
One of my favorite lifters, Janis Finkelman, recently posted about her pursuit of a bigger bench press and the need to gain muscle in order for this happen. As I read her post, I realized that her point, while a seemingly simple one, was also something that is largely overlooked by many women, both competitors and recreational lifers alike. Of the big three lifts, the bench press is universally the weakest lift for women. The reasons for this aren't mysterious at all. Women naturally have smaller upper body dimensions than men and generally far less muscle mass. Pressing, whether it's a bench press or overhead press, is always a weak pattern at the onset of training. Out of all the clients I've ever trained, only one time have I ever had a girl tell me that she had a very strong upper body—she was a former gymnast. Whereas most guys intensely focus on training their upper bodies when they first start lifting, women almost always do the opposite: they train legs and glutes. This leads to what I call a “three-plate lower body with a one-plate upper body.” Women will have very muscular lower halves, with the squat or deadlift being their best lift, but their upper body lags significantly in comparison. And said simply, they have a poverty bench press, essentially the opposite of a “bro.” What's to be done? Nothing earth shattering. As Janis said, you have to build muscle. Technique isn’t the problem. You need muscle to move weight. Period. Muscle is ultimately what reinforces your technical execution of any one lift. People get overly obsessive with their technical execution and fail to recognize that their strength isn’t limited by how they move the bar but the muscle, or lack thereof, that they're moving the bar with.
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Is technique not important then? It absolutely is, but there are certain logical gaps that people overlook when building their lifts. The bench press is a prime example. Have you ever seen a big raw bencher with skinny triceps, no pecs and no shoulder development? I never have, yet this reasoning is readily applied to the squat, with women taking pride in having muscular thighs (fuck yeah) and moving weight. But then this doesn’t get applied to bench pressing for whatever reason. The bench press is a constant struggle, with the necessity for mass seemingly overlooked in the pursuit of a perfect technical setup and execution. Worthy pursuits no doubt, but you need muscle to execute them nonetheless.

The Margin of Missing
This is something of a personal concept that I've come up with. It basically means, “What's the margin of error that you can fuck up a high percentage lift and still get the bar up?” The less muscle you have, the smaller your margin of being able to screw up technically and still save your lift. Muscle enables you to grind, struggle and gut a lift out. A lack of muscle means that you get pinned. Simple concept. With the bench press, most women’s margin of missing is zero when they get into heavier weights, like 85 percent and above. If they miss the groove, the bar won't go anywhere. Again, you need upper body mass. So accepting the idea that you need upper body mass, how do you go about building it?Enter Bodybuilding
Women need a targeted approach to muscle work for their upper bodies. The likelihood that “just benching” and doing some banded push-downs will result in complete muscular development is very low. This approach doesn't work for most men and it definitely isn’t sufficient for women. Women should focus on five integral areas along with suggested exercises for each that I've found to be most effective. You'll notice immediately that all the suggested set/rep schemes are geared toward muscular hypertrophy. These aren't movements for hitting one-rep maxes. 1. Wrist strength: This is something that gets overlooked. Women can have very petite wrists and their ability to grip the bar and stabilize it is heavily impacted by wrist forearm strength. A slight shift in wrist positioning at the bottom of the lift can be the difference between making or missing a lift. For this reason, all my female clients always do direct forearm work, regardless of whether they compete or not.- Dumbbell hammer curls
- Pronated cable forearm curls

2. Arm strength: Bis and tris, baby. While triceps are without question the more integral muscle in pressing, bicep strength and grip strength both tie together as well. Your ability to handle heavy weights will be compromised if your triceps development is lacking.
- Close grip push-ups
- Dips
- Push-downs, reverse grip push-downs
- Chest supported rows (dumbbells, T-bar, machine...just pick one)
- Seated rows
- Chin-ups

4. Shoulder strength: The “front delts” may contribute the most to the bench press, but fully developed shoulders make for strong pressing in direction. Julia Ladewski has awesome shoulder development and can bust out push-ups and dips with ease. Her recent transition to raw lifting has her readily benching over her body weight for reps, and she can use 70-pound dumbbells on the flat bench for higher reps as well.
- Dips and push-ups again (you really ought to be doing these)
- Incline dumbbell pressing
- Shoulder presses (standing or seated, machine or free weight)
- Front, lateral and rear delt raises
- Flat dumbbell press
- Wide grip bench press
- Dips and push-ups again (because they work)
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As Swede Burns says, this isn't the science of rockets. All that I've outlined above is an argument that training the entirety of your upper body is important. Yet many fail to commit to do this. If your current training has a lack of direct muscle work and your bench press is impoverished, a change is in order. One of the current trends in powerlifting is to have the fourth training day of the week be a “pump” day. This is an effective solution and provides a complete training session to work on the above areas.

While I can't offer a “program” without knowing the needs and history of an individual, the following is an operative example from a current client of a primary and secondary day.
Primary Day:
(In this girl's case, we're using fifth set programming for her big three lifts.)- A. Bench presses, 5 X 3 at 70%
- B. Assisted overhand pull-ups, 5 X 6–10
- C. Dumbbell presses, 3 X 10–20
- D. Assisted dips, 3 X 8–12
- E1. Zottman curls, 2 X 15
- E2. Incline dumbbell flies, 2 X 15–20
Secondary Day:
- A. Machine shoulder presses, 5 X 8–10
- B1. Supinated rows, 4 X 20, 15, 12, 10
- B2. Front, lateral and rear delt raises, 3 X 25, 20, 15 reps
- C1. Reverse grip push-downs, 2 X 12–20
- C2. Pronated push-downs, 2 X 12–20
- D1. Face pulls, 2 X 20–25
- D2. Diamond push-ups, 2 sets to failure
Swedes' 5thSet for Powerlifting ebook.
Get to Work
Hopefully, this has made you reconsider some aspects of your own training and/or that of your female clients. A lack of muscle will make any exercise that requires the usage of that muscle difficult to perform. Beyond this article's basic premise, keep in mind that sometimes the most obvious observation is where the solution to the problem lies. Also, thank you, Janice, for the thoughts. Keep growing!


















































































