
Back at The Table, Dave Tate and Mark Dugdale are taking on more of your questions. Today they respond to a question that their many years of experience helping other lifters makes them uniquely qualified to answer:
Mark answers first, from a bodybuilding perspective, and says it comes down to total time spent training. The muscles need to be trained over time, for a long time, before you're an advanced lifter. This isn't to say that advanced lifters are going to be better than beginner lifters, or that beginner lifters can't beat intermediate or advanced lifters in a competition. Lifters can train for a very long time yet see terrible to no progress. Likewise, a beginner lifter may see extraordinary progress and surpass intermediate and advanced lifters who have been training for much longer. Dave begins his answer by mentioning several classifications he's referred to in the past. First, the self-classification:How do you qualify a beginner, intermediate, and advanced lifter?
- If you think you're an intermediate lifter, you're a beginner lifter.
- If you think you're an advanced lifter, you're an intermediate lifter.
- If you think you're a beginner, you're probably an advanced lifter.
- If you've been hurt training, you're a beginner. This means you've pulled a muscle.
- If you've been injured, you're an intermediate. This means you've pulled a muscle and been forced to take several weeks off training.
- If you're fucked up, you're advanced. This means you have to train with an issue that's never really going to go away.
WATCH: Table Talk with Mark Dugdale — Training Evolution and the Genetic Ceiling



















































































