I’m 44-years-old and broken, but I’m not done yet. This will be a 10-part series on my road to a comeback.

Let me start off with a little history. I lifted most of my life and was always my own best competition. I competed in powerlifting, Strongman and grip at fairly high levels. I won the APF Submaster Nationals in the 308-pound weight class. I think it was 2005, or 2006 – I can’t remember. I haven't competed in a meet since 2006. I didn't train for that meet, I just jumped in at the last minute because about 10 of the guys in my crew asked me to. I only got my openers. It was a dark day at TPS.

There are many reasons why I only got the openers. The main reason was a lack of preparation, but a laundry list of injuries was there too. There are many other reasons why I haven't competed since 2006, as well. Let’s look at the injuries first.

Laundry List of Injuries

In 1998, I tore the patella tendon in my left knee in a fight, which required three surgeries. I was unable to walk for a year, and the rehab was difficult. I crushed my left Achilles tendon in a motorcycle accident in 1990. This left me unable to walk for about six months. The doctors said I would be lucky to walk right, let alone compete at anything after that. Screw them, they are idiots. I have a torn labrum in my left shoulder, which severely hampers my bench press. My left hip hurts so much all the time that I can’t stand up straight sometimes, and I just rehabbed a bicep tear from lifting stones in December and I tore my left gastroc in 2007. There are a few more little nagging injuries, but they're incidental.

Due to personal and professional reasons, my training was poor from about 2006 until about a year ago. Sure, I trained, but the injuries and the amount of hours I worked was killing me. Every time I was starting to get strong, something broke...usually because I did something stupid.

Out-of-Shape

I let myself go physically, too. I went from 305 pounds, with the top row of abs peeking out in 2002, to about 295 with 12 inches of blubber around my waist sloshing around like a big trash bag full of water under my shirt.



Murph3-19-2011_murph

About six months ago, I decided that I needed to do something about my appearance and get rid of the belly fat. I mainly wanted to lose the belly fat so that I didn’t die of a stroke and leave my family alone. There's also one thing that I didn't accomplished yet and it was gnawing at me all the time in the back of my head.

When I was younger, I read about Hatfield’s 1000-pound squat and said to myself, “I will do that someday.” That day never came. I was going in the right direction, but got sidetracked. Business, family, injuries...whatever, they're all just excuses. I said to myself, “Just do it.”

With that in mind, the first step was to get rid of the fat. I started to clean up my act and do things right when I was called to do an interview and article for Muscle and Fitness by my friend Sean Hyson. They wanted to know what to eat before a big lift. I decided to interview a number of very successful lifters and they were using John Kiefer and Carbohydrate Back Loading. I was skeptical, but open. My mind changed when I saw Brian Carroll at the Lexen Extreme meet in March. He was JACKED. Brian was one of the guys I interviewed for the MF piece, but it didn’t sink in until I saw him – he was JACKED. Oh, I said that already.

Carb Backloading

As soon as I got home, I bought Kiefer’s book and read it through quickly. I half-assedly (is that a word?) jumped into back loading. I started out at well over 30 percent body fat and 270 pounds. I then reread the book about five times, called Kiefer, and spoke with him numerous times until I understood how to do it.

Currently, I lost over 35 pounds of body fat and gained an equal amount of muscle. Now, I’m 275 pounds and will stay there until I'm done with my quest. I won’t try and lose any more body fat until the lifting goals are attained. If it happens, good. If it doesn’t, that’s cool too.

Tune-Up Meet Time

Around the same time, I decided to get ready for a tune-up meet. I called up my boy Spud and asked for a program. I'm tired of writing my own programs. While I had great success with this, I just wanted to focus on lifting and accountability to a coach. Spud came through with a killer program and it worked great. Spud is a busy guy and I didn’t want to torture him too much, so I enlisted the services of Brian Carroll.

Brian has been my coach for a few months and things are going very well. I'm confident that I'll hit my end goal with Brian’s help. He has a knack for knowing just how much volume to give me and not overdo it.

I was going to wait and do a meet when my numbers were better. Before I was banged-up, I had a 700 pound squat in just a belt and a 710 deadlift in a belt. My bench has always sucked, but my overhead was at a solid 365 – strict. I wanted to wait until I got these numbers back, or at least close.

Making My Comeback

However, at Brian’s urging, I entered a meet. This is where this story begins. I'll be returning to the platform at the RPS meet in Attleboro, Mass., on October 21. It's a local meet and I'm using it as a tune-up to give me actual lifts to base a real training cycle of off, so I no longer have to follow one based off gym lifts.

I hope to hit a squat somewhere around 700, bench around 425 and pull whatever pounds I can (hopefully around 550-600).

I will be lifting in the best gear I ever used and used a lot – Metal. I currently use

Jack briefs, an

Ace suit, a

Jack shirt and a

King Deadlifter. I will be switching to a Jack suit soon.

I'll be taping all of my work sets and posting them with the articles. I was a little leery of this because the weights I'm using are paltry, but I said to myself (I talk to myself a lot), “I don’t care what anyone has to say about my lifting, let’s see what the haters are saying about themselves when they have walked in my shoes." I encourage you to watch the video and learn from my mistakes.

Keep reading elitefts™ for weekly updates on my progress.

Videos:

Squat and Bench

Deadlift

 

 

C.J. Murphy
Tagged: Powerlifting

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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