The squat is one of the "bread and butter" movements of all times of weight training from powerlifters to bodybuilders and from NFL linemen to mixed martial artists. The massive full-body overload that the squat provides develops explosive power and strength, as well as great leg development. For the sake of high level intermediate and advanced bodybuilders whose goal is to develop each muscle to their genetic hypertrophic potential, one must understand the pros and cons to squatting.
Squats are a great exercise for a beginner and most intermediate bodybuilders since they are a great tool with which to cause progressive maximum overload to the quadriceps. As the weight gets heavier and the body starts to resist the easy and almost immediate hypertrophy that came as a beginner, the back squat begins to fade as a mass building tool. As the weight becomes increasingly heavier from years of training, the body naturally uses physiological points of leverage to get the load from point A to point B the simplest and easiest way possible. This means that back squats after some time, tend use the quadriceps as less and less and become glute, hamstring and hip flexor dominant. Furthermore, a more experienced bodybuilder requires direct and intense neuromuscular stimulation in addition to progressive maximum overload for optimal hypertrophy since the body has begun to adapt to resistance training. This means that for bigger quadriceps after a few years of bodybuilding, the glute, hamstring and hip flexor dominant back squat is no longer your best bet.
Enter the front squat. By simply stabilizing the bar over one's shoulders, inching the load forward over the body, the quadriceps get exponentially more stimulated than the back squat. Greater percentages of muscle fibers from the quadriceps are activated performing a front squat and thus the pivotal neuromuscular connection that is required in the training of a high intermediate to advanced bodybuilder is developed. Add these two factors to a once per 7 day progressive maximum overload training cycle and prepare for your quadriceps to grow!
- HR