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Is that right some Pros don't train heavy ?

Mushroomhead

New member
I was talking to this kid that works out at venice golds, he tells me he sees some pros who don't train heavy for their weight and the amount of juice they are one but they do high volume training with a perfect form... and only they train heavy in front of the camera to just show off

Is that true ?

is strength that important when it comes to bodybuilding
 
It's very true. They aren't working out with 10lbs, but they also aren't lifting to get PR's. When it comes to body building, it's all about stimulating the muscle and making it grow. Usually the best way to do that is to hit it with higher volume. Thats why you see a lot of bodybuilders hitting sets to failure, then a drop set to failure and another. As far as the strength question, they aren't up there in a benching contest, it's about who has the best body.
 
Jay Cutler mentions this in the series Passion-Pain-Perfection. He says that once they make it to IFBB pro status, lifting real heavy is to big of a risk. A simple injury can put a pro out for an entire season and that costs them a lot of cash.
 
Strength and size do not have much to do with each other. Some of the strongest guys in my gym look like fairly average guys.
 
yeah bro I honestly do not even pay attention what todays pros do, would much rather push to look like the guys from the golden age of bodybuilding... the ones that ate hard, trained hard, and took conservative amounts of roids by todays standards. I was listening to a BB show yesterday on the radio and they were talking about this, its sooo true. women just get freaked out by guys who look like coleman or cutler, NOT THAT i do not respect those guys for their sheer size trust me.
 
I agree with steve

I'm going for the vince gironda or reg park look while being brutally strong.

I have no desire to ever look like any of today's pros.
 
Btw, Im sure most of today's pros built their massive size moving heavy weights. It does make sense for them to do more "fluff" training in order to stay healthy and competitive minus the injuries.
 
I cover this in depth in my books. But for now...real simple.

Heavy training hits the fast twitch Type 11 muscles and they are the bigger muscle fibers. They're designed to burden heavy weight for short amount of time. Hence, it makes sense to train heavy and build the bigger muscle.

One problem -- not everybody has an abundance of them.

And if you don't, the stress will just go to the joints and tendons.

But ALL muscles can be pumped. And pumping will stimulate more mytochoria, which in turn creates the ability to regenerate more muscle. Pumping fills the muscle will nutrients and essentially "shapes" it, creating the "look" of a larger muscle.

Serge Nubret trained in a very slow, strict style using relatively light weight i the 12-15 rep range. Seemed to work for him. http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_v4BnOvWsCM0/TAK1AjLRfXI/AAAAAAAAA5A/YpJ2BS0IyY0/s640/Serge+Nubret.jpg

Flex Wheeler was a strict form light guy too. VInce Taylor and Paul Dilett too. Even Mike Menzter -- yes the guy who promoted "heavy Duty" training. That was a total gimmick/intellectual experiment. He never actually trained that way. In fact, by the time he promoted it, he was horribly out of shape at age 40.

Also, keep in mind, "light" is relative. What I'm referring to is not a 6-8 max to failure range but something that will create a pump. It depends on the individual.

That's PART of the answer.
 
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