Jim Wendler’s 5/3/1 program is built on the very same principle. You can’t make the 80 percent bigger without making the 100 percent bigger. This doesn’t have to be some incredibly complicated and intricate program either. Start with a weight your athletes can do for a solid 2–3 reps (and by solid, I mean good form and fast bar speed). Then add 5–10 pounds in each training session until bar speed or form break down. At that point, drop the weight back, reestablish a new “starting weight” like you did before, and work back up. Sound familiar? When programming for the Olympic lifts, you have to decide if you’re training the lift or using the lift to build a particular component. I don’t really give a damn what my football or basketball players’ max power clean is. All I care about is if that lift is making them more explosive athletes. If not, I need to tweak my programming or find a different set of lifts to build that particular aspect of their performance. Everyone loves a big 1RM in any lift, but it isn’t the “end all be all” when building athletic performance.
Olympic Lifting Considerations
Jim Wendler’s 5/3/1 program is built on the very same principle. You can’t make the 80 percent bigger without making the 100 percent bigger. This doesn’t have to be some incredibly complicated and intricate program either. Start with a weight your athletes can do for a solid 2–3 reps (and by solid, I mean good form and fast bar speed). Then add 5–10 pounds in each training session until bar speed or form break down. At that point, drop the weight back, reestablish a new “starting weight” like you did before, and work back up. Sound familiar? When programming for the Olympic lifts, you have to decide if you’re training the lift or using the lift to build a particular component. I don’t really give a damn what my football or basketball players’ max power clean is. All I care about is if that lift is making them more explosive athletes. If not, I need to tweak my programming or find a different set of lifts to build that particular aspect of their performance. Everyone loves a big 1RM in any lift, but it isn’t the “end all be all” when building athletic performance.
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