Author Topic: High cut calves  (Read 34676 times)

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Raptor

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Re: High cut calves
« Reply #45 on: March 01, 2011, 08:01:15 am »
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Genetically different baby!

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rkeRP6PGvIQ" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rkeRP6PGvIQ</a>

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fFRPH8StsSY" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fFRPH8StsSY</a>
« Last Edit: March 01, 2011, 08:04:41 am by Raptor »
Current PR status:

All time squat: 165 kg/Old age squat: 130 kg
All time deadlift: 184 kg/Old age deadlift: 140 kg
All time bench: 85 kg/Old age bench: 70kgx5reps
All time hip thrust (same as old age hip thrust): 160kgx5reps

LBSS

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Re: High cut calves
« Reply #46 on: March 01, 2011, 09:07:56 am »
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I have conversations like this with myself sometimes. I'm pretty sure I'll end up having kids with a girl who is physically attractive at the time we decide to have kids; also as (or more) intelligent/high-achieving as I am. I simply can't envision it being any other way. But will she be athletic, or have athletes in her family? Will I care at that point? At the moment I'm sure I'd like my kids to be more athletic than I am and having kids with a chick with better athletic genes can't hurt there.

Current GF is beautiful and is smart and high-achieving as hell but isn't an athlete (used to be a ballet dancer, pretty good but not pro quality). Marriage/kids with her highly unlikely but these thoughts do enter my mind sometimes.

I know you were kidding, but I'm kind of serious...

If that's the largest reservation you have about this chick then get the fuck over it :headbang: Also, don't try and force your future kids into being super athletic. Encourage them to try as many things as possible and do what they like to do as well as they can.

haha, if this were the biggest reservation i had then i'd be worried about myself. reservations that come before that one (by no means a complete list):

1. we're both 24, MUCH too young to get married IMO
2. she's about to start medical school in another city and i don't want to go back to an LDR
3. i have no long-term stability, nor any desire to have it
3a. there's a solid chance i'll be living overseas in the next couple of years
3b. there's a solid chance i'll be in grad school in the next couple of years
4. the sex is good but i've had better (especially from my now-fundamentalist christian ex, lol) and i can't imagine settling before i've had a bunch more of it
5. i just don't wanna

believe me, i'm not going to force my kids into sports and once they play i'm not gonna be a crazy driving parent living vicariously through my children's athletic success. those parents are pathetic. but, barring disabilities, you can be damn sure those kids are gonna be running around and playing outside as soon as they can stumble forward without falling down. i want them to be physically confident. that doesn't come from 1000 forehands and backhands a day from age 4 on up, it comes from doing just what you said. letting them be kids and encouraging them when they find something they like to do.

them being more athletic than me is just a secondary dream.

/hijack
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

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https://www.savannahstate.edu/cost/nrotc/documents/Inform2010-thearmstrongworkout_Enclosure15_5-2-10.pdf

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Dreyth

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Re: High cut calves
« Reply #47 on: March 01, 2011, 11:34:10 am »
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Wow I just HOPE my son is really into basketball, I'll turn him into a damn star. I mean with the knowledge that I know now, imaging applying it to an 8 year old in stead of an 18 year old, and the potential rises just so much more. And how knows how much more knowledge we'll all have by the time we have kids? Better protein, better training philosophies, etc.

I mean I'll have him play with toy basketballs when he's a baby and stuff and watch basketball games with him, hoping that he'll have an interest for it, but I don't think I should force it down his throat if he doesn't like it. Like if he falls in love with soccer, then I'll help him like crazy with whatever I know about it.
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LBSS

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Re: High cut calves
« Reply #48 on: March 01, 2011, 12:07:21 pm »
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Wow I just HOPE my son is really into basketball, I'll turn him into a damn star. I mean with the knowledge that I know now, imaging applying it to an 8 year old in stead of an 18 year old, and the potential rises just so much more. And how knows how much more knowledge we'll all have by the time we have kids? Better protein, better training philosophies, etc.

I mean I'll have him play with toy basketballs when he's a baby and stuff and watch basketball games with him, hoping that he'll have an interest for it, but I don't think I should force it down his throat if he doesn't like it. Like if he falls in love with soccer, then I'll help him like crazy with whatever I know about it.

yup. daughter, too, if i have a daughter. and if the kids don't turn out to be into sports at all, well, that's cool, too. but i'll be damned if they run, throw and jump like idiots.
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

- Avishek

https://www.savannahstate.edu/cost/nrotc/documents/Inform2010-thearmstrongworkout_Enclosure15_5-2-10.pdf

black lives matter

Kellyb

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Re: High cut calves
« Reply #49 on: March 02, 2011, 02:55:48 pm »
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Quote
if i read the 2nd study posted correctly, does that mean that calf strength is important?

Of the things they looked at yeah the adaptations typically brought about by heavy strenght training (muscule thickness and increased pennation angle) correlated with power, but they weren't looking at stuff like hip strength etc. The main thing is other studies have shown the inherent structure of the calf more important than the strength adaptations for things like 100 meter sprinting, which is the opposite of that study and fits with the overall theme of this thread.  The more intense and powerful the activation (jumps, accelerations, changes of directions etc.) the more likely you are to benefit from calf strength or at least not be hurt by having a shitty structure (low insertion points) when compared to less intense rhythmic activities like speed endurance or distance running.