Posts Tagged ‘workout’

Plyometric MMA Training: Shock Your Body For Added Power

Sunday, January 3rd, 2010

The evolution of workout programs continues to advance the way we train.  Integrating plyometrics into your routine will help cause muscle confusion and reduce adaptation to your current workout. Although plyometrics may not be appropriate as your only workout program, we highly recommend this for people have been training for three months or more with a traditional routine.  Most fighters already use some form of plyometrics within their routine and technique drills.

What is Plyometrics? (more…)

How To Break Bodybuilding Plateaus

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

Here are some tips to help you should you find yourself in the awful situation of no progress in your bodybuilding efforts. At all costs you should avoid over-training which is believed to be one of the most common causes of hitting a plateau. Frequent colds or illness, aching muscles and joints, low energy and motivation and sleeplessness are indicators of over-training. Should you find yourself experiencing these ailments then it means you are over-training and your body is letting you know that it needs a break. By taking a couple of days off your body will be allowed to completely rejuvenate itself before easing back into training.

For each muscle group endeavor to perform exercises which vary. For example, you can use shoulder presses with a straight bar in a set then change to dumbbell shoulder presses in another set. Although this might seem to be a simple change, a different stress will be placed on the shoulder muscles which will help to break through a plateau in shoulder development. The aim is to vary the exercise so that a novel stress is placed on the targeted muscle group. This will help you by making the muscles grow as well as keeping you interested in the workouts. (more…)

Getting Ripped For Mixed Martial Arts: A Basic Training Guide

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Many MMA fighters have looked at the bodies of the weight lifters around them and wondered “How do I get ripped?” When looking at your weak muscles, it’s often difficult to imagine them being toned, ripped and chiseled without having to work out every single day with weights. Not to mention, you need to balance your MMA training to keep your technique and endurance crisp. Rather than wondering how to get ripped you should think about the following training plan that will help you get the ripped and hard body you’ve always been wanting. Not unlike your MMA training, repetition and practice are the only way to improve and obtain results.

You need first to remember that the answer to getting ripped involves a combination of proper nutrition and an excellent workout. You need to know that muscle weighs more than other body tissue and weighs a great deal more than fat. This means that you’ll need to gain weight and eat a lot of calories in order to become ripped with big and strong muscles. Your nutritional program will begin with at least 5-7 meals per day so that you eat every 2-3 hours throughout the day. You will need to base much of your diet on protein, which is the building block of muscle formation. (more…)

The Benefits Of Using Slow Lifting Techniques For Muscle Growth

Friday, October 30th, 2009

This includes doing the reps in a very slow fashion; push the weight up in 10 seconds then pause a little while the slowly down the weight in 5 seconds. This concept is used to add extra pressure on the muscle fiber resulting in increasein strength and size. It has also been credited as one of the safest lifting technique. This technique requires one to have full focus and alot of intensity. Many bodybuilders have coined in that this technique has no inflammation effects on the joints.

Slower reps are performed with the point of achieving various goals. These reps find their way in the following roles:

To display strength as opposed to building strength

There is general confusion between displaying strength and building the same. For a weightlifter lifting a heavy weight may be described as displaying strength. This display is often compared to a display of power a person has although power is described as work done per unit time, it is thought one has more power if lift a weight in very little time. However, the question lingers if this quick lifting is the best way to build strength.

For a weight lifter who lifts a weight off the floor then pauses at the shoulder level then jerks the weight up into the air; this is definately using more technique and a great amount of momentum to get the weight lifted over the head. The use of technique and momentum is good for entertainment since this is an actual display of shher strength. Thistechnique needs one to fully understand his or her neuromascular tendancies to make the lifting more efficient and easier.

The slower motions reduce the momentum of lifting considerably. This has the effect of using the muscles only to lift and no external forces. In this process the muscles experience higher levels of stimuli and tension.

The intensity aspect

Many exercise literatures point to intensity as having a major role in strength gained and even the muscle mass. Training with high number of the set and reps produces significant results only when high intensity is involved. If even the state of muscle fatigue is reached without the adequate intensity, the result may still not be forthcoming.

The muscle fibers response

The outcome of various training techniques is largely dependent on the mechanism defined by the size principle. The principle goes ahead to say that the (smaller) short muscles are synchronized before the (larger) long twitch muscles. This statement simply put, says the muscle fibers tend to be synchronized starting from the smallest to the biggest fiber. According to this principle, while the short muscles are getting fatigued, the longer muscles are just getting started and finally the whole collection of muscle fiber is fully activated. Even in fatigue the fibers are still active but they produced little forces progressively until the training stops.

With slow movements and slightly heavy load, one can attain the muscle fatigue state with say 5 reps.The intensity involved in such an exercise serves to activate the long fibers into action. Thereby the notion of fast movements in order to activate the long fibers may be laid to rest.

One may not be able to gauge the intensity of the exercise since no method has been invented yet. One may use a stop watch to check the onset of fatigue and compare it to other sessions to determine whether the intensity is increased or not.


Dane Fletcher is the world’s most prolific bodybuilding and fitness expert and is currently the executive editor for BodybuildingToday.com. If you are looking for more bodybuilding tips or information on weight training, or supplementation, please visit www.BodybuildingToday.com, the bodybuilding and fitness authority site with hundreds of articles available FREE to help you meet your goals.