In an ideal world, a lifter's lifestyle and recovery capabilities line up with a four-day conjugate training split that includes a max effort and dynamic effort workout for both upper and lower body lifts each week. In the real world, this often isn't the case. For either time constraints or an inability to recover optimally, many lifters seek an alternative to the traditional template. In this Table Talk video, Dave summarizes several questions he has received on this topic and gives an all-inclusive response:
"How do you run a conjugate program only three days a week?As an example of how this might work, Dave notes that you can rotate four days on a three-day per week schedule, as such:
- Monday — Max Effort Lower Body
- Wednesday — Max Effort Upper Body
- Friday — Dynamic Effort Lower Body
- Monday — Dynamic Effort Upper Body
Will results be less than optimal training on a modified split like this? It's all based upon recovery, Dave explains. If you're trying to slam four training sessions into seven days but you can't recover, your results will be less than if you expand the cycle length. You may perform fewer training sessions over the same time frame, but your results will be better. The optimal point is always going to be where your recovery matches your training.
MORE: Training to Peak for a Meet
Dave goes on to say that where this can get tricky is when planning for a meet. When developing your plan for peaking for a meet, you want to work backwards from the day of the competition. This is much easier to do with weeklong cycles. For the sake of simple peaking rules, Dave lays out a scenario where you want your last heavy lifts to fall on the following days:
- Last Bench: Seven days out
- Last Squat: 10 days out
- Last Deadlift: 14 days out
The lesson here is to forget about trying to use the perfect sequence in every situation. Don't try to force things to fit a template. Form the template around the lifter instead and you'll be far more successful.
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