cont.,,,,
Q ] So, in a sense, the process of preparing for the Mr. Olympia was more important than the competition itself.
Yes. The Mr. Olympia was a platform for me to display the end result of my training efforts. And people used to say to me at the contests, "Maybe you should smile, why don't you jump up and down when you win?" I already knew I was going to win, so it was no big surprise, so therefore why act like this? And for me it was sporting event.
You are not going to see Mike Tyson smile in the ring when he is knocking somebody out. You are not going to ask Carl Lewis to give a smile and a wave when he is running 100-meters. He's fucking running 100-meters!
[ Q ] You were the quintessential warrior up on that stage weren't you?
Yes it was the warrior mentality mate and I was up there solely to beat my competition, defeat them. That was the mode I was in and everybody knew I was in that mode. Then eventually everybody was psychologically competing for second place.
[ Q ] It seems a little strange sometimes when a champion jumps up and punches the air and cries onstage but that could be the English influence coming through in me.
Well you can maybe understand this if it is a surprise for the first time, but after the second time and third time come on that's enough. Again maybe that's my Englishness no bullsh!t thing. It's like, "come on, what's this bullsh!t", you know.
[ Q ] Given bodybuilding success relies to a large extent on one's ability to project their physique onstage, that all-important presentation factor, it seems to me that this is something that would not sit to well with your given your stoical manner.
Yeah, the presentation factor was not something I was too comfortable with because I was a guy who mostly liked to go into the gym and train with weights, and build muscle. The whole onstage posing thing - just the very word posing - was all a bit gay to me, all a bit foreign. But I had to get comfortable with that and find my niche there. The way I presented myself was with very powerful, dominating classical music with a little rock muscle mixed in. This suited my persona and me. So that's one aspect of it.
Q ] What other factors went into creating the unprecedentedly massive, grainy look you presented?
Then you have got the nutrition aspect and the condition combined with the muscle mass and of course how you project yourself onstage, which can also influence people around you: judges and competitors. The whole range of factors is what it took me to present this look.
[ Q ] You were one of the few who simply had an unquestioned impact of power whenever you walked onstage. How would you contrast this to the dancing and gyrating we often seen onstage these days?
Well if that's what they think it is all about, that's their view. But I had my own and it was unique. And it is good that people are different onstage. If we are all the same it's going to be boring, right? I think the '90s, to me at least, was the best period for bodybuilding because there were a lot of different personalities up there, different physiques and attitudes. Now it is not all that exciting.
[ Q ] And there were more rivalries, friendly and otherwise, back then it seemed.
Yes that's right. There was the Ronnie before Jay came along then the Ronnie and Jay thing. Ronnie was super-impressive of course. Now that Ronnie is gone you just don't seem to have those kinds of personalities up there.
Q ] If a younger guy came to you today and told you he was considering competing in bodybuilding, what advice would you give him?
Well if he was aiming to be Mr. Olympia I would tell him to forget about that. I would have him focus on the fundamental things that will give him the base he needs upon which to build an elite body, if he has the genetics to do this. I would say that goal setting is very important, and would even break it down to monthly goals.
Increase this much on your incline or leg presses, up your bodyweight by so much or put a quarter inch on your arms. Have these goals and make them achievable and break them down into even smaller goals: that is very important. Get a sensible training routine and get enough rest, enough protein, and enough calories and do everything consistently.
Don't get distracted or make the process too complicated. Don't keep chopping and changing; just get a good core and stick with it. In saying that, of course if it is not working you will have to look at changing things.
[ Q ] How serious should a beginning bodybuilder be?
Oh yes, you can be serious about achieving your goals but if you are going to start out saying "I'm going to be Mr. Olympia," it is just so way ahead that it is like deciding to climb Mt. Everest and standing at the bottom of this mountain and saying, "sh!t, I'm never going to get there." But if you got to one ledge, then another and another, eventually you might see the top.
[ Q ] Through objectively looking at a beginning bodybuilder, how would you determine whether they had the genetics to do well in bodybuilding?
By their structure, muscle belly length, proportions. If somebody has got structural defects like a long upper body and short legs or certain muscle groups have got shorter muscle bellies than others, and the person is smaller in certain areas, then those are going to be hurdles that are probably impossible to overcome. Sure you can balance things out a little bit, but I would look for somebody with overall good balance and proportions, and a good body structure.
Q ] To your understanding, what is most important: training or nutrition?
Okay, training is 100 percent, nutrition is 100 percent, and mental approach is 100 percent. It is like a tripod: you take one of the legs away and they all fall down. So that is bullsh!t and there is no such thing (that one bodybuilding factor is more important than they other).
What if you had an absolutely perfect diet? High protein six-times-a-day every two and half to three hours and all the supplements you can get, and you sit home all day and watch TV? Nothing is going to happen. So in this light how can nutrition be the most important factor? Conversely, if you went to the gym and busted your ass and just ate a slice of toast, nothing would happen either. So they are all as important as each other.
[ Q ] People are wont to be scientific when assessing their regime: for example, it is often said that nutrition is 70 percent and training is 30 precent of bodybuilding success.
These sound like guys that don't go to the gym too much. Put as much as you can into everything. Why would you want to limit yourself? I wouldn't like to put percentages on it because they are all important. If you are lacking in one area you are not going to get the best results.
[ Q ] Let me put it another way. If some kind of emergency situation occurred and you had to make a choice: miss a daily workout or a day of proper eating: what would it be for you?
If you put it like that it is a different question and I would miss the workout. If I miss the workout I'm not going to benefit from the workout obviously, but nothing drastic is going to happen, right?
It might even be beneficial to miss a workout if you are slightly overtrained. If you miss a day of eating then your body will go catabolic and you may lose some muscle. Putting it like that it is an easy question to answer but as far as percentages go, I think it is a silly debate.
[ Q ] Would you subscribe to the belief that people should use mass building exercises in the off-season and more shaping movements pre-contest?
Those are just bullsh!t phrases anyway: mass building and shaping. There are compound exercises, which are multi-joint exercises, which tend to give you the ability to build more size because the muscle functions optimally that way and more stress can be applied to the mid-range part of the exercise, where the muscle belly is functioning.
And there are isolation exercises, which move around one joint. They all have their uses and I don't think training should change one bit from off-season to pre-contest. It is just a case of manipulating nutrition and cardiovascular exercise. So no.
Q ] So you could even build a degree of muscle mass with the so-called "shaping", or, more precisely, isolation movements.
You could but they would not probably be as effective for building muscle mass because your body doesn't really function as well in isolation generally. What we call the mass builders, like the bent-over-row or squat, are multi-joint exercises and tend to hit the mid-range: there is not a lot of stress at the start or the end of the movement; it is all in the middle where the muscle functions best.
But isolation exercises have their benefits also. If you are just doing pressing you are not going to really hit that lateral head; you isolate the lateral head with the side raises to get the full development and that aesthetic look. If you look at a power-lifter, they use huge amounts of weights in pressing movements and bench-pressing, but they don't often have that shoulder cap you see on pro bodybuilders.
So they are both important and necessary ("mass builders" and "isolation movements") pre contest and off-season. It makes no difference. There is no such thing as a cutting exercise. This is just to do with reducing your body fat and this requires a negative calorie balance.
[ Q ] If something is lacking you are not going to wait until the pre-contest phase to address it anyway, right?
No, if it is lacking and you start to do it pre-contest then it is too late. Because you are not going to have the right nutrition to build muscle mass, and if you want to change something you have to build something. All your building work and changes are done in the off-season. Pre-contest you are basically just stripping the fat off and trying to maintain the muscle.
[ Q ] What are your views on the negative aspect of a repetition?
I believe it is important, if not more important than the positive part. So I always emphasize the negative part because more muscle damage occurs during the negative phase. And it's the damage that is repaired that makes the muscle grow.
Q ] How does it do this exactly?
Nobody really knows for sure. If you look at an Olympic weightlifter, for example, they do the lifting part, and then they drop the weight. So they don't do negatives as much apart from on the squatting motion. That could be why they have massive legs and comparatively smaller upper bodies. The idea is to emphasize the negative by slowing it down, because you're stronger on that portion. And occasionally you can do extra negative reps where it's practical.
[ Q ] And what exactly does the positive part of a repetition do?
They are both important. The muscle works in both phases so there should be equal attention to both. A lot of people think in terms of just lifting the weight. They will bench press, then drop it down and do another rep. They forget about the negative part a lot of the time, and I think this is a mistake.
[ Q ] Many believe that it is the positive, contracting part of the rep that provides the muscle pump.
They are both going to give you the pump and create extra blood flow and create muscle trauma. The negative part creates greater trauma, so it might even be more important for the pump. But we still don't know for sure so let's emphasize both parts.
[ Q ] There is also a belief that we can pump the muscles with short, sharp positive reps.
The pump is just extra blood flow to the muscle. Just because you pump it, it doesn't mean you are going to create any growth. I can increase blood flow to the area with a 20-pound dumbbell but it's not going to make me grow
Q ] I would now like to discuss the specific exercises you used while training for the Mr. Olympia. You were known as having the thickest best proportioned back of your time, possible of all time. What exercises gave you most of your back size and what approach did you use?
Variety was my approach. Mostly close-grip pull-downs, close-grip bent over rows, one-arm rows, cable rows. Not all in one workout obviously. But the reverse-grip pull downs and rows are a staple. Whether it's a barbell row, a dumbbell row or a Hammer row, they are always going to be there.