P.S. 3. My other books and courses are right
here at Dino Headquarters:

Brooks Kubik's Hard-copy and PDF Books


For more hard-copy books and courses, visit: http://www.brookskubik.com/products.html

Brooks Kubik's Kindle Books







 
For even more Kindle books by Brooks Kubik, visit:

 




Three Questions About Everyone's Favorite Exercise

Philadelphia's Louis Abele was a huge fan of the exercise we're going to talk about in today's Blog Post - and it helped make him one of the strongest men in the world!
Hail to the Dinosaurs!

Two quick notes and then we'll talk iron - as
in, cover some questions I've been getting
about everyone's favorite exercise. (Can you
guess what it is?)

1. The September Dinosaur Files

I'm working on the little monster, and it's
going to be another great issue.

If you missed the last couple of issues, you
missed some good ones - but you can grab
them right here:



July-August Dinosaur Files


May-June Dinosaur Files


I do need more feedback on these two issues -
as well as workout reports and training updates
from the Dinos - so don't be shy - send me a
short email and let me know how you liked
the last two issues - and how your workouts
are going!

2. Winter Is Coming!

And that's a great reason to grab a Bosco
hoodie from John Wood:

Bosco Hoodie (Grey)

BTW, I'm not sure, but I bet these will add at
least 20 pounds to your squats and deadlifts.

After all, Bosco has been helping trainees
build serious strength and muscle for a very
long time!

3. Some Squat Questions

It must be The Year of the Squat because ever
since January 1, I've been getting a ton of squat
questions.

So I thought I should cover some of them in
today's email. Here are three of them.

Q. Which is better - doing bottom position back
squats or bottom position front squats in the
power rack?

A. I like bottom position back squats in the
power rack - meaning that you set the bottom
pins low enough that when you set the bar on
them and get under it, you are at the same
position you would be at the bottom of a
parallel squat (top of thighs parallel to the
floor). From there, you drive hard and stand
up with the weight.

I don't like bottom position squats. They're
much more awkward - especially if you don't
have the super mobility of an Olympic weight-
lifter - and few of us do, especially if we're
older Dinos or have any dings and dents that
affect our flexibility.

If you like front squats, try pause squats where
you start in the normal top position, squat down,
and pause for a count of two in the bottom
position before driving back up.

Q. Do I need a cambered bar for squats?

A. No, not at all. They're a good training tool,
but they're not necessary.

Q. What do you think of the Dave Draper Top
Squat device?

A I like it a lot. As a 61-year old Dino with tight
shoulders, It's a necessary tool for me. I can't
do back squats without it.

That's three questions - but I remembered
another one I've been getting - so here's a
little bonus question . . . .

Q. Do any of your books or courses have good
leg training routines - or good programs for
gaining muscular bodyweight?

A. There are 20 programs for building strength
and muscle mass in Chalk and Sweat. 10 of them
are leg specialization programs, and 10 of them
are back specialization programs:

CHALK and SWEAT



Alternate between your favorite leg specialization
programs and your favorite back specialization
programs, and you will utterly transform your
body!

Make no mistake about it - leg and back training
is the Royal Road to Herculean strength and
development.

It's also what separates serious trainees from
the ones who aren't serious at all - as in, the
guys who do nothing but arm and chest work!

There are more questions, of course, and I'll try
to get to them in another email - but those are
enough for now.

As always, thanks for reading and have a great
day. if you train today, make it a good one!

Yours in strength,

Brooks Kubik

P.S. If you're an older Dino, grab a copy of Gray
Hair and Black Iron - it's a must read for anyone
over the age of 35:

Gray Hair and Black Iron




P.S. 2. My new course on heavy partials is
selling like hotcakes - and readers are loving
it. Go here to grab a copy:

 Dinosaur Strength and Power - Course No. 2 - Heavy Partials
 


P.S. 3. My other books and courses are right
here at Dino Headquarters:



Hard-copy and PDF


Kindle




P.S. 4. Thought for the Day:

"First, last and foremost - SQUAT!"

-- Brooks Kubik

Before you leave, be sure to check out our Kindle books - we have over 25 now - with more on the way!


Brooks Kubik's Kindle Books