Furious George
Ex-Bluelighter
- Joined
- Mar 28, 2008
- Messages
- 643
Ah well, I deleted my post because I don’t want to argue with you. I thought I’d got rid of it in time but you’ve spotted it and typed a response, so I’ll bite and reply.
You didn’t know and still don’t know how he’s training. You telling him he’s overtraining because he’s added ab work to each session is meaningless. You don’t know, what exercises, reps, resistance, or intensity he’s training at. You don’t know if he varies it from session to session. You don’t know if he’s just bodybuilding or trying to make different functional changes. He might only be sticking 50 crunches at the end of his workouts.
I know all about allowing sufficient recovery periods. I’ve been training for 19 years, and I have a degree in biology. I read the same forums you do and some that you don’t (the strength and conditioning forum at mma.tv has been very usefull for my goals). You’re not telling me anything new.
What fact is that then? That weighted decline crunches are the best and only way to train abs? If you’d said that a weighted crunch is better than an un-weighted crunch, I’d agree with you. But I’ve been boxing or thai boxing since I was 14 and that’s not how we condition our abs in any gym I’ve ever been to.
Or is it that 4 days a week must be ‘Overtraining’? In pre fight training I do 400 reps a day 6 days a week. Sets of 50-100. Exercises like medicine ball twists, v-sits, hanging leg raises, push back leg raises, crossovers, medicine ball drops, cycling crunches, planks and impact drills. This is what generations of fighters have put themselves through to be properly conditioned. I bet my abdominal organs that this method is superior to weighted crunches for creating a fight ready midsection. And it makes me look great.
I didn’t write that at all. You were calling him a moron because he was basically ignoring you. I think that not engaging with you is pretty smart. It has served me well up until today. I’m sure it will serve me well from this post onwards.
Both you and Rockstar are regurgitating what you’ve read on bodybuilding sites. Bodybuilding is not the sole purpose of training. I do Muay thai and go bouldering. I need a high level of aerobic and anaerobic fitness (so I run & do hill sprints), high power to weight ratio (so I do heavy clean & press, deadlift, weighted chins) and a highly conditioned midsection (so i do hundreds of reps 3-6 days a week). Doing 21’s on the EZ bar, cable crossovers, tricep kickbacks? that’s training for Jersey Shore types, it’s going to do fuck all for me.
Saying “your doing it wrong” when you don’t know what someone is doing or why their doing it is nonsense.
I wasn't a tosser at first, I was just offering advice on the basic fundamentals of bodybuilding/workingout/sport.
You didn’t know and still don’t know how he’s training. You telling him he’s overtraining because he’s added ab work to each session is meaningless. You don’t know, what exercises, reps, resistance, or intensity he’s training at. You don’t know if he varies it from session to session. You don’t know if he’s just bodybuilding or trying to make different functional changes. He might only be sticking 50 crunches at the end of his workouts.
I just thought i'd point out some very very basic fundamentals. If you don't know that your muscles grow during recovery, and not during working out, then yes I do know more than you.
I know all about allowing sufficient recovery periods. I’ve been training for 19 years, and I have a degree in biology. I read the same forums you do and some that you don’t (the strength and conditioning forum at mma.tv has been very usefull for my goals). You’re not telling me anything new.
We aren't arguing over opinion here, we're arguing over fact.
What fact is that then? That weighted decline crunches are the best and only way to train abs? If you’d said that a weighted crunch is better than an un-weighted crunch, I’d agree with you. But I’ve been boxing or thai boxing since I was 14 and that’s not how we condition our abs in any gym I’ve ever been to.
Or is it that 4 days a week must be ‘Overtraining’? In pre fight training I do 400 reps a day 6 days a week. Sets of 50-100. Exercises like medicine ball twists, v-sits, hanging leg raises, push back leg raises, crossovers, medicine ball drops, cycling crunches, planks and impact drills. This is what generations of fighters have put themselves through to be properly conditioned. I bet my abdominal organs that this method is superior to weighted crunches for creating a fight ready midsection. And it makes me look great.
If you think only morons engage with me, then both of you are more than welcome to not engage me, lest you realise that the statement you just made makes you a moron...
I didn’t write that at all. You were calling him a moron because he was basically ignoring you. I think that not engaging with you is pretty smart. It has served me well up until today. I’m sure it will serve me well from this post onwards.
Both you and Rockstar are regurgitating what you’ve read on bodybuilding sites. Bodybuilding is not the sole purpose of training. I do Muay thai and go bouldering. I need a high level of aerobic and anaerobic fitness (so I run & do hill sprints), high power to weight ratio (so I do heavy clean & press, deadlift, weighted chins) and a highly conditioned midsection (so i do hundreds of reps 3-6 days a week). Doing 21’s on the EZ bar, cable crossovers, tricep kickbacks? that’s training for Jersey Shore types, it’s going to do fuck all for me.
Saying “your doing it wrong” when you don’t know what someone is doing or why their doing it is nonsense.