Wed 11:00amJuly 10, 2013
Dynamic warmups - loaded paused rep full squats, paused reps backup2.3BW goal : 475 at BW204-208lb315 x1
365 x1
405 x1
425 x1 Rest Day 1
405 x1
Calf Raise - Leg PressPaused Reps - top/bottom hold9x45s x20 Consecutive Day 3
DipsPaused Reps - top/bottom holdBW x20
* did an early workout like last week. i'm able to minimize the fatigue from lack of sleep if i get a good 3-4hr afternoon nap before my 7pm-8am work sched. sleep post workout is also a very good thing.
* calf raises on the 3rd straight day. now at 9x45s. will keep it to 3 straight days max. i want to blast thru this 9 plates because it feels the same as 8 anyway. will go 10x45s soon.
Do you still do your vertical jumping and sprinting? How is jumping performance with the added bodyweight? I'd be most afraid of the jumping/running injuries as weight creeps up.
i still do some SVJs on my non-455 days. a couple of x6 reps holding 25lb plates each hand doing resets/continuous jump squat as warmup. jump focus on pushing explosively with balls of feet, emphasize plantar flexion on take off and land as quiet as possible on the same balls of feet. controlled landing more important than jump height.
i sitll SVJ rim grab at this 200lb BW but will hang on the rim so the landings are sub 30" impacts. i will not go max SVJs until i see veins in my lower abs again.
hill sprints doable even at this weight. nothing is getting strained.
why not back off on squats for a little (like to 425s or even 405s) for an extended period while adding some heavy back-specific work like pendlay rows? i know you've done hypers and stuff in the past for your low back but it sounds like that's not where you're failing anymore.
yes. back off the 455s for 3-4 days max while using 425s to dissipate the torso fatigue. the high rep back extensions i'm doing is for recovery work. get the blood flowing faster on those tired muscles.
what i've learned is in order to be strong on the backsquat for heavier weights the simplest and most effective exercise is the back squat. heavy RDLs/GMs will get you a stronger back but will most likely get the squat weaker because of the fatigue or the lack of practice squatting heavy. by the time you balance out the back recovery / back squat practice, you've spent the same time or even longer compared to just squatting continuously.