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Progress Journals & Experimental Routines / Re: chasing athleticism
« on: May 16, 2017, 10:17:43 am »You'll be repping 2 plates on the bench in no time
That would be amazing. Seriously dedicating myself to upper body now.
In all seriousness this is closer to the mindset you should take. Right now you have an over obsessive mindset lower body strength - (eg thinking that you MUST add X kg to your squat etc) and a strange mass-based approach to upper body work.
From your journal it appears your a basketball player first - your second love is strength training. For lower body weightlifting realize that your build is highly influential for how much strength you can express - the optimal build for basketball is actually the one that is the worst for both the squat and the benchpress. This is why it's important for most athletes to use both the squat and a deadlift variation rather than fixate on squatting as much as someone else. With your build you should focus on getting your squat + deadlift to a reasonable level - 4x bodyweight is pretty great for a basketball player. After this your should focus on more specific lower body work.
While I don't love the bench press for upper body work at least it's a measurable quantity so I commend your for building it. I'd rather see you track your heavy pullups, standing press, weighted crunch as a way to measure upper body functional strength - then focus on some challenging mobility/strength exercises - can you do 5 reps of single leg deadlift to overhead press (leg off the ground the whole time, arm in opposite hand) on both legs with 30kg?
Your comments about upper body strength got me to do some asking about what NBA guys do. I asked an NBA trainer and it's a lot of heavy core, standing presses (no laying bench press at all) in the offseason and then it's a ton of band and cable work all year long. I might be guilty of making an appeal to authority fallacy (if the NBA guys do it then it MUST be right) but the thinking for the strength program there is that laying movements like bench press don't involve core/legs which is still the engine driving upper body power - and while standing presses and pulls are an improvement they still involve vertical pressing (because well - gravity) where a basketball player needs horizontal plane work. It is a compelling argument, albeit one that sounds a bit too over-specific for me - but it could be worth a try. What I have seen them doing is a lot of work where they have a weighted vest attached to a band which pulls them in a certain direction WHILE the doing upper body band work. For example. You are standing at the free throw line with a band pulling you back toward three point line, you have bands in one or both arms. You have to take a strong plant step against resistance to the top of the circle and the perform a quick standing horizontal press with one arm while remaining strong against the band resistance... Maybe ridiculous - maybe the secret to rebounding and post strength?