Heating can improve the performance in the gym by enhancing blood flow and increasing body temperature, which can help prevent injuries. What does an effective warm -up look like?
Dr. Mike Israetel, who has been raised for 25 years and holds a doctorate in the field, continues to improve his training approach. Shared Five basic lessons he has learned recently, including the warm -up strategy designed to Improvement of profits and lift the lifting performance.
Israatel’s five tips to improve profits
- Correct and specific warm -up
- PART PART
- Myo-Reps
- Gloves backwards
- High Frequency Training for Rapid Muscle Discovery
[Related: Is Ego Lifting Actually Bad?]
1. Suitable and specifically warm -up
Israetel explains that the 12-8-4 warm-up method is particularly effective. It uses a maximum weight of 30-rep to complete a total of 12 repetitions, followed by a short rest. Then perform eight repetitions using a maximum weight of 20 rep. Finish with four repetitions using a max 10-rep.
This method exposes the muscles to heavier weights while maintaining the energy for upcoming work sets. It can enhance nervous and technical readiness for exercise.
The use of this warm -up for each exercise in one session is not necessary, especially if the training aims at similar muscle groups. After completing the first exercise, warm-up for the next moves by making a set of eight repetitions with 20-rep max before jumping into your work sets. This can be repeated throughout the training, ensuring efficiency and readiness without excessive extension.
“The 12-8-4 system is really good,” said Dr. Israetel. “You have a system where you make multiple warm -up sets that are gradually becoming heavier and closer to failure as you go, but start easily and become hard towards the end.”
Dr. Israetel omits general warm -up, citing a study published in Sports biology The magazine that suggests that the performance remains consistent if the body is heated through the exercise without a heart. (1) The study emphasizes that general, specific and combined warm -up enhance muscle performance, providing flexibility in the way individuals prepare for physical activity.
2. PART PART
Dr. Israetel did exercises using a full range of motion for muscle growth. However, recent studies indicate that the lower half of a movement – where the muscle is in prolonged position – can lead to significant muscle growth and, in some cases, even exceed a full range of motion. (2;
After experimenting, Dr. Israetel found that the ratio of stimulus to port and energy expenditure, especially for extension of some movements, was often equal or better than those of full -range exercises. For example, it observed greater muscle growth when using a few repetitions in exercises such as calves and inverted skull crushes compared to the full range of movement.
3. Myo-Reps
Myo-refs is a training technique that includes the execution of multiple short sets with a minimal rest in the meantime. The process begins with the completion of 10 to 20 standard repetitions, followed by a short balance from two to three seconds or five to 10 seconds. Then perform an additional five to 10 repetitions by repeating this cycle.
The main advantage of myo-refs was preceded by the muscles, pushing them near failure many times. Short rest periods allow for a sufficient recovery to continue, repeating the muscles back to the end of the failure for maximum efficiency.
Myo-REPS vs traditional repetitions cultivate muscles the same amount. Myo-refs grow in half a year.
-Dr. Mike Israetel
Myo-refs can be effective when specific rest and recovery conditions are met:
- The restriction results from the muscle., Not from the cardiovascular system, as suggesting constant breathing.
- A sufficient neurological and psychological recovery has occurred.
- Supporting muscles are not overly tired.
- Target muscles recover quite a bit during short rest periods to perform at least five additional repetitions.
4.
This technique, adapted by the IFBB Pro Jared Feather, highlights a unique approach to maximize buttocks activation during lunges. Feather has discovered that the pencil leg – the one that extends forward – plays a crucial role in the bulbs. By placing the buttocks for maximum extension, isolation and contraction, the lead leg becomes the main guide, while the hind leg provides mainly stability.
Many distribute the attempt between the two feet during the boats, pushing with the front and hind legs. However, Feather refines his technique from a prospect of buttock hypertrophy using only light touches with the back foot and directing almost all the load on the front leg.
To enhance this focus, Dr. Israetel recommends that you place the back foot with the face of the shoe down when stabilized. This thin setting shifts most of the workload on the front leg and creates enough discomfort to require a greater concentration in the correct form and activation of the buttocks.
5. High Frequency Education for Rapid Muscle Discovery
Dr. Israet once believed that the training of a muscle more than twice a week was irrational, convinced that there was not enough recovery time. “For a long time, I trained everything once every five days or twice a week,” he shared. Its progress increased when it increased the frequency of biceps, Delts and arm training to three, four or even six times a week in short sessions.
Smaller muscle groups recover faster than the larger ones. Waiting several days between sessions is unnecessary and potentially counterproductive. Dr. Israetel proposes to increase the training frequency can benefit various muscle groups, saying: “It’s all about recovery courses. If you train a muscle.
Dr. Israetel recommends an increase in frequency once a week, starting with a lower volume for each session. As recovery evolves, the volume can gradually increase each session.
“You will get more overall work. Nothing better predicts muscle growth than recoverable overall weekly work, “Dr. Israetel concluded.
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References
- Andrade, DC, Henriquez-Olguín, C., Beltrán, AR, Ramírez, MA, Labarca, C., Cornejo, M., álvarez, C., & Ramírez-Campillo, R. (2015). Effects of general, specific and combined warm -up on explosive muscle performance. Sport Biology, 32 (2), 123-128.
- Androlakis Korakakis, P., Wolf, M., Coleman, M., Burke, R., Piñero, A., Nippard, J., & Schoenfeld, BJ (2023). Optimization of resistance technical training to maximize muscle hypertrophy: a narrative review. Journal of Functional Morphology and Kinesiology, 9 (1), 9.
Suggested Picture via Shutterstock/Peopleimages.com – Yuri A