101 Muscle-Building Workouts & Nutrition Plans
2.5/5
()
About this ebook
In 101 Muscle-Building Workouts & Nutrition Plans, the staff of editors, scientists, and expert trainers at the acclaimed magazine Muscle & Fitness provide the very best lifting advice they have to offer. The various training programs contained here are all cutting-edge—backed by scientific research and proven time and again in the trenches by novice and professional athletes alike. With multiple full body programs ranging all the way from four weeks to three months, readers are covered for years to come. To support efforts at the gym, comprehensive meal plans ensure the maximizing of muscle mass while also increasing energy levels and maintaining overall health. Whether the goal is to make good on a New Years resolution or get in shape for the summer, this reference provides all of the useable information needed.
Read more from The Editors Of Muscle & Fitness
101 High-Intensity Workouts for Fast Results Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5101 Workouts For Men: Build Muscle, Lose Fat & Reach Your Fitness Goals Faster Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
Related to 101 Muscle-Building Workouts & Nutrition Plans
Related ebooks
101 Strength Training Workouts & Strategies Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Total Abs: Build a Rock-Hard Midsection in Four Weeks Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5101 Get-Lean Workouts and Strategies Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsAbs for Life - The #1 Solution To Get Six Pack Abs Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The Total Dumbbell Workout: Trade Secrets of a Personal Trainer Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The New Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding: The Bible of Bodybuilding, Fully Updated and Revis Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Muscle Building: Beginners Handbook - Proven Step By Step Guide To Get The Body You Always Dreamed About Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The 21-Day Big Muscle Plan Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsArms & Shoulders Above the Rest Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Supermen: Building Maximum Muscle for a Lifetime Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Body Building Secrets Revealed Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Bodyweight Training: Bodyweight Exercises for Extraordinary Strength Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Ultimate Bodybuilding Guide: How to Achieve the Body that you’ve Always Wanted Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsFitness Nutrition: How to Unlock Your Physical Potential by Working Out and Eating Properly Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsKettlebell Workout Routines: Effective Kettlebell Training Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Anatomy of Strength and Conditioning: A Trainer's Guide to Building Strength and Stamina Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Muscle Building: The Ultimate Guide to Building Muscle, Staying Lean and Transform Your Body Forever Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsBodybuilding: From Heavy Duty to SuperSlow Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Circuit Training Workouts: The Top 50 Circuit Training Workouts That Build Muscle & Burn Fat Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsHealthy Bodybuilding: Successful body building tips Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsGet Big GUNS™ (Get Ready To Grow): The Ultimate Guide To Massive Arms Without Steroids Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsResistance Band Workouts: 50 Exercises for Strength Training at Home or On the Go Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5101 Workouts For Women: Everything You Need to Get a Lean, Strong, and Fit Physique Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Raw Muscularity Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The Total Kettlebell Workout: Trade Secrets of a Personal Trainer Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Bodyweight Workouts for Men Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsWeight Lifting Training: Improving your Overall Health Through Weight Lifting Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsBodyweight Training: How To Increase Strength And Gain Muscle Mass At Home Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
Reviews for 101 Muscle-Building Workouts & Nutrition Plans
10 ratings0 reviews
Book preview
101 Muscle-Building Workouts & Nutrition Plans - The Editors of Muscle & Fitness
Chapter 1
Return of the King
Pay homage to the iconic barbell by remastering the moves in this old-school bash
WHEN MAN INVENTED THE WHEEL — when he rounded off the square corners of some stone and realized it could easily be rolled from one place to another — he knew he was on to something. Since then, we’ve figured out how to cover wheels with rubber, combine them with internal combustion engines and move ourselves across land with an ease their original inventor would never have imagined. Yet the wheel’s original design hasn’t changed. It’s still round, it still rolls, and physics continues to defy us to come up with anything better while still bound by the laws of gravity.
It’s unclear exactly who first conceived the barbell, but there came a time when someone with some modicum of ingenuity (perhaps an Athenian who had a bone to pick with a Spartan who had kicked sand in his face) decided to slide weighted discs onto the ends of a rod and lift it in a variety of ways to get stronger.
In the history of physical training, I don’t think there has ever been anything that has improved upon the adjustable barbell,
says Dan John, an author, national-level discus-thrower, coach and Olympic lifting advocate. If it’s too heavy, you take off weight. If it’s too light, you add some. [Yet] people look at this like it’s the Riddle of the Sphinx.
In the history of physical training, I don’t think there has ever been anything that has improved upon the adjustable barbell
Maybe this decidedly old-school genius, whoever he was, had it right the first time. Maybe progress with the barbell should’ve stopped before things got out of hand. Since that initial barbell built its first set of biceps, we’ve seen an astounding procession of so-called upgrades. In trying to render obsolete the hassle
of lifting weights with an actual barbell, these reinventions have convoluted our pursuit of physical advancement with all kinds of complicated contraptions, gimmicks and overpriced machinery.
Has any of this stuff really improved upon the original notion of picking up and putting down a barbell in different ways? To find out for yourself, locate a bar and some plates, and make that your gym for the next month. Put in an honest day’s work with the one piece of gym equipment that has withstood the test of time and watch your training take off the old-school way.
It’s my belief that both athletes and fitness enthusiasts are capable of training at home at a level of excellence unmatched by most spas, gyms and training centers,
John explains. Contrary to popular belief, you can train very effectively with a minimal investment. I spent $159 on a 300-pound barbell set 20 years ago, and I can train for the rest of my life.
Add a dash of creativity to your training equation and there’s little you can’t accomplish with a bar and plates. In fact, when you designate the barbell as your main training tool, you’ll realize that it’s the machines that fall short compared to a simple barbell and a willingness to work.
PICTURE A LOADED BARBELL ON THE FLOOR. You can do three very basic things with it: You can push it, pull it, or combine pushing and pulling to accelerate it rapidly through space. In fact, every exercise you do in the gym can be reduced to fit into one of these three categories. The idea is to find the best combination of pushing, pulling and acceleration to gain strength, add mass, become a better athlete and increase your capacity to perform work.
I assume only one piece of equipment with my program: a bar,
John says. Machines aren’t the answer to your fat-loss or muscle-building questions. As a coach, I need to cut to the core of the things that work and repeat what works. Barbells work.
ROMANIAN DEADLIFT
Once you learn to manipulate the position of the bar with respect to your body — for example, figuring out how to squat without the luxury of a power rack or a set of squat stands — you can perform a seemingly endless number of pushing, pulling and dynamic-acceleration exercises with just a barbell and plates.
Presses, squats and extensions are examples of push movements. When you push a weight, in most cases you’re fighting gravity by propelling a load away from your center. At the bottom of a lift, you’re starting with your muscles and joints in a coiled
position, and you’re trying to finish the movement at full extension at the end ofyour range of motion. When you bench-press, for example, you extend your arms. When you squat, you stand up.
Rows, curls and shrugs are pulling movements, where you start at full extension, then close the gap by pulling the load toward a coiled position where the main joints supporting the weight are bent instead of extended. With bent-over rows, you initiate the movement with your arms extended, which is where the weight of the bar makes them want to stay, then pull the bar against gravity into a coiled position touching your midsection.
With Olympic lifts like the power clean and power snatch, proper technique combines both pulling and pushing to move a load quickly and effectively from point A to point B. These exercises work your entire body in myriad ways. Bearing a load and moving it repeatedly will make you stronger, but it’s the nature of the movements — quick, compound and powerful — that recruits more muscle fibers. Along with the balance and stability these lifts require, that simply can’t be replicated using machines.
In the program on page 13, each workout starts with compound, multijoint movements, then scales back to assistance exercises that help build strength and increase stability for your main lifts. Push and pull moves are combined to target every main muscle group. On your lower-body days, you’ll work the muscles crucial to deadlifts, front squats and Olympic lifts: abs, hamstrings, lower back and quads. On your upper-body days, you’ll do a series of exercises for your pecs, triceps, lats, traps, delts and biceps. For challenging and comprehensive strength sessions, you won’t need any more than this.
SPREAD-EAGLE SIT-UP
Start: Load a bar with a 25-pound plate on each side and place it on the floor. Sit down and hook your feet under the bar, keeping your legs straight and spread as wide as possible. Lie back on the floor.
Execution: Crunch your torso up by bending at the waist and hips. Lower back down until your shoulder blades touch the floor.
MIDSECTION MAYHEM
This challenging exercise will enhance core stabilization as well as hit the upper and lower abs
ROLLOUT
Start: Place a barbell on the floor and kneel behind it with your knees hip-width apart and your toes on the floor. Lean forward to grasp the bar with a shoulder-width or narrower, overhand grip.
Execution: Keeping your arms straight, roll the barbell forward, using your abs to hold your body rigid, until your arms are fully extended. Contract your abs to reverse the motion.
STANDING OVERHEAD TRICEPS EXTENSION
Start: Perform a clean, then press the bar overhead using a grip just inside shoulder width.
Execution: Bend your elbows to lower the weight behind your head without moving your upper arms; make sure your elbows remain pointed forward or slightly to the sides. Return the bar to the start position by extending your arms overhead.
In the Barbell Domination Routine
on page 13, the set and rep ranges we list are designed to cover all your bases: strength, hypertrophy, athleticism and increased work capacity. Understand, however, that these variables can easily be manipulated to meet your individual needs. To put on mass, add reps to each set until you’re training in a range closer to failure. To get stronger, use more weight and fewer reps on your compound lifts at the beginning of each workout. To improve your conditioning, shorten the rest periods between sets.
Above all, embrace the barbell and everything it offers. It’s humankind’s original dedicated gym tool, and it’s still the standard by which all workout equipment is judged — and found wanting.
BARBELL DECLINE PUSH-UP
Start: With your feet elevated on a bench, get in push-up position with your hands grasping a barbell at approximately shoulder width.
Execution: Keeping your body straight, bend your elbows to lower your chest to the bar, then push back up to the start.
DEAD-STOP
LYING TRICEPS EXTENSION
Start: Lie faceup on the floor with a loaded barbell behind your head. Grasp it with a shoulder-width or slightly narrower grip. Your elbows should point directly at the ceiling.
Execution: Extend your arms until they’re locked out, the same as at the top of a bench-press rep. Bend your elbows to return the bar to the floor without bouncing.
FORMIDABLE FOREARMS
Target the brachialis and brachioradialis by flipping your grip on curls
BARBELL REVERSE CURL
Start: Grasp a barbell with an overhand, shoulder-width grip and let it hang in front of your thighs.
Execution: With your elbows close to your sides, bend them to curl the bar toward your shoulders. Return along the same path.