Swiss bar) • 2- and 3-
board presses • Flat and incline presses with
chains (barbell or Swiss bar) • Flat presses with
bands When it comes to training the back, I’ve used every pull-up and chin-up known to man, but most of the time, I just have my athletes change their grip (pronated, supinated, parallel), width, and load (body weight or adding an external load such as a weight vest or dip belt with weights). Here are some of the rows I use the most: • One-arm dumbbell rows • Bent over rows (supinated and pronated) • Seated cable rows (all variations) The pull-ups and chin-ups are used for both low reps and high reps. But the rows are almost always used for no less than six reps because going really heavy often becomes a circus act for most people. The majority of the time, the rows are for putting on muscle and the chin-ups and pull-ups are for increasing relative strength. Almost all the athletes I train within the grappling sports have had injuries to the neck, shoulders, and thoracic spine (myself included), so assistance exercises to strengthen these areas are paramount. Typically, if I have an athlete who has problems with these areas, fixing them makes him stronger in the bigger lifts just like fixing the alignment of a car would make it go faster and drive better. For the lower body, the main lifts I use to drive up the predictor lift (back or front squat) are: • several squat variations • several deadlift variations The supplemental lifts used are: • Standing and seated good mornings • Romanian deadlifts (barbell and dumbbell) •
Glute ham raises •
Reverse hypers • Back extensions Grapplers need a lot of unilateral lower body training because of structural imbalances. Many of my athletes aren’t initially qualified for squats because of structural weaknesses. So the majority of the time, unilateral exercises are done first to correct these problems. Here are a few I use often: • Bulgarian split squats (dumbbell or barbell) • Front foot elevated cable split squats • Reverse Lunge Off Box • Step-up (barbell or dumbbell; height dependent on what you’re targeting) If you have the luxury of training with Strongman implements, here are a few more exercises I use a lot for legs: •
Sled drags (backward and forward; time and weight dependent on the training objective) •
Prowler push • Tire flips


















































































