Now that we've reached part four of Jim Wendler's 2016 Open UGSS Presentation, here is a summary of the topics Wendler has covered so far:
-
Part One — Earning the Barbell, Training Philosophy, and Industry Trends -
Part Two — Training Standards and Injury Management for Kids -
Part Three — Programming Layout for Athletes
Program Design:
- Mobility
- Jump
- Main Lift
- Assistance and Conditioning
- Squat
- Trap Bar Deadlift
- Bench Press
- DB Squat
- DB Straight Leg Deadlift
- DB Press
- DB Rows
- Chins
- Dips
- Push-Ups
- Ab Wheel
- For squat: 2-3 sets of 5 at their top weight and then a PR set
- For bench: 4 sets of 5 at their top weight and then a PR set.
- "We live on sets of five. Once the kids are ready we do PR sets."
- "We had the JV/Freshman team attempt PR sets and the attitude of the weight room has completely changed now. They think they're the cock of the walk."
- "You want athletes to get stronger but not in a smokescreen fashion."
- "When you strength train for something other than strength training, it's GPP. "
- "For sports, lifting weights is nothing more than GPP, but it has to be specific enough to carryover to your goal."
- "It stands for washed-up, lethargic, retired, used-up sportsmen. That's what WALRUS stands for."
By the minute:
- Training parameters for "athlete lower, bodybuilder upper" (0:12)
- Definition of a PR set — more doesn't always mean you're stronger (2:30)
- Strength training is GPP (3:55)
- Core lifts and assistance lifts within the program (5:07)
- The WALRUS Challenge (6:40)
- Can you overhead press instead of a variation of the main movement? (10:01)



















































































