Trainingsschema's

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  • Trainingsschema's

    Hier is een nieuw artikel geplaatst op T-Nation:

    Het bespreekt kort een 10-tal verschillende schema's:
    Het bespreekt echter alleen de meer algemene schema's.
    Dus niet: Bill Star, Stronlifts, Starting Strenght, Westside Barbell Conjugate training, German volume training, wendler 5/3/1, reg park 5x5, ed coan, of wat er nog meer is



    Path #1 – Total Body Routine
    I define a total body routine as a routine that includes an upper body pushing exercise, an upper body pulling exercise, and a compound leg exercise all in one workout.

    Recommended Frequency: 1-4 times per week; 2-3 times per week is most common

    Outline: 1-2 exercises per main muscle group, 6-10 exercises in the workout
    Day 1: Total Body
    Day 2: Total Body
    Day 3: Total Body

    Strengths: Typically used for beginners, fat loss, and general health and fitness. Doesn't require insane intensity to produce results; allows for a specific lift to be practiced frequently. Shouldn't make one super-sore.

    Limitations: Not typically used to build maximum muscle size and muscle work capacity (such as the ability to complete 16 sets for chest, for example); may tax lifters' recovery capabilities, especially as they get stronger, bigger and/or older; may be hard to work on weak points and still train the bigger items; harder to program effectively if training 4+ times per week.


    Path #2 – Upper/Lower Routine



    The upper body is trained one day; the lower body trained another. Abs, core, and lower back can go on either day, although being paired with the lower body is most common.

    Recommended Frequency: 2-6 times per week (2-4 times per week is most common)

    Outline: 1-3 exercises per muscle group, 5-10 exercises per day
    Day 1: Upper (Chest, Back, Shoulders, Biceps, and Triceps)
    Day 2: Lower (Glutes, Quads, Hams, Calves, Abs, and Lower Back)

    Note: The days and order are interchangeable.

    Strengths: Promotes recovery compared to total body routines; works well in many situations; works well if exercising 4 or more times a week.

    Limitations: Upper body day can be long; some lifters may feel they need more recovery time.


    Path #3 – Push/Pull Routine
    The upper body pushing muscles are trained on one day, the upper body pulling muscles are trained on another. The legs can be trained with either day but are generally paired with the pulling muscles because of time (the push day tends to take longer). Core is generally paired with the pushing muscles.

    Frequency: 2-6 times per week (2-4is most common)

    Outline: 2-3 exercises per muscle group, 5-10 exercises per day
    Day 1: Push (Chest, Shoulders, Triceps, Abs)
    Day 2: Pull (Back, Biceps, Legs, Lower Back)

    Note: The days and order are interchangeable.

    Strengths: Allows for a bit more focus on similar muscles compared to the upper/lower routine; may be more ideal for size; works well in many situations.

    Limitations: Produces more local muscle fatigue than an upper/lower routine; may be too advanced for beginners; pull day can be demanding.


    Path #4 – Push/Pull/Legs Routine



    Similar to Path #3 but now the legs have their own day.

    Frequency: 3 times per week (can go up to 6 if you want)

    Outline: 2-4 exercises per muscle group, 6-8 exercises per workout
    Day 1: Push (Chest, Shoulders, Triceps)
    Day 2: Pull (Back, Biceps, Abs)
    Day 3: Legs (Glutes, Quads, Hams, Calves, Lower Back)

    Note: The days and order are interchangeable.

    Strengths: Allows for more focus on specific muscles (particularly the pulling and leg muscles) compared to the 2 day-a-week routine; can promote recovery compared to higher frequency routines.

    Limitations: Only training each area once a week may not be optimal stimulus; likely to produce soreness if training is intense.


    Path #5 – Superset Routine
    This is a 3 day-a-week routine in which agonist/antagonistic muscles are paired. This allows for supersets to be employed, although it isn't mandatory.

    Frequency: 3 times per week (can go up to 6 times per week)

    Outline: 2-4 exercises per muscle group, 6-8 exercises per workout
    Day 1: Chest and Back
    Day 2: Legs, Lower Back, and Abs
    Day 3: Shoulders, Biceps, and Triceps

    Strengths: Easy to use supersets; small upper body muscles receive stimulus 2 times per week; may promote recovery; tends to provide the feeling of a 'pump' which, according to Arnold, feels pretty good.

    Limitations: Only training each major area once a week may not be an optimal stimulus; likely to produce soreness if training is intense.

    Path #6 – Sheiko Routines



    Matt McGorry wrote a good summary of Sheiko routines for T Nation here. Their main purpose is to promote strength without adding too much muscle mass, allowing lifters to stay in the same weight class.

    Frequency: 3 times per week

    Outline:
    Day 1: Squat movement, Bench movement, 2-3 assistance
    Day 2: Deadlift movement, Bench movement, 2-3 assistance
    Day 3: Squat movement, Bench Movement, 2-3 assistance

    Note: Sometimes a squat, bench, or deadlift is repeated in the same day as an assistance exercise.

    Strengths: Promotes neuromuscular coordination through repeated practice of the big movements; big movements are trained every session.

    Limitations: Workouts can be boring; easy to over-train if training is too intense; not ideal if lifter expresses compensations during the movement or is dealing with a chronic injury.


    Path #7 – 2 Compound Exercises per workout
    This workout is very simple – pick any 2 compound exercises and train them in a workout. Mix and match the exercises as you see fit.

    Frequency: 2-6 times per week, 2-4 is most common

    Outline:
    Day 1: 2 compound exercises
    Day 2: 2 compound exercises
    Day 3: 2 compound exercises

    Strengths: Goes well with autoregulation training; promotes recovery; focuses on "bang for the buck" exercises; time efficient.

    Limitations: Programming can be haphazard; weak points may develop; certain areas may be undertrained; might not provide novice lifters with enough direction.


    Path #8 – 2+2 Workout



    This workout is just like the 2 compound exercises described above, except 2 assistance exercises are added into the workout. Mix and match exercises as you see fit.

    Frequency: 2-6 times per week, 2-4 is most common

    Outline:
    Day 1: 2 compound exercises + 2 assistance
    Day 2: 2 compound exercises + 2 assistance
    Day 3: 2 compound exercises + 2 assistance

    Strengths: Goes well with autoregulation training; can help address weak points; can promote recovery; reasonably time efficient.

    Limitations: Programming can be haphazard; certain areas may be undertrained; might not provide novice lifters with enough direction.

    Note: Jim Wendler's 5/3/1 Program is similar to this, although he provides more guidance on how the program should be set up and when to perform certain exercises.


    Paths 9-12: Once a Week Splits



    The following 4 Paths are similar but not identical. They generally consist of 4 workouts per week, but each area of the body is only trained once a week.

    These workouts are typically associated with traditional bodybuilding routines. I'll give the general frequency, outline, strengths, and limitations of these programs first, and then outline the specific routines, with notes to follow.

    Frequency: 4 times per week (more is possible but generally unnecessary)

    Outline: 3-5 exercises per large muscle group, 2-4 exercises per small muscle group, 5-8 exercises per workout.

    Strengths: Promotes recovery; weak points receive significant stimulus; allows lifter to train with high intensity; works well if lifter has sensitive joints that require longer recovery; builds work capacity and lactate threshold; promotes muscle balance; may reduce chance of overuse injury.

    Limitations:
    Must be used with high intensity training; training once a week might not be sufficient to provide optimal stimulus; likely to produce significant soreness; may not promote neuromuscular coordination in key exercises due to lower frequency; doesn't work as well with more laid back or newer lifters.

    Path #9 – Large and Small Synergistic Muscles Combined
    Day 1: Chest and Triceps
    Day 2: Legs and Lower Back
    Day 3: Back and Biceps
    Day 4: Shoulders and Abs

    Note: Promotes full recovery. However, synergistic muscle may be fried by the time you get to it.

    Path #10 – Large and Small Synergistic Muscles Separated
    Day 1: Chest and Biceps
    Day 2: Legs and Lower Back
    Day 3: Back and Abs
    Day 4: Shoulders and Triceps

    Note: Smaller muscles are fresh when you train them and ultimately receive stimulus twice per week.

    Path #11 – Separating Legs and Lower Back

    Day 1: Legs and Abs
    Day 2: Chest and Biceps (ideally have a day of rest after day 2)
    Day 3: Upper Back and Lower Back
    Day 4: Shoulders and Triceps

    Note: This routine allows for the separation of legs and lower back to minimize fatigue – squats would be performed on Day 1, with deadlifts on Day 3 – so the lifter can approach these exercises as fresh as possible.

    Path 12 – The Yates Routine
    Day 1: Shoulders, Traps, Triceps
    Day 2: Upper Back, Rear Delts, Lower Back
    Day 3: Chest and Biceps
    Day 4: Legs

    Note: Named after the immortal Dorian Yates, this was the former Mr. Olympian's favorite routine. He'd often train 2 days on, 1 day off, 2 days on, 1 day off, and repeat.

    Traps can be paired with either back or with shoulders, your choice. This goes for any of the routines.


    Get Training!
    Exercise program design can be complicated but it shouldn't be like trying to do calculus in Cantonese. The previous12 templates are time-tested routines that thousands of lifters have used for decades. Pick whichever one floats your boat and then personalize it by filling in all the details to make it your own.

    But above all else, believe in it, and follow it for at least a few months. After that, reassess, tweak, or perhaps move on to a new program – and start the whole process again.

    See? There's hope for the unapologetic program hoppers after all. As long as you don't forget about progressive overload, the results will come.

    T NATION | 12 Programs to Follow

    Ander artikel over trainingsschema's:
    T NATION | Ten Killer Splits
    lucky short-armed-spine-bending bastard

    ~~~You wanna be strong, let a cute girl spot you~~~

  • #2
    Push/pull blijft lekker om te doen

    Leuk stukje dat je hebt geplaatst, altijd leuk om eens weer te proberen die schemaatjes
    "You are what you eat..."
    That's strange I don't think I've eaten any sexy beasts today...

    Comment


    • #3
      Bill Star, StrongLifts, Starting Strenght, German volume training, wendler 5/3/1, Reg Park 5x5, etc. vallen onder Total Body routines.

      Het blijft wel apart dat FB routines nog steeds door velen als intro voor beginners wordt gezien, terwijl dat oorspronkelijk helemaal niet het geval was. Dat was namelijk de manier waarop mannen zoals Reg Park, Bill Pearl en Arnold S. trainden om massa te kweken.

      Dat hele gedoe met splits werd pas een hype nadat Weider het naar voren schoof als de moderne manier van trainen. Tegenwoordig komen steeds meer mensen erachter dat de bodybuilders uit de jaren '60 helemaal niet verkeerd bezig waren met hun FB routines.

      En voor pure krachttraining is FB natuurlijk beter dan een split routine, omdat de compounds dan vaker dan 1x per week worden uitgevoerd.
      I know from teaching hundreds of seminars that the guys who say they have “awesome technique” are usually the biggest disasters—their ego just doesn’t let them see it.
      - Dave Tate

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by inferno_0666 View Post
        Bill Star, StrongLifts, Starting Strenght, German volume training, wendler 5/3/1, Reg Park 5x5, etc. vallen onder Total Body routines.

        Het blijft wel apart dat FB routines nog steeds door velen als intro voor beginners wordt gezien, terwijl dat oorspronkelijk helemaal niet het geval was. Dat was namelijk de manier waarop mannen zoals Reg Park, Bill Pearl en Arnold S. trainden om massa te kweken.

        Dat hele gedoe met splits werd pas een hype nadat Weider het naar voren schoof als de moderne manier van trainen. Tegenwoordig komen steeds meer mensen erachter dat de bodybuilders uit de jaren '60 helemaal niet verkeerd bezig waren met hun FB routines.

        En voor pure krachttraining is FB natuurlijk beter dan een split routine, omdat de compounds dan vaker dan 1x per week worden uitgevoerd.
        Oh, ok dankje.

        Ik probeer me nu goed in te lezen over al die methodes. Op het moment ben ik bezig in het boek van westside. Hierna nog UD2 en IF lezen. zoveel leeswerk.
        lucky short-armed-spine-bending bastard

        ~~~You wanna be strong, let a cute girl spot you~~~

        Comment


        • #5
          Edit: Wendler 5/3/1 valt onder "2+2 Workout".
          I know from teaching hundreds of seminars that the guys who say they have “awesome technique” are usually the biggest disasters—their ego just doesn’t let them see it.
          - Dave Tate

          Comment


          • #6
            wat je zegt, ben ook voorstander van FB en niet enkel voor beginners.
            jr -83kg

            Comment

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