This morning, I was at my local fitness centre training and witnessed an instructor taking a person through a workout, which included the push press and the hang power clean as part of a circuit.
It got me thinking that more and more instructors at gyms around the world are turning to the modified Olympic movements as mainstays in their exercise selection and programming.
Technically, though, the instructor had basically no idea and the resultant performance of the trainee was at worst potentially injurious and at best a distant similarity of what was supposed to be performed.
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I used to run a three-hour clinic on the use of strength and power exercises techniques and programming.
The basic outline and notes are included here for you.
I firmly believe you have to start at the simplest movement that someone can master correctly, and then, over time, progress from the simple to the more complex movements if it is warranted for what the person requires in their training plan. The process is one of progressive skill acquisition.
Back in the 1980s and ‘90s, the NSCA published exercise checklists in both the Journal of Strength and Conditioning and a number of other publications that assisted people in preparation for the CSCS certification, such as:
Basics of Strength and Conditioning Manual
Exercise Technique Manual for Resistance Training
Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning
For example, using the squat:
- Chest up at all times
- Break at the hips first then the knees
- Keep knees aligned and tracking the toes
- Squat down to a position where the thighs are parallel to the floor
- Keep the weight towards the heels at all times
go here.
Or you can get a copy of
Dave Tate’s Free Squat Manual.
If a person can do all of these to your satisfaction, you can load weight onto the bar. But if they cannot complete all five items on the list during the following session, reduce the weight and try again to achieve a 5/5 score, and then progress the load at a slower rate.
If you are progressing to learn the power snatch, you may follow this progression from my course:
- Overhead Squat
- Pressing Snatch Balance
- Snatch Balance
- Snatch Press in Squat/Split
- Push Press Behind Neck
- Snatch Grip Deadlift
- Snatch Grip Shrugs
- Snatch Grip Deadlift + Shrug
- Snatch High Pull
- Muscle Snatch/Cuban Press
- Power Snatch
- Olympic Snatch in Squat/Split
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Back in May 2015, I wrote an article titled
“Progression and Regression System for Exercise Selection,” which dealt with this exact scenario in sports programming.
Today, the NSCA has released its most up-to-date course,
Foundations of Coaching Lifts, and I would urge any instructor or trainer to attend one of these courses in order to get a solid basic knowledge of the techniques and progressions of training with the major lifts. The NSCA website will have all of the details of these courses and where they are around the country and the world.
It is great to see people lifting in gyms using principles and ideas from
powerlifting, Olympic lifting, and
strongman rather than just blindly following bodybuilding programs. The rise of athletic, not aesthetic programming needs competent, well-trained trainers and instructors to ensure that the movement prospers gathering momentum and more people train movements and not just muscles.
Key points to remember:
- Simplicity to complexity over time
- Weight training is a skill; perfect practice makes perfect technique
- Hasten slowly; you are in this for the long haul
- Less is often more since you are performing multi-joint lifts; often just two or three lifts in a workout will be all you need
Priority Set and Rep Schedule
Exercise 1: 6 sets
- Week 1: 6 x 6 @ 75% (INOL = 1.44)
- Week 2: 6 x 4 @ 85% (INOL = 1.6)
- Week 3: 6 x 5 @ 80% (INOL = 1.5)
- Week 4: 6 x 3 @ 90% (INOL = 1.8)
- Week 1: 6 x 6 @ 75% (INOL = 1.44)
- Week 2: 2 x (6/5/4) @ (75%/80%, 85%) INOL = 1.44
- Week 3: 2 x (5/4/3) @ (80%/85%/90%) INOL = 1.63
- Week 4: 2 x (4/3/2) @ (85%/90%/95%) INOL = 1.93
- Week 1: 5 x 5 @ 80% (INOL = 1.25)
- Week 2: 2 x 5 @ 80%, 85%, 3 x 3 @ 90% (INOL = 1.48)
- Week 3: 5 x 3 @ 90% (INOL = 1.5)
- Week 4: 5,4,3,2,1 @ 80%, 85%, 90%, 95%, 100+% (INOL = 1.95)
- 5 progressively heavier singles starting at 95%
- Week 1: 4 x 6 @ 75% (INOL = 0.96)
- Week 2: 4 x 4 @ 90% (INOL = 1.6)
- Week 3: 4 x 8 @ 75% (INOL = 1.28)
- Week 4: 4 x 2 @ 95% (INOL = 1.6)
- Week 1: 4 x 3/3 @ 85% (INOL = 1.6)
- Week 2: 4 x 2/2/2 @ 90% (INOL = 2.4)
- Week 3: 4 x 3/2/1 @ 85%, 90%, 95% (INOL = 3.6)
- Week 4: 4 x 1/1/1/1/1/1 @ 95%+ (INOL = 4.8)


























































































