WATCH: Passion Trumps Everything
Light did eventually shine. After plugging away for a couple months, I was at least strong enough to begin a meet training cycle in August. As bodyweight returned, weights on the bar moved faster and easier. Training started to click and the peaking process was even better. On meet day in December 2015, I hit an 816 squat, 711 bench press and 628 deadlift for a 25-pound PR total of 2,155. Following more than four years of setbacks and learnings, progress finally materialized. Granted, it was only 25 pounds, but it felt great.
The Program
The meet training cycle was based on programming Dave Tate created for prior competitions, and then customized based on current weaknesses. It consisted of max effort on Saturday (upper) and Sunday (lower) and dynamic effort on Tuesday (upper) and Thursday (lower). Exercises were generally done in two to four week waves. Weight would increase and reps would decrease through each wave. Main exercises were variants of the competition lifts early on and shifted to replicating the main lifts as the meet got closer. Accessory work was a larger percent of overall work early on, focused on weaknesses, and became less significant as the meet approached. Targeted weaknesses were abs and low back to remain upright and hold an arch while squatting, triceps for bench lockout, and better engagement of glutes during lockout of the deadlift. While I did not program deloads for the sake of deloading, there were two weekends that acted in a similar fashion. The first was a free weekend halfway through the cycle with no prescribed exercises or weights — I lifted heavy, just with whatever I felt like doing on those two days. This allowed me to avoid aches and pains and focus on areas that were feeling good and ready for the added work. The second was taking an entire week off when I was three weeks out from the meet. Our family had a week-long vacation with no access to a gym, so I just took it easy. This unload week was out of necessity more than anything, but it ended up being productive. Upon return to the garage for the last two weeks of training, I felt incredibly rested and strong. Family vacation or not, I plan to step away from training three weeks out from my next meet as well.
The Meet
The meet was sanctioned by the SPF and hosted byAustin Simply Fit, just north of Austin, Texas. This was a three-hour drive from my home, so the family and I made a long weekend out of it. I wasn’t planning to cut weight, but was only five pounds over the SPF’s 259 weight class cutoff, so restricted sodium and carbs for a couple days and weighed 259 on the nose. Meet director Mark Rogers was on the ball and posted the flights a few days ahead of time. I was admittedly concerned with the 86 lifters resulting in four flights of 20+ lifters each. Few things are more draining than deadlifting 12-14 hours after your first squat. However, the timer was being enforced, breaks were minimal, and the spotters and loaders were on point. The event moved quickly and the time between lifts was as expected in an efficiently run meet. Kudos to Mark and his team for that. Former S4 training partner
Ted Toalston flew from Ohio to Texas to act as handler and to explore Austin. Ted is rock-solid from a technical standpoint and is able to immediately identify flaws and to keep my head where it needs to be during competition. Lily Starobin made the trip as well. In addition to them both being of great assistance during the meet, we all had a great weekend. I can’t thank them enough.
WATCH: Ted Toalston's Four Steps of Meet Handling
Squat:
Metal Ace Pro briefs and
Ace Pro squat suit. Opened with 722 for three whites. Went to 783 for the second attempt. Good lift. Took 816 for a 16-pound PR on the third. Down and up for three more whites and a good lift. Squats had never felt better. Bench: Metal Viking Pro bench shirt. Opened with 678, good lift. Moved to 711 for the second attempt, struggled to touch, but pressed it nicely for another good lift. Here came the only adversity of the day. A month out I had strained a pectoral muscle. It hadn’t fully healed and was burning after the second attempt. I was mildly concerned, but decided to go for a five-pound PR of 755 on the final bench. The press felt fine after the touch, but I could not push through the transition point where the triceps take over. I called for the spotters to take it. No lift. Deadlift:
Metal Ace Pro squat suit. The deadlift has always been my weakest link. Getting the bar off the floor is fine, but I stall at lockout. I switched to sumo style for this meet and focused training on pushing the hips through. My deadlift numbers are still terrible, but finally showing signs of improvement. Opened with 573 for a good lift. Went to 606 on the second attempt in order to secure a whopping three pound full-meet PR and got it. Went to 628 on my final lift of the day and locked it out fairly easily. This was an 18-pound deadlift PR and bumped my meet total PR to 25 pounds at 2,155.
Conclusions
There were various technical learnings from this meet:- The
Safety Squat Yoke Bar was used prodigiously in early weeks of the training cycle and had a positive impact on ability to hold an arch. - Heavy pulldown abs using a wide squat stance helped stabilize upper body and remain more upright.
- Triceps work had lockout feeling strong, but I neglected to do enough upper back work to stabilize the bar properly during the bench press.
- Competition lifts over the last six training weeks were done more in full gear than in the past, which was desperately needed to iron out technical issues and build confidence with heavier weights.
- The family-vacation-forced unload three weeks out allowed my body to refresh and prepare for the final push to the meet.
Passion Trumps Everything. I have no designs on being a world champion and I don’t care about breaking federation records. I care about maximizing strength potential within the confines of my life’s infrastructure and established priorities, of which powerlifting ranks behind family and career. Passion is the catalyst and binder enabling the required consistency to make this process possible. Without passion, the process disintegrates. This is why saying Passion Trumps Everything makes sense to me. Passion is not all that is needed to achieve what is sought. However, without passion, the journey never happens.






































































