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#61 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: 1.d4
Posts: 4,275
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Free squatting has some of the same advantages of using dumbbells, but the Smith Machine and their ilk are safer alternatives. Just do it!
-Robert
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"Love is the irresistible desire to be irresistibly desired."-Frost |
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#62 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 3,383
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#63 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Chico, CA
Posts: 2,543
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i could put up 185 when i was weighing 155 as a senior in high school. haven't done too much power lifting or maxing since...
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3x Tecnifibre T-Fight 320 w/ Cyberflash mains-OG Micro crosses @ 55 and Yonex Supergrap. |
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#64 |
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Banned
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 4,606
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I was told by my PT that when benching (bar or bells), I shouldn't bring my elbows behind my back. The proper form is to lower my arms so that my bent elbows line up with my back, and then explode upward.
Any comments on that? I see a lot of people bouncing the bar off their chest or, ever so slightly lower the bar and call that a rep. |
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| Say Chi Sin Lo |
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#65 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Minneapolis, MN
Posts: 2,420
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My best bench was a 245 max in college, with a bodyweight of 175. Now, I'm closer to 180 and am doing reps at 145-150. I have a tender shoulder, so I've cut the barbell bench and have gone to dumbell bench with 45-50 lb weights. Anything more, and I'm sore in my right shoulder.
I agree 100% that lifting properly is very safe for most people, and actually can help to prevent injury. It's when you try and lift too heavy or too often than you can injure yourself. |
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#66 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 311
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Quote:
http://www.lifestyleschanges.com/onerep.html So, if an 89% of body weight one max rep bench press gets a 60+ year old into the 90th percentile, I bet your 106% (180 bench divided by 170 body weight) for reps would get you close to the 98th percentile. As I said before, pretty impressive. |
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#67 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: USA
Posts: 12,900
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I've done pretty close to double my bodyweight. I was in the 180s with a 345 lb. flat bench press. All the other guys in the gym who could press 3 plates and up were all over 200 lbs..
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#68 | |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 531
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Quote:
whys that? |
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| cncretecwbo |
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#69 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 486
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I avoid the barbell bench press. It aggravates my shoulders more than any other exercise.
Upright rows, dips, anything else that supposedly is bad for the shoulders, all of those are fine. I haven't tried to figure out why, but it's not an important exercise to me, so I'm fine to exclude it from my routine. |
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| Sleepstream |
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#70 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 311
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Quote:
This reminds me...I was at the Arnold Classic a couple of years ago, and while strolling through the trade show, came across a display where you could sign a waiver and take a crack at benching 225 pounds. There was this one guy who must have cranked out 20 or 25 reps. But, he was about 5' 6" tall and had the shortest arms I have ever seen. When he benched, the bar probably didn't move more than six inches. Not to take anything away from the guy, 'cause I couldn't bench 225 once, let alone 25 times. Still, I don't know if I could call the guy an athlete. Later, I saw him walking past the Marines booth. They had a pull-up bar and were giving guys the chance to crank out a few reps. Our bench pressing friend wouldn't go near it. I bet watching him try to do pull-ups would have been ugly. Anyway, I think the bench press is one (but only one) good measure of an athlete's strength. Personally, I'd rather be a good decathlete than hold the world bench pressing record. But...to each his own. |
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#71 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: USA
Posts: 12,900
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It sounds like the guy was doing partial reps. Maybe his partial reps gave him the illusion of having super short arms.
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#72 |
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Professional
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 809
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In the old days when you benched you had to touch your chest and wreck your shoulder if you had long arms. If you look at top bench press guys thay have a barrel chest and short arms they never break parallel the bar moves maybe 5-8 inches tops. When you go past parallel your shoulder is in its weakest position now you have to change the direction with the bar and that when most guys hurt their shoulder. I even saw a big guy rip his pec off pretty gross with only 275 going deep not worth the risk. I hear guys say they go for the stretch I wouldn't like to stretch my muscles and tedons with all that weight, stratch before and after you workout.
I been a trainer and strength coach for the past 17 years. I learned that from many years os school and experience and my own lifting. |
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#73 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: 1.d4
Posts: 4,275
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Quote:
1. Functional decline, such as less lifting, and less activity. I see this all the time and can agree with you that most guys over 60 have trouble taking out the garbage! It's just too sad. There is no need to get so fat and out of shape. It ISN'T inevitable that you have to lose so much in your 50's and 60's. You will lose a small amount even if you train hard, but Bill Phillips is still pushing some heavy iron after all these years. 2. Lowered testosterone due to 1 above, poor diet, and age. Something comparable is running. Before my back injury I was taking my youngest brother out on training runs. I would be jogging along at an easy 10 mpm pace and he would be red faced, huffing and puffing and having a near death experience. He's almost 10 years younger than me and only weighs about 175. I see this sort of thing on the tennis court all the time, which is why so few older guys play singles. At triathlons it's a very similar situation. The average sprint triathlon might get 5 guys over the age of 65 out for the race, whereas the 30-35 age group has 30-50 guys. Anyway, coming back to benching, the guys who've been doing it for a long time, have stayed healthy and fit, are going to bench a lot more than your average guy. Frankly I don't think I know any other 60 year old tennis players who could bench over 150. At least not at my courts. Heck, I can't get but a couple of them to go to the gym with me. I took one guy and he wouldn't go back. "Too hard." LOL. And I started him on almost nothing. Just too sad. It's like they've had a sex change by that age. -Robert
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"Love is the irresistible desire to be irresistibly desired."-Frost |
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#74 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: 1.d4
Posts: 4,275
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Quote:
I may have benched 280 when I was younger, but frankly I tossed all my old power lifting notebooks, so I don't recall. I never was much of a bencher. -Robert
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"Love is the irresistible desire to be irresistibly desired."-Frost |
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#75 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: 1.d4
Posts: 4,275
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Quote:
-Robert
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"Love is the irresistible desire to be irresistibly desired."-Frost |
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#76 | |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 679
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Quote:
so yea, physiological benefits are minimal. the chances of getting hurt doing this stuff is high. usually reserved for some football players (need the muscle), bodybuilders (need the appearance) or people taking steroids. Last edited by power_play21 : 08-28-2008 at 02:27 PM. |
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#77 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: USA
Posts: 12,900
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Robert, I'm not a young man anymore, but I can still bench around 275 and that's without having benched in a long time. I know this because even after a 2 year complete layoff from the weights, I was able to bench 225 on my first attempt. I wasn't doing anything at all on my comeback trail, but these days, I do dips and pullups at a BW of around 191. 315 isn't out of the question if I practiced benching again for a few weeks. The last time I got back to 315 on the bench, it took me 3 and 1/2 weeks.
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#78 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: 1.d4
Posts: 4,275
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Quote:
-Robert
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"Love is the irresistible desire to be irresistibly desired."-Frost |
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#79 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Sep 2004
Posts: 425
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Im 26, I weigh about 120 and Im 5 foot 6. I bench about 190 max. But I usually just do 3 sets of ten with about 140.
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#80 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 311
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Quote:
http://www.exrx.net/Calculators/OneRepMax.html |
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