apparently vertfreak is supposed to never allow you to plateau although for me it didn't allow enough time for my maximum quick gains so I'll keep it going for now and see what happens.
nice one chaps, I will check back with significant improvements
not sure about how VF program is programming this so i'll just speak generally..
well, plateau'n is actually a good thing... the quicker you get to your "limits", the more time you have to spend pushing past those limits.. sure a gradual approach is most effective, but here's what i'm getting at..
the quicker you get to your "initial limit", the more you can focus on actually pushing passed it. Alot of people take an extraordinary amount of time just getting to their initial limit, which just slows down the process.. You want to reach that initial limit, where gains become pretty hard, as soon as possible (while still staying fit, jumping, sprinting, reactive work etc), because now, all programming/training is structured around percentages BASED on that defeating that limit.
So, if somehow we had a magic ball, and knew that 1.9xBW squat would be your "initial limit", where further gains become VERY HARD, we'd want to reach that point as soon as possible (still this can take 6+ months). Once we reach that goal, now everything is focused on setting new limits, like 2.0, 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5.. If 1.9 is where things get very hard, and you manage to improve to 2.5 over the next 1.5-2 years, that will result in some SERIOUS performance gains..
so with all that said, getting to the point where you genuinely plateau is pretty important, that's when the real fun (hell) starts.. alot of people "avoid plateau" by switching up the program etc, when in reality, they end up spinning their wheels for the most part.
an elite oly lifter type of athlete might have an initial limit of 2.5, weak people like me have an initial level of < 1.5xBW deep squat lol.
peace, hope that helps.