Platform Field Manual

Mastering Your First Powerlifting Meet

A judge’s guide to commands, openers, weigh-ins, meet-day food, handlers, and the small details that keep first-time lifters from melting down.

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Meet-day scoreboard

3Attempts per lift 6-8Hours on site 1Job: execute 0Ego on openers

Bottom line

Do not wait until you feel “strong enough.” Read the rules, pick conservative openers, pack food you trust, listen for commands, and use the day to learn the sport.

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Stepping onto the platform for your first powerlifting meet can feel intimidating. The weights are heavy, the room is loud, the lights are bright, and the judges are watching every inch of every lift. But your first meet should be an exciting introduction to the sport, not a stressful ordeal.

This guide draws from the perspective of Valerie Smith, a highly decorated strength athlete and powerlifting official. Smith is a United States Powerlifting Association lifter, an international referee, the USPA state chair for Georgia, and a meet director who runs competitions in Georgia and North Carolina. With more than a decade of competition experience, she brings the rare perspective of someone who has been on the platform, in the head chair, and behind the scenes.

Use this as a meet-day map: what to expect, what to pack, how to pick attempts, and how to keep your head when the bar is loaded.

Section 01

The true purpose of your first meet

One of the most common mistakes new lifters make is waiting to compete until they feel they are strong enough. That day never really arrives. There will always be a bigger total, a cleaner technique goal, or another training block you think you need first.

Your first meet is not about breaking records. It is about getting your feet wet and learning how competition actually works. You are there to feel the timing of the flights, hear the commands, make attempts under judging standards, and experience the community.

Check your ego at the door. Your first meet is for experience, not validation.

Most local meets are packed with first-timers. The powerlifting community is usually far more supportive than new lifters expect, and people will cheer for a hard third attempt whether the bar is light, heavy, or somewhere in between.

Section 02

The referees are not trying to fail you

New lifters often think the head referee is waiting to red-light them. That is not how good judging works. Referees are bound by the rulebook, but within those rules, they want you to succeed.

A judge cannot pass a squat that misses depth or a bench where the lifter racks before the command. But the goal is not to embarrass you. The goal is to apply the rules consistently and help you have a fair shot at a good lift.

For example, a nervous first-timer might stand over a deadlift waiting for a start command. There is no start command on the deadlift. A head referee may calmly prompt the lifter to begin. The lesson: know the rules, but remember the officials are people who want the sport to grow.

Section 03

Master the commands before meet day

Powerlifting is not just about lifting the weight. It is about lifting the weight under command. The biggest mistake new lifters make is jumping the commands, especially the rack command after a squat or bench.

Adrenaline will be high. You may squat the weight, stand up, and instinctively walk it back into the rack. If the referee has not given the rack command, that lift can be turned down. Train your commands until they are automatic.

Competition command chart
Lift Commands to hear Common first-meet mistake Fix
Squat Squat, Rack Racking immediately after standing up. Stand tall, stay locked in, and wait until you hear rack.
Bench Press Start, Press, Rack Pressing before the bar is motionless or racking too early. Pause, listen, press only on command, and finish under control.
Deadlift Down Waiting for a start command that does not exist. Begin when ready, lock out, then wait for down.

Read the rulebook for your federation and read every email from the meet director. Those emails often cover weigh-in details, rules of disqualification, equipment standards, rack-height instructions, and practical information you do not want to figure out at the last second. For USPA lifters, start with the current USPA rulebook.

Section 04

Attempt selection: avoid the bomb-out

A bomb-out happens when a lifter misses all three attempts on one lift. It is brutal, avoidable, and often caused by an overly heavy opener.

Your opener should feel like your final warm-up. It should be a weight you can hit on a bad day, with meet commands, in a strange room, after waiting around longer than expected. You are not proving anything with your opener. You are getting on the board.

Attempt selection chart
Attempt Goal Confidence level Intensity visual
Attempt 1 Get on the board. Treat it like a final warm-up. Very high

68% visual effort
Attempt 2 Build the total with a number you are highly confident in. High

82% visual effort
Attempt 3 Push for a PR or heavier goal after you are safely in the meet. Strategic

96% visual effort

If you can bench 315 in the gym, that does not automatically mean 315 is a good opener on the platform. The pause will be longer, the room will feel different, and a referee, not your own rhythm, controls the timing of the lift. Open conservatively, build momentum, and save the big swing for the third attempt.

Section 05

Meet-day logistics start at weigh-ins

Weigh-ins are not just about bodyweight. This is where your gear is checked, your divisions are confirmed, your opening attempts are recorded, and your rack heights are set for squat and bench.

Here is a simple mistake that can wreck your day: giving rack heights in the wrong shoes. If you measure rack height in flip-flops or flat sneakers but squat in elevated lifting shoes, the bar may be set incorrectly when you walk out for your attempt.

Bring the shoes you will actually lift in when you give rack heights. The spotters and loaders use those numbers to set the bar for you. Make it easy for them to help you.

Section 06

Fueling for the platform

A powerlifting meet can last six to eight hours. You are not packing for a normal lunch break. You are packing for an all-day strength event with long stretches of waiting, sudden bursts of intensity, and a nervous system running hot.

This is not the time to experiment with a new diet. Bring foods you already know you digest well. Many lifters lean on fast fuel: bananas, Rice Krispies Treats, candy, chips, subs, muffins, and other easy carbs. The point is not to win a nutrition contest. The point is to keep energy available when it is time to lift.

01

Pack familiar foods.
Do not test a new meal plan on meet day.

02

Overpack.
You may not know what your body will want until you are there.

03

Respect nerves.
If a full stomach ruins your squat, eat lighter early and reload later.

Section 07

The secret weapon: hire or recruit a handler

A good handler acts as your brain for the day. They track time, monitor the flight order, help calculate attempts, remind you to eat, manage water, and keep you from wasting energy on non-lifting activities.

When you are caffeinated, emotional, and about to make maximal attempts, the last thing you need is mental math. Let a trusted handler manage the numbers and logistics so you can focus on one job: executing the lift.

Section 08

First powerlifting meet checklist

Use this list before you leave for weigh-ins and again before you leave for the venue on meet day.

  • ✓ Federation membership
  • ✓ Photo ID
  • ✓ Singlet
  • ✓ Approved underwear
  • ✓ Deadlift socks or shin coverage
  • ✓ Squat shoes and deadlift shoes
  • ✓ Belt, wrist wraps, and sleeves
  • ✓ Chalk if allowed by venue and federation
  • ✓ Water and electrolytes
  • ✓ Fast-digesting carbs
  • ✓ Meet director emails
  • ✓ Attempt plan in pounds and kilos

elitefts meet-day gear locker

Build the bag before meet week. Waiting until the last minute is how lifters end up borrowing gear, missing required items, or changing equipment when they should be focused on execution. Always confirm federation rules and meet-director requirements before you compete.

Gear 01

Competition Singlet

Platform apparel for lifters who need a clean, meet-ready fit.

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Gear 02

Powerlifting Belts

Support options for squat, bench, deadlift, and heavy training.

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Gear 03

Knee Sleeves

Warmth, compression, and joint support for lower-body work.

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Gear 04

Wrist Wraps

Extra wrist support for bench attempts and heavy pressing.

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Gear 05

Gym Chalk

Grip support for heavy pulls and high-pressure attempts.

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Gear 06

The Code Bundle

Powerlifting education for squat, bench, deadlift, mindset, and common-sense training.

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Pack the bag. Take the opener. Learn the sport.

Your first meet is about joining a community and learning how to compete. Read your emails. Practice commands. Pick smart openers. Eat enough. Trust your handler. Listen to the head referee. Then enjoy the day.

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Editor note: Federation rules and approved equipment can change. Always confirm standards with your meet director and the current rulebook before competing.

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