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Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Legs today, Gone tomorrow!

Legs today, Gone tomorrow, is what I like to say on legs day. I’ll coin that phase throughout the day, as to keep me psyched for my legs work out that night.
Knowing if I don't get my legs up to the next level, there will be no chance at the Nationals or any chance for a pro card.
Legs today, gone tomorrow the legs will be and for a few days afterward too! You know you had a great leg work out when you have trouble bringing yourself down on a chair, because that movement of sitting is like squatting and you just squatting your ass off

I competed in bodybuilder from 1985 to 1992, then stopped to box for the next 12 years. I fought in the 1996 Golden Gloves as Light heavyweight, winning a 59 sec. first round knockout in the semi finals.

When I got back into Bodybuilding June 1, 2007 after not touching a weight since 1996, I knew the legs had to grow...


Searching the internet one day I came across this web site called Stronglifts. This guy put together instructions on how to lift correctly. Basically putting down in writing, things most of us take for granted.

Here’s the squat article, I thought I'd share it.


Time for a protein drink

Squat Setup.

You’ll have to think about a lot of things at first. Study the tips below, start with an empty barbell, focus on your technique.
Chest Up. Keeping your chest up makes lower back rounding impossible & tightening of your upper-back easier.
Forward Look. Look down & your back will bend. Look at the ceiling & your neck will hurt. Look forward.
Bar Position. Put the bar low, on the muscles of your back shoulders. Below the bone at the top of your shoulder-blades.
Grip Width. Narrow grip makes it easier to tighten your upper-back. Do lots of shoulder dislocations if this position feels uncomfortable.
Thumbless Grip. Put your thumbs on top of the bar, next to your fingers. You’ll be able to keep your wrists inline with your forearms.
Straight Wrists. Your back supports the weight, not your hands. Keep your wrists inline with your forearm, never bend them.
Tight Upper-back. Bring your shoulder-blades together. Tightening the upper-back gives the bar a solid base to rest on.
Elbows Back. Don’t let them come forward during the Squat. Pushing your elbows back prevents elbows injuries.
Foot Stance. A narrow stance doesn’t work for the low bar Squat. Heels should be shoulder-width apart.
Toes Out. Point your toes out at about 30 degrees. Your toes must always follow your knees.
Weight on The Heels. Curl your toes up if needed. Never get on your toes. Push from the heels.
Squatting Down. You have unracked the bar correctly. All muscles are tight & ready to Squat. Key to the low bar Squats are the hips.
Hips Back. Think sitting on your toilet. Hips go back first, way back. If you can’t, you probably have tight hamstrings. Do the Squat Stretch.
Knees Over Toes. Don’t let your knees travel forward in the bottom Squat position. Knees over the toes, not further.
Knees Out. Never allow your knees to buckle in. It can cause knee injury. Push your knees out.
Hit Parallel. Your hip joint must come lower than your knee joint. Ask someone to judge your depth or tape yourself. No Partial Squats.
Squatting Up. Your hip muscles are stretched when you hit parallel. Use that stretch to bounce from the bottom. DO NOT relax your hip muscles & DO NOT bounce off your knees. Keep your hip muscles tensed.
Hips Up. If your hips come forward, your knees will also come forward. Drive your hips up straight out of the bottom.
Squeeze Your Glutes. Power comes from the glutes. Squeeze your glutes as hard as you can while driving your hips up.
Push From The Heels. Curl your toes up if needed. Don’t let your heels come off the floor. Push from the heels.
Knees Out. Same as for the way down: don’t let your knees buckle in. Push your knees out.


Common Squat Problems.

If you have someone to help you improve your Squat technique, great. Otherwise tape yourself and use the following tips or Starting Strength to improve your Squat technique.
Lower Back Rounds. Keep your chest up & do the Squat Stretch. Read why your lower back rounds during Squats & how to fix it.
Leaning Forward. Happens when your hips go up faster than your shoulders. Read how to avoid leaning forward on Squats.
Bent Wrists. Will cause wrist pain once the bar gets heavy. Support the weight with your back muscles, not with your wrists.
Knees In. You have weak and/or tight hip muscles. Do the Squat Stretch & actively push your knees out on every rep.
Knees Forward. Move from the hips: hips back when Squatting down, hips up – not forward – when Squatting up.
Heels Off The Floor. Puts stress on your knees & impairs stability. Curl your toes up and push from the heels.

1 comment:

  1. The leg is a limb on a living thing's body that supports the rest of the animal above the ground between the ankle and the hip and is used for locomotion. It is all about the legs, baby!

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