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Getbig Bodybuilding Boards => Training Q&A => Topic started by: barkbomes9 on May 05, 2020, 09:30:02 PM
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Reading through heaps of articles, some say heavy low reps, others classic 8-12, 4 day body part splits or twice a week upper lower, what's your go to routine giving the best (not necessarily fastest) results, for those who don't juice? Does it even make a difference and purely time and commitment will pay off? Thanks.
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Full body 2-3 times week.
Always include a press, a pull, a squat, and a calf exercise.
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A full body routine is the way to go. The body works in any athletic endeavor as a unit. It gets fatigued systemically and not only local to a muscle trained. It fatigues and recovers as a unit working out. Using a whole body routine like Nat said will work if you use it three times a week or twice. It also gives you free days for cardio or other athletic pursuits. We have been brain washed into thinking we need four different bicep exercises. With a whole body routine pick one or two exercises a body part and after say six workouts you can change the exercises you are using. A good protocol that is based in power lifting is to not to go to failure every workout. Let's say you are lifting Monday-Wednesday and Friday. Pick a two week peak. Predict a goal you want for those six works in weight used. Let's say it's a 100 pounds for three sets of 8 in the curl. Back off for those two weeks of work outs for 5 lbs a work out. So work out one will be 75lbs for three sets of 8 for the curl on Monday. Wednesday will be 80lbs for the same reps and sets. Friday will be 85lbs again with no increase in reps or sets. Take your weekend off and begin Monday at 90lbs. After Wednesday, Friday should bring you to your goal of 100lbs. Make sure planing your cycle that you don't make your goal impossible if you are a seasoned lifter. After that six workout peak change your exercises around to keep things interesting. Change every single exercise. Using a whole routine you can't go wrong with using Arthur Jones protocol of training the largest body parts first going down to the smallest. Steve Reeves disagreed with this saying it's best to warm up with smaller body parts to get into the flow of the routine.
A method that has worked for me is to use a split but train body parts directly once a week. Doing something like Monday doing Back and chest. Wednesday doing legs and Friday delt and arms. Of course days of the week are meaningless and you can get your three workouts in however they fit during the week. The reason why this workout works is over lap. It's impossible to truly isolate different areas of your body. For example on monday I either included power cleans or deadlifts. They work legs hard. So legs are being trained hard twice a week. One day directly and the other day with over lap. Monday being back and chest day both the triceps and biceps are getting hit hard with the pulling and pushing. On Friday they get hit again directly with the Delt/ arms day. I can go through each body part and show some over lap as to why body parts are getting hit twice a week through what appears to be a once a week routine. On days off do some cardio.
So many ways to do it. If you want to train like the natural champs of the 50's, 40's and even 30's go with the full body routine. Guys who use a split are fond of saying it's a beginner routine. The truth is it's the hardest way you can train. It's exhausting to train the whole body in one shot. Splits are no doubt easier.
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Good ideas, OT.
Many ways to arrange a routine that hits the entire body.
Great point about the overlap of muscle groups when you train using bro-splits.
Using drugs allows you to recover from this but as a natty it's not as easy.
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Good ideas, OT.
Many ways to arrange a routine that hits the entire body.
Great point about the overlap of muscle groups when you train using bro-splits.
Using drugs allows you to recover from this but as a natty it's not as easy.
People have jobs and family obligations that are exhausting. Very few guys can drive an hour to work then work for 8-10 hours to drive home to a six day a week workout. So many drug users might have part time jobs but few have a careers. In the real world we need effective realistic workouts. I once heard someone say one set to exhaustion with your exercises gets you 90% of what you can get our of your workout. Another set gets you another 5%. Each extra set is a fraction in additional benefit. I don't agree with his percentages but he was making a valid point. we need to train with the most pay to value costs. I look at the world of running trying to increase endurance. Running 25 miles a week will get you 90% of your potential. To get to 100% might involve 50 mile weeks. Important for an elite athlete but not us mere mortals.
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K.I.S.S. (Keep It Simple Stupid) A motto well learned by many successful BB'ers over the years. It was also a banner placed on the wall of a old school style gym I had used before.
Agree with IroNat, full body and with a focus on compound exercises involving two joints or more. Two or three time a week. With a abbreviate workout program involving a few selected exercises with less sets, as 3 to 5 sets max each body part.
The general guide is to start with working the larger muscle groups at the beginning of a workout down to the smaller. Example: legs, back, chest delts & arms. If wishing to work the total ab wall with one movement, than would suggest a Ab Wheel at the end of a training session. Suggesting other Ab exercises can done in a 6-9 rep also, other than the mentioned Ab Wheel, and with extra weight added. The ab region is a very powerful short range muscle group.
As for reps...20 reps will do for you what 5 reps won't. And 5 reps will do for you what 20 reps won't. In other words each of us will have to explore a bit to find the rep range best suited for your goals and body types. In general BB'ing, the 6-9 rep span seems to work quite well for most. But again, you will have to use experience as your guide.
A simple program for you consideration: Squats, BB Row, Bench, Press Behind Neck, BB Curl. Three times a week. Three to five sets each. 6-9 reps range.
Would also suggest the tried and proven Progressive training system. The purpose is in trying to improve either the reps or poundage from workout to workout. Even adding as little as 5lbs to a bar or one more rep is the idea. It's the advancing of either reps or weight, progressing each training session.
All of the above are only suggestions. If not filling your personal needs, than by all means do what you believe is best suited for you.
Good Luck.
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A full body routine is the way to go. The body works in any athletic endeavor as a unit. It gets fatigued systemically and not only local to a muscle trained. It fatigues and recovers as a unit working out. Using a whole body routine like Nat said will work if you use it three times a week or twice. It also gives you free days for cardio or other athletic pursuits. We have been brain washed into thinking we need four different bicep exercises. With a whole body routine pick one or two exercises a body part and after say six workouts you can change the exercises you are using. A good protocol that is based in power lifting is to not to go to failure every workout. Let's say you are lifting Monday-Wednesday and Friday. Pick a two week peak. Predict a goal you want for those six works in weight used. Let's say it's a 100 pounds for three sets of 8 in the curl. Back off for those two weeks of work outs for 5 lbs a work out. So work out one will be 75lbs for three sets of 8 for the curl on Monday. Wednesday will be 80lbs for the same reps and sets. Friday will be 85lbs again with no increase in reps or sets. Take your weekend off and begin Monday at 90lbs. After Wednesday, Friday should bring you to your goal of 100lbs. Make sure planing your cycle that you don't make your goal impossible if you are a seasoned lifter. After that six workout peak change your exercises around to keep things interesting. Change every single exercise. Using a whole routine you can't go wrong with using Arthur Jones protocol of training the largest body parts first going down to the smallest. Steve Reeves disagreed with this saying it's best to warm up with smaller body parts to get into the flow of the routine.
A method that has worked for me is to use a split but train body parts directly once a week. Doing something like Monday doing Back and chest. Wednesday doing legs and Friday delt and arms. Of course days of the week are meaningless and you can get your three workouts in however they fit during the week. The reason why this workout works is over lap. It's impossible to truly isolate different areas of your body. For example on monday I either included power cleans or deadlifts. They work legs hard. So legs are being trained hard twice a week. One day directly and the other day with over lap. Monday being back and chest day both the triceps and biceps are getting hit hard with the pulling and pushing. On Friday they get hit again directly with the Delt/ arms day. I can go through each body part and show some over lap as to why body parts are getting hit twice a week through what appears to be a once a week routine. On days off do some cardio.
So many ways to do it. If you want to train like the natural champs of the 50's, 40's and even 30's go with the full body routine. Guys who use a split are fond of saying it's a beginner routine. The truth is it's the hardest way you can train. It's exhausting to train the whole body in one shot. Splits are no doubt easier.
Full body workouts are brutal especially after age 40.
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Have had lots of success using a two way split especially the DC 2 way training split. Currently doing a push, pull, lower rotation on a 2 on, one off. Push, pull, rest, lower, push, rest, pull, lower, rest, repeat. Body parts directly hit every 4th to 5th day. Great frequency especially for me turning 42. With the heat approaching and training in my garage for the last 10 years. I am all about getting in and getting out during the pre and summer months. One big lift and a few accessories and get the hell out.
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Have had lots of success using a two way split especially the DC 2 way training split. Currently doing a push, pull, lower rotation on a 2 on, one off. Push, pull, rest, lower, push, rest, pull, lower, rest, repeat. Body parts directly hit every 4th to 5th day. Great frequency especially for me turning 42. With the heat approaching and training in my garage for the last 10 years. I am all about getting in and getting out during the pre and summer months. One big lift and a few accessories and get the hell out.
Garage gorilla or basement barbarian is the way to go.
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Garage gorilla or basement barbarian is the way to go.
? Is that a workout template?
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Full body workouts are brutal especially after age 40.
So true especially if you train with heavy weights to failure or close. I just did three full body workouts on Friday, Sunday and Wednesday. I think I go into shock afterwards. I try to run the day after and my body is so destroyed I can't do it. I'm beginning to think mere mortals that use the full body workouts are not pushing the failure envelope and avoid it like the plague to get through the workout. I start my full body with cleans and jerks. After that I seriously wonder about my sanity trying to finish the rest of the workout.
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So true especially if you train with heavy weights to failure or close. I just did three full body workouts on Friday, Sunday and Wednesday. I think I go into shock afterwards. I try to run the day after and my body is so destroyed I can't do it. I'm beginning to think mere mortals that use the full body workouts are not pushing the failure envelope and avoid it like the plague to get through the workout. I start my full body with cleans and jerks. After that I seriously wonder about my sanity trying to finish the rest of the workout.
I'm not sure why you are having problems but common sense indicates you are overdoing it.
Training to failure makes deep inroads into your body's recovery abilities.
That totally exhausted/in shock feeling the next day you describe means you have fried your CNS.
How long do your workouts take?
How long are your rest periods between sets?
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Here's a super abbreviated routine that you can recover from.
https://www.complete-strength-training.com/body-by-science.html
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Here's a super abbreviated routine that you can recover from.
https://www.complete-strength-training.com/body-by-science.html
I did a very basic routine similar to that. Full body push pull every other. Very upper back focused. Limited lifts.
Monday push
Zercher squats
V bar dips
Ended with zercher carries supersetted with a accessory say laterals
Wednesday
Snatch grip Rdl’s
Seal rows
Ended with farmer walks supersetted with an accessory. Curl variation etc. face pulls or chins
Friday
Repeat Monday but vary the main lifts. Say zercher pin squats and close grip bench
The other main pull hip hinge variation was the reeves rdl
Upper back got dense due to the loaded carries and exercise selections
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Puzzling why some believe that a full body workout need be brutal, if approaching it with reason and a logical workout plan. Having a short and to the point training agenda has worked for thousands of men over the years.
What becomes self defeating is too many sets and/or too many exercises in one workout. The most self defeating element of all, and one that can halt and even reverse gains, is going to the point of failure at some point in a workout. Experienced weight men know and understand all this. From BB"ers to PL'ers to Olympic lifters, all are aware of the regrets of going to a point of failure and avoid it. Stopping one or two reps away from that point seems the general rule. You may get away with reaching a point of failure in workouts for a while, but sooner or later a state of nervous exhaustion (burnout), and the non ability to not recovery completely from the last workout can subtly begin, bring gains to a standstill...
The CNS (Central Nervous System) is what is overtaxed when including going to failure in every workout, and the odds of it returning to it's normal state and doing what it's capable of doing in ways of recovery and building the body stronger, with increased muscle mass, is greatly retarded
Not going to failure does not mean your not training a muscle hard, this is a mistaken belief held by a lot of BB'ers. Your training hard (in most cases) but not to the point of damaging the ability to recovery.
The average rest period between sets is 90 to 120 seconds. Between exercise, 3-4 minutes. The idea is to keep a good working pace. This is generally for BB'ing. And as for any workout plan...K.I.S.S..
Good Luck.
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Puzzling why some believe that a full body workout need be brutal, if approaching it with reason and a logical workout plan. Having a short and to the point training agenda has worked for thousands of men over the years.
What becomes self defeating is too many sets and/or too many exercises in one workout. The most self defeating element of all, and one that can halt and even reverse gains, is going to the point of failure at some point in a workout. Experienced weight men know and understand all this. From BB"ers to PL'ers to Olympic lifters, all are aware of the regrets of going to a point of failure and avoid it. Stopping one or two reps away from that point seems the general rule. You may get away with reaching a point of failure in workouts for a while, but sooner or later a state of nervous exhaustion (burnout), and the non ability to not recovery completely from the last workout can subtly begin, bring gains to a standstill...
The CNS (Central Nervous System) is what is overtaxed when including going to failure in every workout, and the odds of it returning to it's normal state and doing what it's capable of doing in ways of recovery and building the body stronger, with increased muscle mass, is greatly retarded
Not going to failure does not mean your not training a muscle hard, this is a mistaken belief held by a lot of BB'ers. Your training hard (in most cases) but not to the point of damaging the ability to recovery.
The average rest period between sets is 90 to 120 seconds. Between exercise, 3-4 minutes. The idea is to keep a good working pace. This is generally for BB'ing. And as for any workout plan...K.I.S.S..
Good Luck.
Full body creates much more overall fatigue than hitting split routines. As a person gets older they do not recover as fast. After training for a few years naturally you are not gaining more muscle size. Bodybuilding does not create constant gains as they are not possible. Training for maintenance is not a bad thing and you can maintain by training once every 7-10 days.
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Well said! Been on a two on, one off lately. Push, pull, rest, lower, push, rest, pull, lower, rest, repeat. It’s all about having fun at this point. Hit a big compound lift, a few accessories and call it a day.
Full body creates much more overall fatigue than hitting split routines. As a person gets older they do not recover as fast. After training for a few years naturally you are not gaining more muscle size. Bodybuilding does not create constant gains as they are not possible. Training for maintenance is not a bad thing and you can maintain by training once every 7-10 days.
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Well said! Been on a two on, one off lately. Push, pull, rest, lower, push, rest, pull, lower, rest, repeat. It’s all about having fun at this point. Hit a big compound lift, a few accessories and call it a day.
It is all about having fun and that's why most people stop in their 20's or 30's. Doing some killer routine like P90X gets you in shape fast but if you are miserable you will quit.
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It is all about having fun and that's why most people stop in their 20's or 30's. Doing some killer routine like P90X gets you in shape fast but if you are miserable you will quit.
I agree.
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There isn't one.
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I don’t know what others do, but I usually follow this routine. I usually focused on Resistance training https://www.borntough.com/blogs/news/why-muscle-density-matters-how-to-build-it (https://www.borntough.com/blogs/news/why-muscle-density-matters-how-to-build-it), Prioritize nutrition, focus on workouts like Barbell, Dumbbell, Pushups and Planks.
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People have jobs and family obligations that are exhausting. Very few guys can drive an hour to work then work for 8-10 hours to drive home to a six day a week workout. So many drug users might have part time jobs but few have a careers. In the real world we need effective realistic workouts. I once heard someone say one set to exhaustion with your exercises gets you 90% of what you can get our of your workout. Another set gets you another 5%. Each extra set is a fraction in additional benefit. I don't agree with his percentages but he was making a valid point. we need to train with the most pay to value costs. I look at the world of running trying to increase endurance. Running 25 miles a week will get you 90% of your potential. To get to 100% might involve 50 mile weeks. Important for an elite athlete but not us mere mortals.
Excuses. You're just lazy. Lots of bodybuilders have careers but still get time to train. They make time.
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Reps in reserve is my preferred method and only a core exercise
In any given session
Dips
Chins
Some of clean and press / overhead
Some form of squat
Multiple sets (15 plus), never taken to failure (at least 3 reps left), short rest periods of 60 seconds, reps in 3 to 5 range
Zero injuries, solid sustainable gains in size and quality of body
Short workouts of around 45, mins
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This is my general go to workout when I do a whole body routine. No warms ups shown. I do them if needed. I change things up with exercises used but this is a standard.
Power cleans and push jerks 3 x 3 then finish with 1 x 1
Squats 2 x 8
Lunges 1 x 8
Bench 2 x 6
Chins 2 x max
Seated cable row 2 x 12
Military press 2 x 8
Dumbbell delt laterals 2 x 10
Dips 2 x 10
barbell curls 2 x 10
Standing calf 2 x 15
Weighted hyper extension 2 x 15
Incline sit ups 1 x max
Incline leg raise 1 x max
Neck exercise
I would do something like this for two weeks or so then change the exercises. Power cleans would be changed to old fashion split snatches. Legs could be something like leg press 2 x 15 with one set each of leg extensions/leg curls. I would go down the list of body parts changing everything up.
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Excuses. You're just lazy. Lots of bodybuilders have careers but still get time to train. They make time.
I worked revolving shifts, long hours and long commutes. I always got my work outs in. I have been lifting for longer than you have been alive. I bet you live with Mom, have a job instead of a career and use juice to look like you know what you are doing but look like absolute crap with the drug assist.
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I worked revolving shifts, long hours and long commutes. I always got my work outs in. I have been lifting for longer than you have been alive. I bet you live with Mom, have a job instead of a career and use juice to look like you know what you are doing but look like absolute crap with the drug assist.
I'm obviously right or you wouldn't throw such a hissy fit. You hit guys sure get triggered easily.
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I'm obviously right or you wouldn't throw such a hissy fit. You hit guys sure get triggered easily.
Very weak come back. Calling me lazy is a direct shot at me. Triggered? I don't even think about you. I have zero problems with volume trainers. You are the one that has to attack anyone that lifts with low sets to failure. It's post after post and all over get big. Bet you couldn't keep up with me for one week of training and I'm 65.
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Very strong come back. Calling me lazy is a direct shot at me which is true. Can't deny that. Triggered? I think about you since why else would I reply? I have zero problems with volume trainers but I can't do volume because of my laziness. You state facts about anyone that lifts with low sets to failure and it's true. This is why I'm having a hissy fit right now. It's post after post and all over get big. Bet you could keep up with me for one week of training and I'm 65, old, past it and so sodding lazy.
😁
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getting back on topic Gentlemen, i would say that natural trainers can also profit from a split routine but better a 3 or 4 day split. The 6 day splits are too much in my opinion.
Full Body i would do 2 times a week but train with intent.
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getting back on topic Gentlemen, i would say that natural trainers can also profit from a split routine but better a 3 or 4 day split. The 6 day splits are too much in my opinion.
Full Body i would do 2 times a week but train with intent.
A natty can do 6 days a week no problem.
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getting back on topic Gentlemen, i would say that natural trainers can also profit from a split routine but better a 3 or 4 day split. The 6 day splits are too much in my opinion.
Full Body i would do 2 times a week but train with intent.
Depends on how much work is being done per workout.
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Depends on how much work is being done per workout.
yes & no because it depends on intensity & how hard you train each set.
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A natty can do 6 days a week no problem.
maybe some can do it we are all different but i like 3, maybe 4 workouts a week with not low sets but moderate, depends on how i feel. I am not a slave to any routine & do what i feel is best.
I go by my feelings on the day.
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yes & no because it depends on intensity & how hard you train each set.
Intensity is overrated.
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Intensity is overrated.
Yep. The nervous system does not recover well. When it is fatigued, the body responds by limiting the use of it. It does not "develop" it like a muscle. Real world example: have a bad day at work, now go and workout. Your capacity to workout is diminished because the NERVOUS SYSTEM is fatigued. It has nothing to do with your muscles.
That's why overtraining shows up as CNS symptoms, not muscular symptoms. Why would muscular overtraining cause depression and suppression of appetite, lack of sleep, nervousness?
Our bodies developed responses and adaptations to enable survival, not enable "big pythons". Essentially, it looks at "all out" muscular work as a an extreme danger to it's survival, so severe that the immediate adaptation is to limit your ability to do it again.
To use an analogy, HIT is like going out into the sun and burning to a crisp. The body makes damned sure you will not do it again anytime soon. Using less intensity but higher volume is like going out in the sun for 10 min, coming in, going out again later, etc.
That's why growth must be coaxed, not forced.
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Intensity is overrated.
stimulation & intensity depends on many variables
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stimulation & intensity depends on many variables
Intensity is % of 1 rep max. The Big Beyond Belief system has 8 factors that influence muscle stimulation and growth.
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Check out my recent training log posts.
Full body 5 days a week but low volume and higher reps.
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Check out my recent training log posts.
Full body 5 days a week but low volume and higher reps.
I will. Thanks for reminding me that there boards other than the G&O. ;D
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Check out my recent training log posts.
Full body 5 days a week but low volume and higher reps.
Bill pearl trained 6 days a week & he trained the same bodypart 2 days in a row but with different exercises for 6 sets. makes sense
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Bill pearl trained 6 days a week & he trained the same bodypart 2 days in a row but with different exercises for 6 sets. makes sense
He was a master. Vince Gironda, Larry Scott and Pearl were the most knowledgeable trainers I've ever seen.
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He was a master. Vince Gironda, Larry Scott and Pearl were the most knowledgeable trainers I've ever seen.
Bill Pearl was a good guy to talk to . I had 3 phone conversations with him & he was honestly a humble guy.
I said to him as a joke i´ll come & train with you in your Home Gym in your barn ( he told me he had just came out of his barn )
He said sure why not come over, i never did but he was a cool guy.
was about 2005 & i can tell you he was very sharp & quick thinking.
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Bill Pearl was a good guy to talk to . I had 3 phone conversations with him & he was honestly a humble guy.
I said to him as a joke i´ll come & train with you in your Home Gym in your barn ( he told me he had just came out of his barn )
He said sure why not come over, i never did but he was a cool guy.
was about 2005 & i can tell you he was very sharp & quick thinking.
A lot of guys took him up on the offer. I know Matt Furey trained with him for awhile.
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A lot of guys took him up on the offer. I know Matt Furey trained with him for awhile.
yes his wife Judy was very nice on the phone too. watching an old Jeff King video...old school :)
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yes his wife Judy was very nice on the phone too. watching an old Jeff King video...old school :)
That's how to train.
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He was a good guy ( RIP )
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He was a good guy ( RIP )
A good guy by all accounts.
He should have taken better care of his health way before all the problems manifested.
Long-term drug use like that will eventually destroy you.
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He was a good guy ( RIP )
Why was he teaching how to train naturally?
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Why was he teaching how to train naturally?
He trained natural bodybuilders as well so it's probably a question he's asked a lot