Friday, February 8, 2008

Training For Lifting - John Grimek




Humberto Selvetti



The average lifter should warm up with five light cleans and presses and/or some calisthenics. In both press and snatch he should start working up in sets of three repetitions a about 60 to 70 pounds below his best personal records. Progressing in 10 pound jumps, as the weight gets heavy he should drop to sets of two repetitions, possibly doing four or five sets or two with a given weight. On a night when limits are to be tried, he should continue upward in single attempts. Limit attempts should not be made too often and only when the lifter feels up to it.

For the clean and jerk, the same procedure should be followed, except that the weights are only cleaned in threes and twos, not jerked. After reaching a near-limit clean, jerks should be practiced in sets of two from the shoulders after single cleans.

Other exercises which will prove of value to a lifter are squats, done in sets of five with heavy weights, rapid deadlifts to waist height in sets of three and heavy bench presses in sets of three using regular overhead pressing grip. If weak in the press, a lifter will often profit by doing dumbell presses in sets of three to five repetitions on one or two of his non-training days each week. A total of 20 presses is plenty for this additional training.

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