Jim Wendler and his 5/3/1 program. I think most of us have read Jim’s program once or twice. He calls it “the simplest and most effective training system to increase raw strength.” By starting any lifting day out conservatively and ending with a maximum number of repetitions at a weight 5–10 lbs heavier than you have done the week before, you achieve a new personal record (PR). At the same time, you haven’t burned yourself out trying to achieve that PR. (For even more on Jim’s 5/3/1 program, I highly recommend purchasing the book or e-book.) I really identified with the program, and after reading it through a few times in the beginning of 2009, I went and applied it to myself on April 27, 2009. After following it for six months, I was seeing great success in my own strength and physique. However, as a trainer, I feel nothing is ever really worth its weight in gold unless it can be applied to my clients to help them achieve their goals. I decided to get Theo on the 5/3/1 program to help her gain size and continue to gain strength. We began on July 29, 2009 after I had assessed Theo’s 90 percent max for each lift. Because her goal was now a figure competition, I tweaked a few things to sculpt her physique without compromising her personal strength goals. Following the 5/3/1 protocol of four training sessions a week was relatively easy. She trains Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays with me and Mondays on her own at home. I started her training week on Wednesday with squats. Using super compensation (manipulating recovery time between workouts to stimulate the muscle for optimum results), I increased training volume for more leg size. I followed the squats on Wednesday with deadlifts on Friday. We benched on Saturday followed by “homework” on Monday, which was a combination of overhead presses with a little more leg work. I used the “boring but big” approach (i.e. squats followed by more squats) in combination with periodization (i.e. hamstring work, ab work, and quad work for a balanced workout and body) for the assistance work (also helped increase leg size). For example, she first squatted 5/3/1. Using the “boring but big” approach, I followed barbell squats with front squats using a kettlebell. I followed that with dumbbell walking lunges. Using the periodization method, I ended by alternating single leg, plate-loaded leg extensions with glute ham raises. If there was time left in the hour, I alternated ab work with foam rolling. By using Jim’s basic 5/3/1 template and manipulating the way I applied it to Theo, her legs grew considerably and so did her overall strength. Shelby helped this process by having her “eat to grow” before switching back to “eat to get lean.” By the third week of the fourth month into the 5/3/1 program, not only was she really lean for the upcoming show but she was still strong. For example, her final squat total at a max of 190 lbs was an impressive 180 lbs or 95 percent for four reps. And this is from a girl who is five feet, two inches and weighed about 108 lbs at this point. Needless to say, I am very proud. November 12, 2009, one week out Theo’s final results were just amazing. At the competition, she placed in the top three of all three figure categories that she entered. Due to the “criteria” for figure, they couldn’t place her higher because she showed more muscle definition than the judges wanted in a figure client. Theo was very proud of her physique despite being told she wasn’t soft enough for figure. She has decided to compete again! She will compete as a light weight bodybuilder where the hard work that went into the physique she wanted will not only be recognized but highly rewarded. Still, her unbelievable muscle definition was noticed. The feedback she received from the audience, competitors, and judges was extremely complimentary and very flattering. In fact, the judges felt she was the most conditioned woman on stage! What they didn’t know from a single glance is that behind that tiny shredded woman was a great deal of physical strength and power plus a small team of people helping her with her training program and nutrition. One can’t usually succeed completely alone. Jim’s 5/3/1 program really helped me create a competitive figure competitor while increasing leg size, overall strength, and a shredded physique in the few months that I did. Without Shelby Starnes of Troponin Nutrition, neither Theo nor I would have gotten the nutrition needed for her success spot on. Without Sue Steele, IFBB professional light weight bodybuilder, posing coach, and friend, she wouldn’t have the suit she wore with pride and her poses wouldn’t have highlighted her physique the way they did. As specialists, none of us would have succeeded without Theodora, whose continued drive and ambition to succeed in all she sets out to do allows us to utilize our skills to the fullest.
Getting Ready for Figure Competition with 5/3/1 Strength and Carb Cycling
Jim Wendler and his 5/3/1 program. I think most of us have read Jim’s program once or twice. He calls it “the simplest and most effective training system to increase raw strength.” By starting any lifting day out conservatively and ending with a maximum number of repetitions at a weight 5–10 lbs heavier than you have done the week before, you achieve a new personal record (PR). At the same time, you haven’t burned yourself out trying to achieve that PR. (For even more on Jim’s 5/3/1 program, I highly recommend purchasing the book or e-book.) I really identified with the program, and after reading it through a few times in the beginning of 2009, I went and applied it to myself on April 27, 2009. After following it for six months, I was seeing great success in my own strength and physique. However, as a trainer, I feel nothing is ever really worth its weight in gold unless it can be applied to my clients to help them achieve their goals. I decided to get Theo on the 5/3/1 program to help her gain size and continue to gain strength. We began on July 29, 2009 after I had assessed Theo’s 90 percent max for each lift. Because her goal was now a figure competition, I tweaked a few things to sculpt her physique without compromising her personal strength goals. Following the 5/3/1 protocol of four training sessions a week was relatively easy. She trains Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays with me and Mondays on her own at home. I started her training week on Wednesday with squats. Using super compensation (manipulating recovery time between workouts to stimulate the muscle for optimum results), I increased training volume for more leg size. I followed the squats on Wednesday with deadlifts on Friday. We benched on Saturday followed by “homework” on Monday, which was a combination of overhead presses with a little more leg work. I used the “boring but big” approach (i.e. squats followed by more squats) in combination with periodization (i.e. hamstring work, ab work, and quad work for a balanced workout and body) for the assistance work (also helped increase leg size). For example, she first squatted 5/3/1. Using the “boring but big” approach, I followed barbell squats with front squats using a kettlebell. I followed that with dumbbell walking lunges. Using the periodization method, I ended by alternating single leg, plate-loaded leg extensions with glute ham raises. If there was time left in the hour, I alternated ab work with foam rolling. By using Jim’s basic 5/3/1 template and manipulating the way I applied it to Theo, her legs grew considerably and so did her overall strength. Shelby helped this process by having her “eat to grow” before switching back to “eat to get lean.” By the third week of the fourth month into the 5/3/1 program, not only was she really lean for the upcoming show but she was still strong. For example, her final squat total at a max of 190 lbs was an impressive 180 lbs or 95 percent for four reps. And this is from a girl who is five feet, two inches and weighed about 108 lbs at this point. Needless to say, I am very proud. November 12, 2009, one week out Theo’s final results were just amazing. At the competition, she placed in the top three of all three figure categories that she entered. Due to the “criteria” for figure, they couldn’t place her higher because she showed more muscle definition than the judges wanted in a figure client. Theo was very proud of her physique despite being told she wasn’t soft enough for figure. She has decided to compete again! She will compete as a light weight bodybuilder where the hard work that went into the physique she wanted will not only be recognized but highly rewarded. Still, her unbelievable muscle definition was noticed. The feedback she received from the audience, competitors, and judges was extremely complimentary and very flattering. In fact, the judges felt she was the most conditioned woman on stage! What they didn’t know from a single glance is that behind that tiny shredded woman was a great deal of physical strength and power plus a small team of people helping her with her training program and nutrition. One can’t usually succeed completely alone. Jim’s 5/3/1 program really helped me create a competitive figure competitor while increasing leg size, overall strength, and a shredded physique in the few months that I did. Without Shelby Starnes of Troponin Nutrition, neither Theo nor I would have gotten the nutrition needed for her success spot on. Without Sue Steele, IFBB professional light weight bodybuilder, posing coach, and friend, she wouldn’t have the suit she wore with pride and her poses wouldn’t have highlighted her physique the way they did. As specialists, none of us would have succeeded without Theodora, whose continued drive and ambition to succeed in all she sets out to do allows us to utilize our skills to the fullest.
EliteFTS Table Talk— Where strength meets truth. Hosted byDave Tate, Table Talk cuts through the noise to bring raw, unfiltered conversations about training, coaching, business, and life under the bar. No fluff. No hype. Just decades of experience — shared to make you stronger in and out of the gym.
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