Strength training is not just for athletes Posted by Mike Furci (09/06/2011 @ 9:47 am) Are you an athlete looking to enhance your abilities? Would you like to increase your muscular size? Would you like to increase your strength? Would you like to boost your self-esteem? Do you want to lose body-fat? Are you a weekend warrior trying to extend your ability to play sports? Are you a stay at home mom who just wants to look and feel better? Are you a forty something male who wants to feel strong and lose some that spare tire? If you answered yes to any of these, you should be training for strength. Strength training is not just for powerlifters, bodybuilders or high impact sports. Strength training can benefit everyone. At a minimum you should be strength training to ensure your health and overall wellbeing. And I’m not just talking about today, but for the future as well. As we age we lose muscle. This is an undeniable truth. This facet of aging has several negative outcomes: Losing muscle will cause a decrease in your basal metabolic rate. Muscle drives the metabolism. The more you have the more calories you burn. Conversely, the more you lose the fewer calories you burn. It doesn’t stop here. The more muscle one loses the weaker one gets. This is logical because the fewer muscle fibers there are to create motion, the less force you’ll be able to produce. The weaker one gets as a result of muscle lost, the tighter one gets resulting in a loss of flexibility. And as one loses flexibility, they lose more strength, which also creates a loss of muscle. This loss of flexibility coupled with a loss of strength dramatically increases ones risk for injuries. Are you starting to see what a vicious cycle this becomes? So, I think my point that despite your genetics, experience, what you know (or what you think you know) about training, strength training is for you. Posted in: Anti-Aging, Bodybuilding, General fitness, General training, Motivation, Weight training, Workout programs, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: Anti-Aging, benefits of strength training, Building strength, exercises for strengthening your back, funcional strength, high intensity weight training, natural antiaging, strength training, strength training advice, strength training for legs, strength training programs, strength training routines, strength training workouts, Weight training, weight training programs, weight training routines, weight training workouts, women weight training
Barbell back squat vs smith machine squats Posted by Mike Furci (02/23/2011 @ 9:56 am) Many strength and muscle building experts will say, the barbell back squat is much more effective at building size and strength. They argue free weight squats are a more natural movement and require much more stabilization and balance, which increases its effectiveness. However, the Smith machine is much easier to learn, especially for beginners, which many argue is safer. I contend that it depends upon the person’s build. If one has long legs and a shorter torso, they will have a very difficult time performing a squat correctly in order to get optimum stimulation for strength or growth. In this case and in others, they would benefit greatly from performing smith machine squats. But what does science have to say? Which is better for gaining strength? Researchers from the University of Saskatchewan in Canada compared the free weight squat to the Smith machine using electromyography (EMG). The purpose of their study was to determine which exercise was better at stimulating the prime movers and stabilizers of the legs (e.g., tibialis anterior, gastrocnemius, vastus medialis, vastus lateralis and biceps femoris) and trunk (e.g., lumbar erector spinae and rectus abdominus). Six healthy participants performed 1 set of 8 repetitions using a weight they could lift 8 times, i.e., 8 rep maximum. Contrary to our hypotheses, muscles of the legs (specifically the vastus medialis and biceps femoris) displayed greater EMG activity during the free weight squat compared to the Smith machine squat, whereas there were no differences between exercises for EMG activity of trunk stabilizers.
Researchers conclude that the free weight squat may be superior to the Smith machine squat for training the major muscle groups of the legs and possibly would result in greater strength development and hypertrophy of these muscle groups with long-term training. Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, 23(9), 2588-2591. Posted in: Bodybuilding, General training, Legs, Weight training, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: best leg exercises, best leg toning exercises, Building strength, dumbbell squats, exercises for strengthening your back, funcional strength, how to build stronger legs, how to increase leg strength, how to make your legs bigger, how to perform a squat, how to strengthen your core, journal of strength and conditioning, Journal of strength and conditioning research, leg exercises, leg exercises for women, leg shaping exercises, leg training, leg workouts, Legs, squat, squats, Strength, Strength conditioning, strength conditioning research, Strength tests, strength training for legs, Ways to test your strength, what are some good leg strengthening exercises
The most underated component of training programs, recovery Posted by Mike Furci (07/07/2009 @ 11:40 am) We all recover from exercise at different rates. Many people who recover quickly have reached a high level of success performing a high number of sets. Many who recover slowly have also been very successful performing low numbers of sets. Because everybody is unique in their ability to adapt and recover from different programs, the number of sets needs to be individualized. A very important component of a training program that should be given consideration is training frequency. How often can, or more importantly, should I train per week? Optimum recovery time between training sessions is essential if one is going to continue to make progress. Training frequency, which is determined by ones recovery ability, is often a forgotten part of most training protocols. Don’t be so concerned with how many training sessions you can handle per week. Be more concerned about the optimal amount. More is not always better. In fact, when somebody comes to me for advice because they’ve stopped making progress, usually I either reduce the workout volume or add days off. There is no reason to go to the gym if you’re not going to make progress. Does it make sense to keep doing the same routine if gains are not being made? Isn’t the definition of “crazy”, doing the same thing over and over expecting different results. If your current program is not working, change it. The number one complaint people have is they’re not making progress or their progress has come to a halt. In both cases, the answer is more recovery time. Understanding the fact our bodies have a finite amount of recovery ability should help explain this concept. The following is Mike Mentzer’s explanation of overtraining and recovery. I’m sure you’ll find it interesting. In bodybuilding, the idea is to impose a training stress onto the body that will serve to induce the biochemical changes which result in muscular hypertrophy. Applying any more of the training stress (high-intensity) than is required by nature will result in the equivalent of over-dosing on a medicine; or, as we say typically in bodybuilding – overtraining. A person exposed to the sun’s ultraviolet rays at the equator in summer would not have the slightest concern whether the intensity of the sunlight stress is high enough to disturb the physiology sufficiently to induce an adaptive response, i.e., the buildup of a suntan. His only concern, his overriding consideration, would be to properly regulate the volume (or duration) and frequency of exposure time so as not to overdose on the stress/stimulus; and, thereby, incur a sunburn or, in extreme cases, death. A person seeking to develop a suntan at the equator, or wherever the intensity of the sunlight is high has no concern that he will develop a suntan; but only if he doesn’t overexpose. (Note that bodybuilding science is largely based on the medical discipline of stress physiology. Also, that the end result of the healing of a sunburn is not a suntan, just as the end result of the healing of overtraining is not greater strength or added muscle.) As the stresses grow progressively greater, they will eventually reach a critical point such that they constitute overtraining. The first symptom will be a slow down in progress; and if the individual continues with the same volume and frequency protocol, the stresses will continue to increase until there is a complete cessation of progress, typically referred to as a “sticking point.” One need not ever experience a slow down in progress, let alone a sticking point, if he bears in mind all the while that as the weights grow progressively greater so do the stresses; and he must do certain specific things to compensate for them. MikeMentzer.com
Posted in: Abs, Arms, Back, Bodybuilding, Chest, Endurance, Exercise, General fitness, General training, Legs, Neck, Power lifting, Specific workouts, Weight training Tags: building muscle mass, Building strength, funcional strength, How often can I train?, how often should you train per week, how to avoid overtraining, increasing size and strength, Mike Mentzer, muscle building, muscle building exercises, muscle building routines, muscle building tips, muscle building tips advice, muscle building workout, muscle building workouts, overtraining, recovery, recovery ability, Strength conditioning, symptoms of overtraining, training for strength, Training frequency, training plateau, Ways to test your strength, Weight Lifting advice, Weight lifting tips, Weight training, weight training routines, weight training workouts
Waiting until summer to improve your golf game is too late. Posted by Mike Furci (03/13/2009 @ 2:47 pm) The mechanics of a golf swing can cause a variety of injuries. The most common area golfers experience injuries is the lower back. Other areas golfers complain about are the shoulder, or more specifically the rotator cuff, the left elbow, and the left wrist (for right handers). Unfortunately, there is little data available about the seriousness of injuries as a result of playing golf or how to reduce them. However, if we apply what we know from other sports through research and empirical data, I have seen many golfers not only decrease their risk of injury but improve their game. What golfer in their right mind wouldn?t want to improve his game? As a matter of fact, golfers, more than participants in any other sport, are fanatical. There are more than 20 million golfers in the US and most of them are obsessed with their abilities on the course. They will drop $700 on an iron and $400 for a driver. Many will pay thousands of dollars to belong to prestigious country clubs. Many more will spend hundreds of dollars during the golf season on balls that they?re eventually going to lose. But the average golfer won?t spend a dime on improving his biggest asset to his game: his body. I cannot imagine owning a $2,000 set of clubs and not doing anything to ensure I could use them to their fullest capacity. To be successful at golf, you need functional strength, flexibility, endurance (ability to hit the club well, over and over), coordination, finesse and timing. You can?t find these aspects of the game in a pro shop. I don?t care how much you paid for your Big Bertha Fusion Irons or your balls that claim to go 20 to 40 yards farther than ordinary balls; if you lack the above, you?re going to be another frustrated player.
Golf: Reducing your isk of injury and improving your game. Posted in: Exercise, Sports Health and Fitness Tags: becoming a good golfer, decrease the risk of injury, elbow injuries, flexibility, funcional strength, golf, golf swing mechanics, golfing injuries, improving your golf game, improving your golf swing, Low Back Pain, the most common golf injuries
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