you're still ok even with the injury....your weights are nothing to be ashamed about. you're better than half the bodybuilders I know. good luck with your injury.
smtimelevi said:at 17 years old 175 lbs. 5' 10" I benched 250x1 -drug free
at 19 years old 185 lbs. 5' 10" I benched 275x1- drug free
at 20 years old 205 lbs. 5' 10" I benched 315x1- after my third cycle
at 22 years old 220 lbs. 5' 10" I benched 315x2- during my fifth cycle
airsmith2k said:that shit shouldnt even count....that bench shirt or watever the hell they are wearing is cheating!! i can see wearing elbow wraps for your joints but that bench press shirt is just ridiculous
Powerbuilder333 said:Top Gym bench (none competition legal) 510x1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gxZDd6gWMqo
I'm 6'6" and today weighed 305 - but I can't bench worth a shit right now, as I'm trying to rehab my right delt/bicep.
bigjd69 said:How can you count a lift with that shirt on to me its cheating

bigjd69 said:How can you count a lift with that shirt on to me its cheating

samoth said:Hell, in that case, anyone use steroids here? Cheaters, all of you.
I was a few months ago702daswoll1 said:Ur a beast bro.
jhondo said:
Open back bench shirt.1tight_tl said:what are those things he is wearing on his shoulders?
That totally depends on many factors.perryscoon said:How many lbs advantage does a bench shirt give you?
Powerbuilder333 said:That totally depends on many factors.
1) Shirt won't give you anything without lots of practice, and shirt specific training, i.e. training your lock out.
2) If your strong in the triceps and weak in the pecs, a shirt can help considerably.
3) If your stong in the pecs and weak in the triceps with long arms, the shirt helps very little.
4) There are dozen's of types of shirts, all having different advantages, and favoring different body types, and lifting styles.
5) The best of the best with years of practice can bench 300 pounds more with a triple ply open backed shirt than they can raw.[/QUOTE]
I never agreed with these for the exact reason u list, 300 lbs more than raw. They have to waddle around with that thing on. The only way they can bend there arms is if there is 500+lbs forcing them down.
bigjd69 said:How can you count a lift with that shirt on to me its cheating
Count for what?bsdgeek said:^^^ I'm sorry, I have to agree with my guys, if you can't bench it without any assistance from a rubberband(shirt, suit, whatever), then in my book, it doesn't count. Also, as mentioned earlier, if you have to lift your ass off the bench, or if you lose form, it doesn't count either.
Powerbuilder333 said:Count for what?
In competition it counts.
For muscle building it counts.
I agree things have gotten out of hand. What was once used for shoulder safety, now is used for performace.
But if you can name one other sport where modern equipment has not helped increase performance, I might concede your point.
Powerbuilder333 said:Count for what?
In competition it counts.
For muscle building it counts.
I agree things have gotten out of hand. What was once used for shoulder safety, now is used for performace.
But if you can name one other sport where modern equipment has not helped increase performance, I might concede your point.
8and20 said:not every competition. my buddy is in natural masters powerlifting here in the states and in his governing body they are not allowed.
tank5469 said:new to the board my one rep max was 525 i am 6'3" at the time weighed 315 bf was at 12 % gettin back now after a shoulder injury from football i can do 405 for a set of 10 now
perryscoon said:From what people are saying about bench shirts, I can't see how they can be legal in competition. If you've got a force trying to push the weight up besides your own, then it seems like an obvious enhanced lift to me. But I'm no powerlifter, so what do i know...


samoth said:And LMAO @ the guy talking down about shirts and benching yet uses the leg press instead of the squat. Lemme guess, most of you anti-shirt guys use straps when you deadlift, too... but that's not cheating! (yeah, it's not cheating when you can't even hold on to the fuckin' bar in the first place, lol.)
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bsdgeek said:for example: if i can bench 100 lbs by myself, but 200 lbs with my spotter helping me get it up, does that count?
bsdgeek said:are you serious about the leg press thing?? obviously, you've never professionally trained and know that this is a NATIONAL standard for assessing strength for training clients. look it up. the standard is the bench press, and leg press, these are done due to no load on the spine and safety reasons. someone who has never done any exercise at all could never properly perform squats, especially at 1RM loads, you'd be asking for a lawsuit. but hey, it's funny right?(lots of things can be funny when you don't understand it) the guy asked why i said it didn't count to me, i explained it. i think that's what a lot of other guys on here think. and it's funny that ONLY in power lifting does the assist of a shirt count for a 1RM lift. all others- football, wrestling, and any other sport where they have periodized lifting schedules don't allow it. but the one that REALLY matters- powerlifting- out of all other sports, allows it. so it must be good, huh??? yep, that makes a lot of fuckin sense.
WHAT???bsdgeek said:are you serious about the leg press thing?? obviously, you've never professionally trained and know that this is a NATIONAL standard for assessing strength for training clients. look it up. the standard is the bench press, and leg press, these are done due to no load on the spine and safety reasons. someone who has never done any exercise at all could never properly perform squats, especially at 1RM loads, you'd be asking for a lawsuit. but hey, it's funny right?(lots of things can be funny when you don't understand it) the guy asked why i said it didn't count to me, i explained it. i think that's what a lot of other guys on here think. and it's funny that ONLY in power lifting does the assist of a shirt count for a 1RM lift. all others- football, wrestling, and any other sport where they have periodized lifting schedules don't allow it. but the one that REALLY matters- powerlifting- out of all other sports, allows it. so it must be good, huh??? yep, that makes a lot of fuckin sense.
bsdgeek said:are you serious about the leg press thing?? obviously, you've never professionally trained and know that this is a NATIONAL standard for assessing strength for training clients. look it up. the standard is the bench press, and leg press, these are done due to no load on the spine and safety reasons. someone who has never done any exercise at all could never properly perform squats, especially at 1RM loads, you'd be asking for a lawsuit. but hey, it's funny right?(lots of things can be funny when you don't understand it) the guy asked why i said it didn't count to me, i explained it. i think that's what a lot of other guys on here think. and it's funny that ONLY in power lifting does the assist of a shirt count for a 1RM lift. all others- football, wrestling, and any other sport where they have periodized lifting schedules don't allow it. but the one that REALLY matters- powerlifting- out of all other sports, allows it. so it must be good, huh??? yep, that makes a lot of fuckin sense.
tropo said:Leg press produces no load on the spine...are you serious? When you do a leg press all the weight is pushing against your pelvis and lower back...and in a very unnatural way too.
It can be one of the worst exercises for people with back injuries and the weight that one needs to stress the legs adequately is way in excess of what is needed in the squat.
Powerbuilder333 said:WHAT???
So if a NFL player gets caught using a bench press shirt he's fined or something? LOL.
Football players (or other non iron junkies) generally never push themselves in the weight room, and never for a max rep. They use weights to improve their game, and won't risk injury in the Gym.
Powerlifters put it all on the line, and except that training injuries are part of the sport.
Bottom line: A bench shirt can be a great training tool, and will help increase your raw bench as well as your shirted bench, and can help increase muscle thickness and tendon/joint strength as well.
I'm living proof - http://tinypic.com/view.php?pic=8503uwx&s=1 From November 11th 2007, at 6'6" 317 and 45 years of age.
DaveTSI said:please will the BB's stop bashing powerlifters and shirts. You all have a huge misunderstanding of the shirts and everything that goes into making them work. PLEASE one of you pretty boy fucks load your max on a bench, add 150lbs, then put a bench shirt on and try it. NO! put 50lbs. over your max on it and give it a go. YOU WOULD ALL FAIL! Not one of you has any clue.
Or you could try this..... max out as often as we do for a month, just dont use the "cheater" shirts we do. See how your joints like it. Most of you probably arent strong enough but maybe even some of you could manage to blow a rotator cuff or tear a peck. Good thing you avoided using a shirt now you look really admirable and honest, everyone in your gym will respect you much more because you didnt use supportive gear.
btw I weigh 200lbs and bench well over 400 raw, most of you pussies couldnt touch that with a shirt and your fag training partner curling it
DaveTSI said:ive seen you around for a long time bro, i know your smart and have some good things to say most of the time....but ^this^ post really sucks balls

SMALLSUCKS702 said:HOLY SHIT, talk about high jacking a thread.....![]()
Ya I never work 1 max reps ether. I do 3 rep max 365 bench. I like to think I train like a power lifter though. I keep reps low and weights high. I just don't like 1 rep maxing lifts.Powerbuilder333 said:WHAT???
So if a NFL player gets caught using a bench press shirt he's fined or something? LOL.
Football players (or other non iron junkies) generally never push themselves in the weight room, and never for a max rep. They use weights to improve their game, and won't risk injury in the Gym.
Powerlifters put it all on the line, and except that training injuries are part of the sport.
Bottom line: A bench shirt can be a great training tool, and will help increase your raw bench as well as your shirted bench, and can help increase muscle thickness and tendon/joint strength as well.
I'm living proof - http://tinypic.com/view.php?pic=8503uwx&s=1 From November 11th 2007, at 6'6" 317 and 45 years of age.

Vagabino said:hahahha at juicers calling shirted benchers cheaters
hahahahah!
bsdgeek said:people with lower back issues do train with the leg press, not the squat.
Sounds darn good to me - unless your spotter assisted the lift with more than a hand off.Tatyana said:60 kg/132 lb for 5 reps last night (spotted big time)![]()
My bench press sucks
what dose and brand u takin?SMALLSUCKS702 said:Powerbuilder i agree, shit i dont even think my roomate could do 132X5...lol
Just an update on my progress, i did 305 yesterday and thats an improvement of 40lbs in less than a month , thanks to Dianabol - methandrostenolone - and Test...
nydj66 said:There is a 27-year-old in New Hartford, NY who holds the world record bench press for a light-weight lifter. In the under 180lb weight category he was the first man to bench more than 800lb.
socket said:The 'world Record' Raw bench press was by Scott mendelson i reckon, at 715lbs. He weighed in at around 315 lbs to do that! Plus the distance between HIS chest and full lockout, is a LOT less than a 187lb guy on lockout!
Calling BS here!
DaveTSI said:you've been misinformed bro
1. there is no "under 180lb category" in any federation
2. no human being under 180lbs has ever moved close to 800lbs in the benchpress
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