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FINNISH
FINISH - NATIONAL APPROACH TO BOX SQUATTING Today many lifters talk about box squatting.
Opinions vary alot. Some still state that using a box is a trick which has
no effect to contest maxes at all. Some say that it will only work at APF
meets where you don´t have to go so low. After hearing and reading
different opinions I decited to give you mine. It is based from what I
have seen and heared from lifters in Finland during the last five years. Jarmo Laine was one of the first Finns to try the
box squats. At the summer of ´96 he wanted to try them immediately after
I told him my impressions and how it worked even for a tired and crippled
veteran. Having had enough big lifts at gym and failures at meets, he was
ready for something new. Old habits die hard and like many, he first box
squatted with too much weight. But after a few months learning, he was on
the right tracks. Having most likely the best squat tecnicue ever seen in
Finland, he was already able to utilize his hip strength in the squat. So
it was only a short moment when he noticed the key points and benefits of
using a box. He never really tried records on several box heigths, only
did a lot of short sets on box below parellel. His hard work paid off at
the ´97 nationals where he got three whites for his easy 680 pounds at
165 bodyweigth. Jarmo Virtanen´s European record was moved in history by
one pound margin. After a couple of injuries, a building project he came
back this year to 165`s again. In april he came up 683 like a toy and
shocked everyone with three picture perfect squats of 661, 694 and 711
pounds. The box benefits his deadlift too. His former weak link is now 683
pounds, done at our Deadlift Record Breakers in september. Having troubles
to lockout a big one, he gave the low & high boxes a steady rides to
max. In WPC & WPO meet in Las Vegas we will see him challenging the
best middleweights in the World. Janne Toivanen, a two-time IPF World Champ, is one
of the finest sportsmen I`ve ever known. If you read about Janne´s
deadlift training of the past issues of PL USA, you have noticed how hard
he trains - six times a week. Being an olympic type squatter, he never got
as much out of the box squats he might have been able to with a wider
stance. But for his super sumo deadlift, box squats developed a lockout
that didn´t fail even if he was forced to four deads like happened in
Salzburg. I knew that when the bar came past his knees, he would make the
lift. His squat was ”only” at 727 pounds and stayed there because he
finished lifting after that thrill in Salzburg. At the last year of his
career, he was in the army and had excellent training conditions. Many
have asked me, what he would have been able to do if he decited to keep on
training after returning to his regular duties as a service product
manager at Valmet Corporations. I have always stated that a 800+ squat at
least plus a high 800 deadlift. That much he had left in him. So far,
nobody has argueed. Sakari ”Daddy” Mäntylä is maybe the most
fanatic powerlifter in Finland. He is quite famous nationally not only
from his lifting but also for coaching with a heart. Some lifters goes
crazy and some do not. Daddy goes nuts always, whether on platform or
coaching. Among friends and team members, he was also famous for his big
squats that were all really high. Once he called me and told that he did
755 in practice. He admited it might have been a bit high, maybe by a size
of a matchbox. I told him that he lights his cigarrettes with a full size
logs. That was during his preparation to ´93 IPF Worlds in Jönköping
Sweden. At the meet he could come up with 650 which was redlighted three
times. That was the old Daddy. Three years ago he decited to start box squats. He
had a very strong back but weak glutes and hamstrings. The first result
was that he was able to do more than one lift in a three lift meet. After
being able to catch a legal depth, he finally started to get some results.
At the WPC World´s in Graz he came with an easy 694 and was able for
more. At ´99, I expected him to make that 755 pound ”matchbox squat”
at 198 from a legal depth but he was injured, had a divorse and did not
compete the whole year. Although he has reaches 46 years of age, he will
still improve. His tecnicue has never been better. High volume training
will keep up his work capacity. The test is in Vegas where I expect my
long time friend to make his best squat and total ever during his 25 years
in the sport. I think I´m the first Finn to ever try the box
squats. Training for ´95 IPF World´s, I ruptured my patella tendon. I
was forced to widen my squat stance to move the weigth from thighs to
hips. The box squats seemed perfect to that. I spent two months learning
the tecnicue, three weeks in bed with a fewer but then I was finally able
to start my first real box squat cycle by percents. After two and a half
months of training with 240-300 pounds, I came up with 578. A carryover I
never met anywhere before. I was more than convinced. After that my knee
has not bothered me and also the lower back problems are very much
history. The reverse hyper machine has a lot to do with that but that´s
another story. Now I squat at 8 to 15 inch boxes and have progress on both
squat and deadlift. This list could go on and on. During the last
years, I have wrote articles, given seminars and coached and consulted
lifters of different levels. All who have tried box squats have had at
least some benefits. Very tall and lifters with long thigh and who had for
some reason not moved their squat stance wide enough have made the
smallest gains. Some have used it only to strengthen their glutes and
hamstrings but many have also adopted the Soviet percent training to their
program. It can be done by box based maxes. Start with sets of
8x3 or 12x2 at 65% of the box max and finish with 4-6 doubles at 80
or 85 percent. After that, go for a meet or try for new box record.
Another method is based on maxes on contest. At Westside Barbell, the
Mecca of box squatting, most lifters go from 50% to 60% of a best contest
lift. The results are known everywhere. What makes box squats so exceptionally effective ?
Louie Simmons has pointed that out many times in his articles, but let´s
review. First, it teaches the perfect tecnicue by allowing one to sit
complitely back and not down while descenting. All know that you come up
from squat like you have descented. Secondly,
it takes the speed off from the lift at bottom which is the most critical
part of the lift. By cutting the consentric-eccentric rhytm it forces one
to produce max force at very short time period to come up. These two
things are the main factors for a successful squat. It really overloads
the main muscles of squatting. The percent training will also allow one to
do more lifts in one training session. Doing only one tough set of 3-6
reps will in long period make you good at reps but lousy at singles. After
all, the opposite is what we all are after. Some lifters have even stated
that they are able train the deadlift more effectively simply because of
smaller weights at squats. Another question is how to start box squats ? Here´s
a system that has proved to be succesful. For learning the mechanics of
box squat, the best way is to start with a box which is 2-3 inches above
parellel. Use only 20-30% of your contest max and get used to the
movement. Remember to pause and relax the hips and legs at bottom. After a
few weeks try, do not increase the weight but lower the box to parellel.
After that, work another few weeks and lower the box 2-3 inches below
parellel. After another few weeks, you are finally ready for training on
boxes. Move back to a box that is an inch or two below parellel. During
the ”test drive” you need to do some regular squats to stay in
productive training weights. But after you are familiar with box squats
you may want to stick to them only. I have heard many wondering why do so many types of
goodmornings ? So, at kinesiology course during my massager studies, I had
a chance to find out. I measured EGM´s on hamstrings, glutes and lower
erectors. At arched back goodmornings glutes and hamstrings did far more
work than in others forms but to my surprise, 30-40% less lower back work
than in bent over goodmornings. The goodmorning/squat combination stresses
all three main muscles almost equal and has proven to be an exellent
choise for lifters who fail in the squat or sumo deadlift because of weak
lower back. Rickey Dale Crain has done box squats for 20 years
and Neville Primich uses them regularly. Watch him going for 400 kilos /
881 pounds after his move to 198`s in the future. Many other top lifters
do them also. But they will boost your squat up whether you´re a world
class squatter or beginner. I have entitled this article by Herb
Glossbrenner`s, the legendary statistian, word´s. Opinions vary and may
even argue sometimes, but results speak for itself. I would like to thank Louie Simmons for his time,
support and innovative thoughts. Thanks again my friend. Powerlifting
needs more people like him who give away their time and efforts just to
get the sport moving forward. Sakari Selkäinaho To find out more about Sakari and his training CLICK HERE
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