You’ll notice that these are stabilizer-focused lifts—that’s a common theme in sussing out the value of new lifts as well as old ones that have been rediscovered.
Up-tempo play calling has changed the pace of gridiron football, and with it, the energetic demands placed on athletes.
Science is in a state of constant development. This article examines several recent studies that provide new theories on hypertrophy.
Cutting through the clutter of fitness information out there, here’s a checklist to help you to figure out what works (and what doesn’t) for your training and the training advice you offer others.
Are you getting beat up from squatting, benching, and deadlifting? Here’s a handful of tips to help cure what ails you.
If Diet-Induced Thermogenisis is in fact a variable we can control through a choice on whether/how to distribute our calories across the day, it could be the example of magic metabolism claimed in so many fitness tip listicles.
Starvation Mode is the not-so-accurate term for your body’s reaction to extreme caloric deficits. What price do you pay for rapid weight loss?
In today’s world of athletics, does the 1975 work of Dauer and Pangrazi hold up?
IR sufferers need to replace their carb intake with proteins and fats…or do they?
You’ve likely heard of this plant extract gaining traction in the supplement industry, but is there any science behind the hype?
Consider the major powerlifting movements, cues, and technical adjustments that may prove helpful in both improving strength and prolonging health.
This 16-week cycle is for gym rats who have been lifting long enough to have good technique but aren’t interested in peaking for a meet.
If you’re anchored to a desk at work, performing these daily exercises will keep your body moving the way it’s supposed to.
Even if you’re active, your fitness goals might not line up with standards set by workforce health management — especially if they use BMI. Here’s what I recently learned about these wellness policies.
How prepared are freshmen athletes for the rigors of strength and conditioning at the collegiate level? A recent survey asked this question and the results are in contention.
The shoulder is a complex and vulnerable joint for competitive athletes and lifters. Use these techniques to get your shoulders healthy and keep them moving pain-free.
Several popular training programs call for a regimented stretching protocol as part of every workout. Is this all hype, or could it be the secret to your next 25 pounds of muscle?
Can proper implementation of unilateral exercise produce healthier, higher-performing athletes?
The human body is a system of levers. When we understand the concepts of these mechanisms, we then increase our force-production capabilities.
Most exercises don’t fall from the sky. Actual lifters created these famous movements for specific purposes. Are you using them correctly?
This updated manual revisits the work of Verkhoshansky and demonstrates how to implement a conjugate-sequence system.
Patterson gives you everything you need to know to find YOUR best bench ever. From grabbing the bar to re-racking the weight, he covers everything in between.
In our endeavors to present diverse methods of training, we sought an authority outside our realm of expertise.
Dr. Squat turns The Real Deal into a more destructive, pugilistic powerhouse.
When God closes a gym door, he opens an anabolic window.
Expert in ethics, philosophy, law, and social policy (as well as WNBF bodybuilding pro), Dr. Melina Bell examines bodybuilding through a philosophical lens.
Does performing cardio with low blood sugar levels increase fat burning? Muscle gain? Performance?
You are embarrassing! You come in here…doing those stale-ass sets, in that stale-ass program, as part of your stale-ass training cycle…and you expect results?
How to sidestep through the minefield of collegiate bureacracy and pier-review boards.
Those guys involved with the Manhattan Project did not have to deal with the politics and bureaucracy of modern day musclehead research. This guide will help you get that doctoral dissertation moving forward.
Fourteen years after his death, is Duchaine seen as supplement swindler or human performance pioneer?
Doing research? Follow these four steps and get your project done.
I want to offer a personal counterpoint to this idea that Westside style programming is only applicable to elite or enhanced lifters.
Right now, and in the right circumstances, understanding your personal genome might be a powerful tool for improved health.
In this QT, we will look at the latest research on heavy lifting and heart health.
When a coincidental injury occurs in a well monitored lab study, it’s definitely something to write home about.
Brandon returns with a quick look at hypertrophy and running.
This edition of quick thoughts looks at hypertrophy and muscle length, the final frontier, long-term dilemmas, and the interactions of illness and intense training.
If Reeves, Schwarzenegger, Anderson, Alekseyev, and such got us interested in lifting, then it has been Glasnost, the Internet, and cheap home media that has gotten us educated.
Isometric lifts, lifts where the muscles contract without causing movement at the involved joints, might be an under-appreciated tool for lifters and athletes.
While some are getting busted, others are finding new ways to improve. All in the work of science.
I underwent three rounds of iontophoresis a few months ago for an aggravated nerve/tendon issue that I’m having with both arms.
It’s something to be concerned with if you’re a competitive athlete because folks are obviously getting busted.
Being statistically significant doesn’t mean a result has practical applications, however; it’s just measurable, and that measurable amount may or may not be of interest to you.
It’s important to know that scientific/medical papers are rarely “how-to guides.” Instead, they seek to answer very specific questions.
Regardless of whether or not you have the surgery, you’ll need to focus on extensive warm-ups prior to activities that cause subluxations.
Parallel systems train multiple skills simultaneously, and they progress mainly by manipulating volume, intensity, and technique as a way of teaching the body what to expect from a competition.
Understanding training organization is the biggest sticking point for many lifters.
A lifter uses multiple lifting techniques because the body has many different modes of adaptation.
Ensure these factors are achieved, and your athletes will have success under the bar.
The following series is intended to give new lifters some general information on major aspects of weightlifting science.
Mark Rippetoe has re-popularized “GOMAD”—Gallon Of Milk A Day—as another bulking strategy.