Fitness Articles Archive, 2024
11/19 "Can you share what you do for legs? I hit plateaus pretty quickly and my legs seem to resist new growth. They get stronger, but not necessarily bigger or more defined."
This is a common question, especially among lifters who do not have a background in leg-heavy sports, like rugby, football, or even certain positions in soccer (goalie, central defender, target, etc.). Don't despair! The laws of science are equally true for everyone. However, that science does need to be nuanced and functionalized to exercise science applications.
In my last article about lats/back (see below, 6/30), I laid out the four main ideas of muscle development: (1) stress the muscle enough, (2) rest the muscle enough, (3) eat strategically, (4) time. That science will always be true for you and I and every human. Your legs will muscularize--or not muscularize--depending on how you technician those four realms.
(1) Stress the Leg Muscles Enough
When I say "stress the leg muscles enough", the nuance is that the stress needs to be hypertrophic-oriented. Distance jogging, anything over 45 minutes, is not hypertrophic-oriented. That makes the legs endurant and long (marathoner legs), but not meaty and herculean. Jogging no more than 45 minutes is a nice sweet spot because it helps carve the legs without working against muscularity. (It also works your heart and lungs, which must be a part of any self-care system.) Just do not do it more than once every three or four days. The other days should be anaerobic-hypertrophic exercises. Here is what I do. As you can see, it works fabulously.
Heavy Lifting. Sets of 6-15, moderately heavy to heavy, focusing on squats, walking lunges, and single leg stepups. Increase the weight in small increments every three or four workouts.
Tire Flips. I adore tire flips, goodness. I would do them everyday and in my sleep if I could. Make sure your back and biceps are fresh and fully recovered before tire flip day. Make sure you use a tire size you can do correctly in the 6-15 rep range. (I am horrified by people at the gym contorted their body in unnatural positions to grind out 2-3 reps on a tire way too heavy for them. This is asking for a major longterm injury.)
German Volume Training. Do a little online reading and see why this works so well.
Weight-Pulls. Pulling weight while walking backwards slowly. This exercise has tremendous effect on the calves and quads. Focus on digging the balls of your feet (the front half of your feet) into the ground and pushing off with them. This blasts the calves wonderfully. I do weight-pulls on grass so I can use my soccer cleats to really dig into the ground and push off with my calves. I use an old tire, with small weights or sand bags inside, and a normal rope I bought at Walmart.
Resistance Sprinting Varieties. Sprinting with resistance also makes the legs muscularize. One go-to from my competitive soccer days is weight-sprints, i.e., doing short sprints while dragging weight. I use the exact same equipment as the weight-pulls, however, I have a weight belt to connect the rope to my waist.
Sand-sprints and hill-sprints are also my go-to. I was exhilarated when I found, here in Florida near the beach, a twenty-yard sand hill at the perfect angle (around 45 degrees). A sand hill provides a double effect of both sand and hill. The results from this two-in-one are just spectacular.
Stair-sprints have also been a part of my system, although this depends on finding a usable staircase nearby. When I travel I use the staircase in the hotel, paired with squats or weighted stepups in the hotel gym. With stair-sprints the key is to go hard for many short bursts of no more than thirty or forty steps. This triggers the anaerobic, anabolic, hypertrophic reactions in the body.
Circuits, Supersets. When possible, I mix and match some of the above into a creative circuit or superset. This keeps the body from plateauing and forces it to keep adapting physiologically into new growth.
Constant Modifications to Avoid Plateau. Without constant micro-modifications you will plateau. Keep increasing the weight by a small amount every three or four workouts. Keep varying the rest periods between sets. Use rest-pause. Use drop-sets. Use up-sets. Constantly innovate these micro-modifications and your body will perpetually stay in adaptation mode, i.e., fitness improvement and hypertrophy. I explain the meaning these terms in my last article about lats/back (see below, 6/30).
(2) Rest the Leg Muscles Enough
After traumatizing your legs muscles with a great workout, they need around three full days to recover. If you did not take the muscles to threshold, and your fitness level is high, they can recover with two full days off. If you took the muscles to threshold, they will need a full three days to recover, possibly four, depending on your fitness level and other fitness activities. It is during the recovery period that the muscles are actually growing. They are not growing during the workout, they are breaking down at microscopic levels and merely initiating the hypertrophic cycle.
Learn to have an intuitive relationship with your muscles. Sometimes they will signal they are ready to go again earlier than expected, sometimes they will signal they need more time. Do not exercise emotionally. Do not exercise as an escape. Do not exercise with ego. These almost always lead to burnout and injury, and other physical and mental problems. Exercise based on physiological principles as you listen to your muscles and body.
(3) Eat Strategically
A couple of articles ago I went into great detail regarding eating, especially eating strategically for advanced exercisists or fitness pros. The article can be found at the 2023 Fitness Articles Archive.
The bottom line with eating is, you will have to eat enough so your muscles have enough resources to create new growth. This means regularly feeding your body lean protein, healthy complex carbs, and healthy fats. Your legs simply will not hypertrophy without enough nutritional resources to create new growth. In fact, if your body perceives a nutritional deficit it will start catabolizing its own resources to function. Translation: you will not grow, you will actually lose muscle. You must eat strategically to maintain an anabolic environment in your body.
(4) Time
Depending on your starting baseline, it will take time to build the legs you envision. If you are disciplined and diligent with your program, and you keep micro-modifying to avoid plateaus, and you eat strategically faithfully, you will see inspiring results within six months and more and more every few months after that.
As I often say, do not take the loser's route of steroids. Not only will it damage your body, God's gift to you, but it is glaringly unsustainable. Will you really be doing steroids for decades to sustain the results? Have you noticed the steady stream of bodybuilders and fitness pros dying in recent years? While the families are not always publicly forthcoming about the true cause of death, behind the scenes it is an open secret how and why they died.
The high purpose of advanced fitness is to celebrate and appreciate God's gift to you, to maximize sustainable physical and mental health, to maximize functionality and life activities, to maximize a sense of dignity and healthy love for yourself, to give the gift of your very best body to another, to inspire others toward higher purposes in their fitness journey.
6/30 "I have been frustrated trying to grow my lats and back muscles, what do I need to do to get better results? Can you share what you do for your back?"
Greetings athletes and exercisists! Thank you for the specific question about lats. Growing your back muscles, like any muscle in the body, means four things: (1) stress the muscle enough, (2) rest the muscle enough, (3) eat strategically, and (4) time. Together, these four maximally trigger the body's intrinsic growth mechanisms.
(1) Stress the Back Muscles Enough
There is an assortment of ways to develop any given muscle. All of them work to a greater or lesser degree depending on your genetics, fitness level, overall fitness program, eating habits, whether you are trending upward or starting to plateau, and so on. Today's perfect workout is tomorrow's plateau, so realize you need a diverse arsenal of muscle-building philosophies to continually mix, match, innovate, and challenge your muscles with to trigger new growth. Here are a few modules I use that work really, really well.
Strategizing Width. The back muscles can be developed for both width and thickness. For width, the two greatest exercises are, without a doubt, standing lat pulldowns and widegrip pullups.
Standing Lat Pulldowns. Standing lat pulldowns stress the muscles precisely associated with frame width, the upper lats near your armpit and rear delts (shoulders). You can variate the standing lat pulldown by bending over to a roughly 45-degree angle. This puts additional stress on the middle tier of the lats, the base of your "wings" behind the ribcage.
I start with light weight, sets of 12-20 reps, slowly building to heavy weight, sets of 6-8 reps, then finishing with moderate weight, sets of 12ish reps. I stop at around ten sets, then move to the next cornerstone of my back workout: pullups.
Pullups. Pullups are the gift that keeps on giving. You can change your hand position to stress different muscles, but to focus on the width of your wings use a (a) wide grip, palms facing forward or a (b) shoulderwidth grip, palms facing back at you. I do around six to eight sets of 6-plus reps, with one or two minutes rest in between. Do the pullup through the full range of motion. Use the assisted pullup machine if you need.
Other Width Exercises. After pullups I "burn out" or finish off my lats with some kind of machine exercise. I go for higher reps, 12-20, and simply try to burn out whatever my lats have left. Of course by this point they are largely exhausted, so I prefer the safety and controllability of a machine exercise, lighter weight, and higher reps.
Constant Modifications to Avoid Plateau. The aforementioned is a flexible outline I use for width work. However, constant micro-modifications are an emphatic must to avoid plateauing.
Keep increasing the weight by a small amount every three workouts.
Keep varying the rest periods between sets. Sometimes I rest thirty seconds, sometimes two minutes, sometimes I progressively increase or decrease rest periods, sometimes I creatively mix and match rest periods.
Use rest-pause. This means, instead of doing a full rest period after a set, rest or "pause" for five to ten seconds, then grind out a few more reps, rest or "pause" again for five to ten seconds, then grind out a few more reps, then do a full rest period.
Use drop-sets. Instead of doing a full rest period after a set, drop the weight to a doable amount and keep going. Do it again if you want. And again. And again. Sometimes I will do as many five drops before I do a full rest period. Sometimes I will do only one or two drops before resting.
Use up-sets. Up-sets are like drop-sets, but going the other way. Instead of doing a full rest period after a set, increase or "up" the weight a bit more and keep going. A crucial word of caution: on your first set only do a moderate weight and only moderately tire your muscles. Do not take your muscles to their threshold on the first set of an up-set; that will almost certainly lead to injury. On the first set do a moderate weight only and only moderately tire your muscles. After 8-12 reps, up the weight and then take your muscles near their threshold. I recommend against doing more than one up-set, unless your first set is light, your second set is moderate, and your third set is to threshold.
Constantly mix and match and innovate these micro-modifications and your body will perpetually stay in adaptation mode, i.e., fitness improvement and hypertrophy.
Strategizing Thickness. For back thickness, the greatest exercise is row, row, row. There are numerous variations of the row, so experiment to find which ones give your particular frame the best results, and, how much you want your legs involved. I, personally, tend to do single arm bent-over row for light and moderate sets, and a seated row machine for heavier sets. I do this to not overstress my legs because I do more than enough legs on leg day.
Single Arm Bent-Over Row & Seated Row Machine. I warm up with several light sets on some back exercise machine. Then I move to single arm bent-over row, bench slightly raised, five or six sets, light to moderate weight, 6-12 reps. Then I move to a seated row machine, where I do my heaviest sets; seven-ish sets, heavy weight, 6-8 reps.
Other Exercises, Deadlifts. Many advanced exercisists and fitness professionals swear that deadlifts are the best thickness-builder for back. They are not wrong. Regardless of whether rows or deadlifts are the true #1 mass-builder, the two exercises are essentially 1a and 1b; both are simply that good. The variable you will have to consider is how much you want to involve your legs on back day. As a soccer player, I adore running and doing an expansive variety of leg modules, like sandsprints, stairs, walking lunges, tire flips, jumprope, weighted sprints, the list goes on and on! Therefore, on upper body days, I am conscientious of legs recovery and not retraumatizing them. So I tend to stay away from deadlifts, which involve the legs significantly. This is the kind of calculus you have to figure out when strategizing a regime that works for you, your genetics, your interests, your schedule, etc.
Constant Modifications to Avoid Plateau. The aforementioned is a flexible outline. Without constant micro-modifications, though, you will plateau. Keep increasing the weight by a small amount every three workouts or so. Keep varying the rest periods between sets. Use rest-pause. Use drop-sets. Use up-sets. Constantly innovate these micro-modifications and your body will perpetually stay in adaptation mode, i.e., fitness improvement and hypertrophy.
(2) Rest the Back Muscles Enough
After traumatizing your back muscles with a great workout, they need around three full days to recover. If you did not take the muscles to threshold, and your fitness level is high, they can recover with two full days off. If you took the muscles to threshold, they will need a full three days to recover, possibly four, depending on your fitness level and other fitness activities. It is during the recovery period that the muscles are actually growing. They are not growing during the workout, they are breaking down at microscopic levels and merely initiating the hypertrophic cycle.
Learn to have an intuitive relationship with your muscles. Sometimes they will signal they are ready to go again earlier than expected, sometimes they will signal they need more time. Do not exercise emotionally. Do not exercise as an escape. These almost always lead to overtraining and injury, and other physical and mental problems.
(3) Eat Strategically
In the last fitness article I went into great detail regarding eating, especially eating strategically for advanced exercisists or fitness pros. The article can be found at the Fitness Articles Archive below, the 2023 button.
(4) Time
Depending on your starting baseline, it will take time to build the lats you envision. If you are disciplined and diligent with your program, and you keep micro-modifying to avoid plateaus, and you eat strategically faithfully, you will see inspiring results within six months and more and more every few months after that.
Do not take the loser's route of steroids. Not only will it damage your body, God's gift to you, but it is glaringly unsustainable. Will you really be doing steroids into middle age and beyond to sustain the results? Have you noticed the steady stream of bodybuilders and fitness pros dying in recent years? While the families are not always publicly forthcoming about the true cause of death, behind the scenes it is an open secret.
The high purpose of advanced fitness is to celebrate and appreciate God's gift to you, to maximize sustainable physical and mental health, to maximize functionality and life activities, to maximize a sense of dignity and healthy love for yourself, to give the gift of your very best body to another, to inspire others toward higher purposes in their fitness journey.