Bombing or Winning—Which Was Better?By Billy MimnaughFor www.EliteFTS.com
I decided to do another meet about a month later in New Jersey while I was still strong. I trained for this meet with Teddy Forbes (1008-lb squat) and Matt Rhodes (of elite fame). We felt if I could just correct some glitches in my squat form, I could hit a fairly large number. Things went very well in training. I was hitting depth, and I wasn’t lying over in the hole. Everything went well. On meet day, everything I learned went out the window, and I reverted back to my old habits. Typically, I bombed. It was a HUGE disappointment because my strength had NEVER been better. Which was the more beneficial meet—the one where things went my way
or the one where everything went wrong? Without a doubt, it’s the latter
and here’s why… I’ve been following Westside Barbell’s methods for close to fifteen years. Box squatting took me to new levels of strength development and made me successful in the sport. It not only helped me squat but helped my deadlift as well. Without Westside, I would have been a competitor on the state level for my entire career. However, it has run its course. Because of injuries,
box squatting has become extremely painful. I
now can’t translate my form on the box to a regular squat. I can’t judge
my depth, and I lay over in the hole. It’s become a real mess. So, I
decided to train with Teddy and free squat. We don’t do progressive
overload, but we wave the weights and intensity up and down while only
free squatting. Everything was going great, but what happened on meet
day? The first thing that went wrong was something that I never even considered. When I train in the gym, I’m very relaxed. I don’t get all psyched up, and it actually looks like I’m bored and using very little intensity. I do this because I’ve found that when I get super psyched or stressed out, I tend to tense all the wrong muscles and inevitably tear something. So, I train in a very relaxed, laid back manner, rarely speaking and just going about my business. However, while this works great in the gym and keeps me healthy, in a meet atmosphere, I’m unable to mimic this feeling. Because of nerves and stress, I start getting very tense. I start using all the wrong muscles, and I can no longer listen to verbal cues. Even if I could, I can’t get my body to follow what my brain is telling it to do. Even though I was able to squat better in the gym, at the meet my body just followed the path that it was accustomed to. No matter how hard I tried, I just couldn’t translate my new form onto the platform. The solution to this is time. I need to train much longer and much
heavier for longer periods so that my new form is natural and not
something I have to think about. This is easily corrected. A good lesson
learned. Another problem is my training itself and my rep schemes. Because of
years of injuries, I have to train in
squat briefs from set one. Even if
I take the bar, I need to wear briefs. So my sets look like this: 135 X
3, 225 X 3, 315 X 3, 405 X 3, 495 X 3, 600 X 1, and 700 X 1. This is all
performed in briefs. Then, I’ll put on my suit and hit 775 X 1 and
finish with whatever I’m supposed to do that day. For example, I may
have to do 835 X 1. Here’s the problem. Because I’m wearing briefs, EVERY squat that I do is high from 135 lbs right through to 600-700 lbs. For the latter weight, I might get it in, but I might not. Then, I put the suit on and 775 lbs is three inches high and 835 lbs might be in or it might not. Think about that. When am I hitting legal depth? Perhaps on two reps? Maybe? That isn’t acceptable. I need to get many more sets in at legal depth. I need to know what
hitting depth feels like every time I’m in meet mode numbers. No longer
can I say, “It was an inch high so if I add 40 lbs I will be in.” I need
to get to a weight and get depth over and over and over again to see how
it feels. I need to know where my body needs to be and how it should
feel. No more guess work. No more hoping and praying. No more gifts or
hopes of a gift from a friendly judge. I need to learn how to get my
stiff ass to depth without thinking about it. Without hearing fifteen
verbal commands. Without wondering where my hips are. I need to know it
and know it well. I wish I would have figured this out years ago. What good is getting VERY strong if you’re unable to demonstrate it at a meet because you can’t hit depth? Who cares if I can handle 750 lbs in a good morning when I’m three inches high in the squat at the meet? All the strength in the world is useless when you bomb because of depth. There aren’t any awards for the strongest high squatter or the best built “one inch above parallel” squatter or even the “fastest out of the hole but that’s two inches high” squatter. No one cares if you handle weights easily or can sit in the hole (the hole being two inches high) for twenty seconds if you can’t drop that last two inches. No, powerlifting is about strength, but you need to be strong and get in. Lesson learned. At this point, I’d rather be weaker and get in than be super strong and bomb and only have training partners know that I’m strong. I need to be able to demonstrate my strength on the platform, not just in a gym. Another thing I learned is that you need to wear the
briefs that
you’re wearing at the gym in the meet. I used the same size briefs, but
the ones I put on at the meet were tighter. This caused the problem with
my knees coming in. Stupid, stupid, stupid. Typical. I will look at this year as a learning experience. I’m still learning
after 25 years of competing,
Billy Mimnaugh has been lifting for 25 years and competing for 20 years. He has won state and regional titles in both bodybuilding and powerlifting including the AAU Maine State Bodybuilding Championships, NPC New England Bodybuilding Masters Championship, APF Maine State, USPF Connecticut State, and the WNPF Region 1. He is a three time runner up in the APF Senior Nationals in the 308 lbs class and a two time runner up in the IPA Nationals. He also placed third in the IPA Seniors and won two APF junior nationals titles. He has been in 50 bodybuilding and powerlifting events and has never placed out of the top three in any event (except for three bomb outs). His best total is 2303 lbs at super, 2232 lbs at 308 lbs, and 2120 lbs at 275 lbs.
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