Finding The Ideal Training Split - Hatfield 2012
Finding The Ideal Training Split - Hatfield 2012
Finding The Ideal Training Split - Hatfield 2012
All these factors, and perhaps several more as yet undreamed of, will variably affect how frequently you
should train each body part and how best to split your routine.
Several years ago, after chatting with Arthur and reading some of his thinking on the topic, I began charting
other lifters' reps at 80 percent max. I found that guys who were so-called "fast" gainers were only able to do
4-6 reps at 80 percent, while lifters who seemingly never made great gains were able to rep out at around 15-
20 reps with 80 percent of their max. Apparently, so-called "fast gainers" have rather poor anaerobic strength
endurance. This is explainable in part by the fact that they're probably mostly white muscle fiber, which has
fast twitch/low oxidative capabilities. Conversely, slow gainers are probably mostly red muscle fiber (slow
twitch/high oxidative) and therefore may possess greater ability for rapid during-set recovery.
The problem is, however, that each muscle group's tolerance to exercise probably differs. Each exercise you
do for each body part can - and often does - possess an entirely individual rep ability at 80 percent max. To
discern your specific tolerance level for each body part, follow these simple instructions:
1. Determine your approximate one rep maximum (1RM) for each exercise.
2. Load 80 percent on the bar (machine) & rep out with it for one all-out effort to see how many reps you can
do.
3. Apply this information to the table below to determine each body part's exercise tolerance.
4. Take into account ALL of the factors listed above that can affect your exercise tolerance.
5. Critically evaluate whether your predicted exercise tolerance levels stand up to what you know from
experience to be true. Remember, “low tolerance” means that you probably make easy gains for that body
part, and “high tolerance” means that you’re probably a hard gainer for that body part.
Here is an example of what I've found in regards to exercise tolerances for fast gainers, average gainers and
slow gainers. Perhaps you'll find these figures and estimations to be pretty close estimates. But perhaps you
won't. One thing is clear, you must look! Your continued progress toward your maximum potential may well
depend on it!
6-10 -1 Low
Slow gainers often benefit most from 10 or more sets of 15-20 reps
_________________________________________________________________________
Average Gainers (usually a mix of red and white muscle fiber):
Days Of Recovery Required For Each Body Part Before Training It Again
Average gainers often benefit most from 5-8 sets of 10-12 reps
________________________________________________________________________
Fast gainers often benefit most from 3-5 sets of 4-8 reps done
explosively
________________________________________________________________________
By critically evaluating your individual muscles' tolerance to exercise, you can more easily "fine tune" your
training regimen to provide maximum gains in the shortest possible time. But don't forget the other factors that
may affect your recovery rate. Look at the list again (above). How have you accounted for each of these
variable's effect on your progress? Have you raised or lowered your reps and sets accordingly? Have you
increased or decreased the frequency of your workouts commensurably?
Training intensity? Have you taken into account your ratio of white versus red fiber, and adjusted your
exercise load and movement speed accordingly?
Why is it that most newcomers to bodybuilding, and even most intermediate level bodybuilders, can’t make
continued gains using a split they copied from one of the pros? It’s quite simple, really. First of all, you must
be truthful with yourself in answering some basic questions. Are you as fastidious as the pro you seek to
emulate in all that you do? Your supplement schedule? Your diet? Have you as much time “in the trench” as
the pro? How long have you been forcing your body to adapt to stress? Most pros have forced adaptations to
their muscles and other bodily systems that have taken years to accomplish. As your body changes over time,
your susceptibility to further change does as well. New forms of stress force different adaptive processes to
occur, and each adaptation requires that different stressors and training schedules be devised in order to take
your body one more step closer to its maximum potential.
So, as you change your body, your body demands different scheduling for further adaptation to take place. It
isn’t simply a matter of piling on more pig iron to satisfy the progressive overload principle. It’s more
complicated than that. One of the biggest mistakes all bodybuilders tend to make is that they do not build their
programs with this important fact in mind. As you change, so must your training because your body’s
“tolerance” to that level or type of stress has changed. And, how you split your training can be an important
source of new adaptive stress to which you have not yet adapted.
Most bodybuilders are not “hard gainers” or “fast gainers” in all body parts. Further, as you get closer to your
maximum potential -- where all professional bodybuilders are -- you may become a hard gainer, whereas
earlier in your career your gains seemed to come easy. Or, maybe you’ve remained an easy gainer but have
yet to discover the type of stress your body now requires to force continued growth.
Through experimentation, I assure you that finding your own level of "tolerance" (body part per body part) will
make a big difference. Where to begin? Here are a few examples of how you can split your training program.
Adjust them at will.
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