|
|
|
|
|
Home | eShop | Article Archive | Subscribe | Contact Us | Advertising | Terms & Conditions
|
|
THIGH AND MIGHTY
Untitled Document
THIGH AND MIGHTY
BY RONNIE COLEMAN
SIX-TIME MR. OLYMPIA
I hope you hate my favourite quad shock workout
I could talk all day about my alternating A and B workouts, my braced isolations,
my fury training and various other training “secrets”, but when I
want to slap slabs of deep and striated muscle onto my quads in the shortest
time possible, only the most extreme shock programme of conflicting principles
will do. This is it.
To stimulate comprehensive growth for all the muscles in the quadriceps group,
you need extremely heavy straight sets of free-weight squats. To burn deep separations
into all of that mass, you also need to keep pounding away with nonstop pump
sets. You already know how much I love supersets and giant sets, but what I’m
talking about here are descending sets that are more extreme than supersets and
giant sets.
Here’s how the workout plays out. First, I do five all-out sets of squats
to exhaust the thighs. I then do three sets of leg presses in orthodox fashion,
but on my fourth and heaviest set, after I have ground out about 15 reps, my
training partner starts to strip off the plates as I go into descending mode
and work the thighs into submission. I follow the same pattern with leg extensions,
and by the end of the session, my thighs are fried.
The inherent problem with this particular workout is that I’m probably
the only one doing it. On the other hand, I’ve won a lot of Sandows, so
if you want quads that are more massive and cut deeper than those you see on
most pros, you should welcome the challenge of hating this shock programme.
Here are the descending-set shock-training rules you should follow.
•
Use this workout every fourth leg day.
•
Use a full range of motion for every rep.
•
Use a spotter (or two), to strip your plates and to keep you going with minimum
rest between sets.
•
Use only your quad muscles, not your hips or joints. Do not cheat. Contract and
extend the muscle at a steady pace, without jerking. Concentrate on making the
muscle pump itself full and tight.
•
Your muscles can deceive you. Just because you’ve pumped them numb doesn’t
mean they’re finished. I assure you, they can still handle another series
of sets, so hit them again, and then again.
•
I warm up with leg extensions, four sets of 30 reps per set, pyramiding in order
to pump the muscle tight, so it can serve as a shock absorber for the heavy squats
to follow. Build the pump smoothly and feel the blood flush into the muscle.
Use a full range of motion, but since this is a warm up, don’t bother with
peak contractions; they’ll come later, when you use descending sets for
your heavy extensions. Just keep pumping.
EXERCISE 1
Squats I do five pyramided sets of these, but every set is 12 reps. I try to
reach failure at 10 or 11 reps, and then gut out anywhere from one to three more
on sheer willpower. Full range of motion is absolutely essential; none of this “squatting
down to parallel” stuff. Squeeze your butt all the way down to your ankles.
The misconception is that you lose power “out of the hole” when you
go below parallel, but the opposite is true: the lower you squat, the more compression
you build in your quads and the more explosion you have off the bottom. Since
I max out on my last set, good form is foremost in my mind. No pitching forward,
no arching my back, and I keep my butt lower than my body’s centre of gravity.
Never does it thrust backward and upward. Concentrate on getting a pump in your
quads.
EXERCISE 2
Leg presses Here, you’ll definitely need a spotter — better yet,
a spotter on each side. First, I pyramid up through my normal four sets for 15
reps per set. When I attain maximum pump during my heaviest set, I have my spotters
quickly strip a plate from each side and, without rest, continue with another
set. When I’m again pumped to the max, I have them strip another plate
from each side and continue without rest. I keep these descending sets going
all the way to the bottom, until I’m pressing only one plate on each side
for a maximum pump. Every rep is full range.
EXERCISE 3
Leg extensions These are performed following the same set and rep pattern as
the leg presses. I pyramid up through four sets to failure, using enough weight
to keep my reps at 15. At the top of each rep, I peak contract. As soon as I
reach maximum pump during my last and heaviest set, I immediately drop the pin
in the weight stack about 20 pounds and, without rest, continue another set to
maximum pump. I immediately drop the pin another 20 pounds and continue in this
nonstop manner all the way to the bottom of the stack, until my quads feel as
though they’ll pop open like overcooked hot dogs. FLEX
|
|
|
|
The World's #1 Hardcore Bodybuilding Magazine
|
|
|
|