Wednesday, 29 September 2010

0 Feedback of Mister Oylmpia 2010

Give your feedbacks of 2010 Mister Olympia with the fourth time Jay Cutler title. How you agree with that final result. Phil second, Victor 8th plave or Kai Greene? Was it a good Olympia for you?

Tuesday, 28 September 2010

0 Aylmer Personal Trainer Reveals How to Build Muscle Build an Awesome Back

Awesome Muscle Building for Your Back!
Undoubtedly, a well developed back is the hallmark differentiator between those who train the "show" muscles, and those who train the "go" muscles.



Arnold's flawless back development!


A well developed back is unmistakable. Starting with the upper traps, the mid and lower traps and the rhomboids, as well as the lats and even , when bent forwards, the lumbar (erector group) musculature pops out as to thick ridges that run beside the spine.


Additionally, for athletes, strong and balanced back development helps to prevent injuries and keeps you in the game and in the gym so your training can continue uninterrupted by injuries.


Guaranteed, if you think you can forgo the important stuff, just to work on the show muscles, you'll be hit up with an injury that can keep you out of the game for years!

Don't Risk Injury... Train Serious, But Train Smart! (TSTS)


Considerations for Awesome Muscle Building Training For Your Back

1. Exercise Selection

Deadlifts
If you could only do one exercise for back, I would say Deadlifts would be your best choice, but thankfully we can do more than one exercise. Deadlifts are the exercise that will best allow you to express your strength and develop top end strength, but they take a toll on your recovery, so while you need to do them, they shouldn't be your main focus. Do them once a week, or even once every two weeks cycled in in place of a squat exercise.

Safe and effective deadlift technique:

Ensure back is in neutral arch, brace abdominals forcefully.  Begin movement by "pushing" the floor away from you.  Maintain the same upper body to floor angle until your legs are nearly straight, then using glutes and hamstrings, pull your hips inwards, squeezing your butt as your upper body pulls up into the finish position.  Be sure to lock your knees out and continue to brace your abdominals hard as you squeeze your glutes to pull you into the finish.  If you don't keep your abdominal brace and lock your knees out, and you pull your glutes in hard, you increase the risk of injury to your back!

Remember:  SAFETY ALWAYS FIRST!

Overload with chains, bands, partials

Here's a short video I put together that shows you the exact description above in action.


How to Deadlift for a Massive Back!



Pull-ups and Chin-ups
Pull-ups and chin-ups are the most important exercise for you to do on a regular basis. They are heavily reliant on the CNS, and thus contribute to significant strength gains that have massive carry-over to many other exercises.

Band-assisted Pull-ups (start)

Because of the stretch position at the bottom, they are also excellent for adding mass to your back. Repeated studies have shown that muscles grow best when loads are applied to muscles in a stretched position.




And if those reasons aren't enough, pull-ups and chin-ups will teach you to leave your ego at the door. I can't tell you how many times when I used to work at silly commercial gyms I would see big muscular guys doing partial range of motion cable pulldowns with 200+ pounds on the rack, yet they could barely do 5 chin-ups. This is just not acceptable, and if you're an athlete, you'll just plain suck if this is your situation!


Don't be that guy! (Or girl!!)

Band-assisted Pull-ups (finish)
Pull-ups and their variations are the meat and potatoes of your back
training program.

Because there are so many variations, you can get even up to three good pull-up workouts into a single week.  At that volume (3x per week), they'll all have to be different, but that's the beauty of it!  You get way more benefit.

Here's an example:

Monday: Parallel-grip pull-ups 5x8 (strength with strength capacity)
Wednesday: Weighted Chin-ups 6x3 (strength)
Friday: Wide-grip band-assisted pull-ups 3x20 (conditioning)

Overload with: bands, chains, plates, etc...









Bent-over rows/Seated rows
All forms of rows rely on lower back strength to hold your body in position (except for chest-supported varieties), which makes your ultimate strength in the movement reliant on your current low back condition. If you've already done deadlifts in your workout, chances are you wont' be setting any strength records in your rows training.

Rows are great for adding additional training volume, and to ensure you have good scapular retraction and depression strength, which is ultimately important for helping with your bench.

Warning:  Don't do deadlifts and then a bent-over variation of rows.  It's just too much for the back.  A good combination is some form of pull-up first, followed by rows.  If hitting rows is a must after deadlifts then use one of the chest-supported variety.

Keep a variety of rowing movements in your program including from the bottom up: seated rows, bent-over dumbbell or barbell rows, wide-grip elbows out barbell, dumbbell, or seated rows, rope face pulls with elbows below shoulder height, rope face pulls with elbows above shoulder height (very important to help encourage mid- and low-trap recruitment patterns - helps to overcome rhomboid dominance patterns), dumbbell or barbell shrugs, and overhead shrugs with dumbbells or barbells.  Variety helps prevent boredom too!

Overload with rest/pause, pre-fatigue, giant sets, etc...



Lower Back 
The lower back may be small compared to the upper back, but the importance of it's development in size, strength, and conditioning cannot be overstated!

Reverse Hypers (controlled movement)


You can Deadlift, Chin, and Row all day long, but if you don't develop your lower back properly, you'll pay the price with either slow progress in the rest of your back and leg development or worse become injured!

To keep your lower back strong and well conditioned include back extensions, 45 degree back extensions, and reverse hypers in your training.  For all three, brace the abdominals, maintain a neutral arch, and move from your hips.  These exercises also target the hams and glutes but with much lower loads than main lifts like deadlifts.

Overload with dumbbells / kettlebells / plates / bands / medballs / barbell



2. Exercise Intensity
Yes you need volume for adding mass, but you're not going to add any mass or get any stronger if you're always lifting puny weights.  Don't be gun-shy here!

Exercise intensity is inversely related to how many reps you can manage per set.  Depending on whether your goal for the training phase is more strength or hypertrophy, each exercise group has a repetition range you can choose from.

Main lifts (like deadlifts) 1-5 reps
Pull-ups and chins 3-20 reps
Bent-over/seated rows 6-15
1-arm rows 6-12
Back extensions/45 degree back xt/reverse hypers  10-20 reps

Point is, even if you are going for size, make sure you've got blocks of training where you go heavy, choosing weights that put you in the low end repetition ranges.  Without some heavy training, you just aren't going to get bigger or stronger PERIOD!



3. Training Volume
The body's limited ability to recover from intense training necessitates a lower overall training volume as training intensity increases.

If you've been doing a higher volume (3-4 exercises, 3-4 sets, 8-15 reps) to build some size, and you're moving into a strength phase, your volume might look more like 3-4 exercises, 1-5 sets, 3-8 reps.

Getting stronger is not a function of trying to beat your max every time you hit the gym, and continually adding more exercises to your program.  Getting stronger relies on recovery.  So train with 70-85% of your max on a regular basis, staying away from failure on most of your sets.  Periodically you can push out some RM (repetition max) sets (where you train to failure) or push up into the 90-93% range for just a few sets of just a few reps, and finally every so often (4 weeks to 4 months) you can go for a new max.

If you've been training longer than 6 months, a deload week every 3-5 weeks will help tremendously with managing your overall volume.

A Deload week is not a NO-LOAD week.. it's NOT a week where you don't go to the gym.  It's not a vacation from training although it should feel like one in the sense that your body gets a rest.  But a proper deload week involves going in and hitting your lifts with significantly lighter weights (60-65% 1RM) for a much reduced volume (50%).

The goal for your deload week is to practice your technique, work on weak points (i.e. rotator cuff strength, hip strength, flexibility, mobility, soft-tissue work, etc...).  At the end of your deload week your body should feel rested and your mind should feel ready to hit the gym with ferocity come Monday!



4. Balanced Training
The worst cause for lack of progress is injuries.  Other than using safe exercise technique and using deload weeks to help with recovery, the best way to prevent injuries and ensure continued training progress is to use a balanced training program.

The only saving grace when you see meatheads at the gym who walk around like they're king shit, only training their chest and arms, is that they're likely just a short time away from suffering a good injury that'll keep them out of the gym and out of your way so you can get your training done and not have to see them!

Here's a few balance pointers:
1. Horizontal press vs. horizontal pull (row)
2. Vertical presses vs vertical pull
3. Anterior shoulder vs. posterior shoulder
4. Horizontal row with elbows down (seated row) vs. horizontal row with elbows up (face pulls)
5. Always hitting some external rotator cuff work at least once a week.

Band pull-aparts to chest


Finally, make sure you do the small stuff... external rotator cuff, band pull-aparts, face pulls... and do your soft tissue with the roller and/or lacrosse ball... this is the stuff that keeps the shoulders able to handle the heavy stuff.

Soft-tissue work removes adhesions and scar tissue, helps mobilize tissue around the joints, and helps mobilize the thoracic spinal segments and ribs too!


Here's a couple sample back workouts for massive size and strength:

Workout 1
Deadlifts 5x5
Pull-ups 7x3 (weighted)
Face Pulls 3x15

Workout 2
Deadlifts  3x3
Chin-ups 5x10
Chest-supported rows 4x12
DB Shrugs 3x15
Band external rotator cuff 3x20


Give these a try and let me know how it goes!

0 Last Chance to grab these Free Special Reports

I wanted to give you a quick heads up…

This could be your last chance to pick up some awesome FREE special reports from the fat loss guru Tom Venuto.

You may have heard about some or all of these but just in case you missed any – here’s one more chance to pick up all four new reports at no cost (100% gratis!)

Tom is currently offering four free fat loss and muscle building products at no cost here:

1) The Holy Grail of Building Muscle and Losing Fat REVEALED (a one hour mp3 and written transcript)

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2) Secrets of Gaining Muscle without Gaining Fat

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3) Never Lose Muscle (100% Pure Fat Loss) (don’t lose precious muscle when dieting)

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4) 50 Body Transformation Mistakes

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I wouldn’t procrastinate on this…

Rumor has it these special reports will be coming down very soon!  Grab them while you can…

You’ll be happy that you did!

0 Mr Olympia 2010 Jay Cutler Posing final video

Monday, 27 September 2010

0 Mister Olympia 2010 Top 6 comparaison photos

0 Mister Olympia 2010 comparaison photos

Ronny Rockel, Dexter Jakcon, Dennis Wolf, Jay Cutler, Phil Heath, Victor Martinez.

Sunday, 26 September 2010

0 5 Ways To Properly Stimulate Muscles For Maximum Muscle Gain

When I first started lifting weights and training to gain muscle, I was not properly activating my muscles in the way I do today.

As a beginner, I was just interested in trying to lift as heavy as a weight as I could and I didn’t take into considerations things like proper form, mind-muscle connections or focusing on the proper muscles when doing the exercises.

Nope, all I did was check myself out in the mirror as I would attempt to curl 50lb dumbbells when I should have been really using more like 15lb dumbbells.

Now don’t get me wrong, you do want to lift heavier weights over time. After all, our muscles will only adapt if we give it a reason to adapt. But, I was impatient, young and had something to prove. I didn’t care about properly progressing in my lifts. All I wanted to do was boost my ego by lifting heavy in front of my friends.

I did gain weight and make some progress, but then down the line, my progress came to a halt.

What happened? Ill tell you what happened…the ‘beginner’s training gains’ wore off!

The only real reason I was progressing is because I was a complete beginner and even though my form, focus and technique were slightly incorrect, my body was still adapting.

This is fine when you are a beginner and the weight you are lifting is only moderate, but as you progress in your training and you get stronger you may develop imbalances and/or injure yourself.

That is why now, I always recommend my clients to focus on technique and form before even considering lifting heavier weights. It will pay off big time in the end.

The problem most people face including myself is that we are sometimes too focused on looking good or acting macho in front of others at the gym, (you know you do it J) and we are not properly stimulating muscle and recruiting all potential muscle fibers.

Muscle fibre activation is just as important if not more as the amount of weight you can lift. If you can stimulate more muscle fibre with slightly less weight and better form, then why would you sacrifice that positive factor by lifting a heavier weight with improper form and bad technique?

This is more of an intermediate to advance article on how to gain muscle by activating the muscles through the mind-muscle connection, but beginner’s can benefit by learning early on that proper form, technique and muscle activation come first and the amount of weight you can lift is a distant second.

Start to include the 5 mind-muscle connection techniques to start seeing better results when trying to gain muscle. These are powerful tools that will assist you and help you progress properly. Eventually, you won’t need to use them as much as they will just become a learned habit.

Think about it:
You should start to think about the muscles you are about to train while you are on your way to the gym. When you being to think about which muscle you are about to train, you send signals to your brain to begin preparing for battle if you will.

By doing this, your muscles become more receptive when it comes time to begin lifting. You are also creating stronger neural connections between your mind and your muscles.

Just silently think to yourself;
- Which muscles am I working today?
- Which exercises am I going to be performing?

This might only require five minutes of your time, but it can be the difference between a good workout and a great workout.

Feeling it:
After ‘thinking’ about the muscle, the other side of it is to focus on what it will feel like when you are training the muscle.

Either immediately after getting to the gym, or while warming up, start to go through some mental preparations:

- How is it going to feel after working that muscle group?
- How is it going to feel to have a shirt busting pump and blood gorging muscles?
- How will it feel when you finally make it to that special event or beach part (you can pick anything you want) and people notice that particular muscle group?

After doing this, you will start to be really motivated to work that muscle group and you will much more committed to the workout because you are holding yourself accountable.

You are reminding yourself of not only the feeling associated in the workout, but also how it will feel when you get rewarded with new muscle gain and compliments from others.

Muscle Activation Warm-Ups (light weights and muscle focus)

Proper warm-up is very important when you train and it should not be overlooked or skipped.

This should be part of your workout and should not just depend if you ‘feel’ like doing it that day or not.

You need to properly warm your muscles up with lighter weights first before you attempt your heavier sets.

The main benefits to warming up with a lighter weight are:

- Helps lubricate the joints by pumping blood through the muscles
- Better coordination of the movement of the exercise
- Prepares you mentally for heavier sets when you progress your warm-up properly
- You don’t have to warm up for every exercise but it all depends on how you are training. If you are training one or two muscle groups per workout, then only warm up when beginning to work that particular muscle group.

You only need 1-2 warm up sets per muscle group for only 1 exercise.

Do not use a weight that will cause you to fail. The goal here is to simply warm up. It should not be an all out effort.

Generally I like to use about 50% of my 5-6 rep max and perform about 15 repetitions to warm up with.  Then depending on how I am training, I might do another warm up set with a slightly heavier weight for less reps. Again, not to failure.

Drop The Weight and Focus On Form and Technique

Form and technique do not get as much attention as they deserve simply because they are not interesting topics to the majority of people looking to gain muscle.

Instead of focusing on proper technique, the average person would rather just concentrate on progressing and lifting heavier weights while sacrificing form and risking injury.

Although they may not realize that they are doing this.

I strongly urge you to start training smarter.

On a regular basis, you should take some time and review basic exercise descriptions for all the exercises you are currently performing in your program.

More often than not, you will pick up on small tips and information you had forgotten about that will help you get better at the exercise.

Secondly, be honest with yourself and make sure your progressions in weight increases are not causing you to sacrifice proper form when doing the exercise.

If ever you cannot complete the exercise with proper technique and execution, then I would highly suggest decreasing the load until you can progress to a heavier weight and still perform with proper form.

Over time, you will get stronger and there will certainly be less chance of you developing injuries or creating stress by improperly performing the exercise.

The priority list for muscle building should always follow; technique + form then increase in the amount of weight lifted.

Stay Focused
The final point on this topic is to always stay focused on your workout.

If your goal is to build muscle and completely transform your body, you cannot get distracted while you are in the gym.

That means not hitting on the women in the gym, not getting caught staring at yourself in the mirror and not having long conversations with your buddies in between sets.

You are there for a workout and nothing else. It’s ok to socialize, but just keep it in moderation and never let it distract you completely from your muscle building goals.

You really need to stay focused especially when you are attempting to beat your best lifts. Do not take this lightly.

I can guarantee if you start to implement all of these tips, you will notice more progress in your lifts and in your quest to build a more muscular body.

Remember that you can still have fun while working out, but it’s not a social occasion. At least it shouldn’t be if you are serious about building muscle.

Just be sure nothing distracts you and you should start to see some impressive progressions in your training and muscle size.

Here for you,
Joey Vaillancourt NSCA-CPT
Bones to Buff

0 Mister Olympia 2010 Top 6 photos

Branch Warren Mister Olympia 2010 third place
Dexter Jackson Mister Olympia 2010 fourth place
Dennis Wolf Mister Olympia 2010 fifth place
Ronny Rockel Mister olympia 2010
Those guys are automatically qualified for Mister Olympia 2011

Saturday, 25 September 2010

0 Mr Olympia 2010 is Jay Cutler

Mister Olympia 2010: Jay Cutler

Jay Cutler 2010 Mister Olympia with Jo Weider

0 Mister Olympia 2010 top 6 results

  1. Jay Cutler
  2. Phil Heath
  3. Branch Warren
  4. Dexter Jackson
  5. Dennis Wolf
  6. Ronny Rockel

0 Mister Olympia 2010 Top 10 results

  1. Jay Cutler
  2. Phil Heath
  3. Branch Warren
  4. Dexter Jackson
  5. Dennis Wolf
  6. Ronny Rockel
  7. Kai Greene
  8. Victor Martinez
  9. Toney Freeman
  10. Hidetada Yamagshi

0 Kevin English 2010 Mister Olympia under 202

Kevin Eglish mister olympia 2010 under 202

0 Mister Oympia under 202 Top 6

  1. Kevin English
  2. David Henry
  3. Eduardo Correra
  4. Jose Raymond
  5. Jason Arntz
  6. Jaroslav Horvath

0 Mister Olympia 2010 backstage

Jay Cutler



Dennis James

Dennis Wolf

Dennis James


Victor Martinez


Ronny Rockel

Troy Alves



Branch Warren

Johnnie Jackson

Victor Martinez

Toney Freeman

Jay Cutler

Jay Cutler

Branch Warren and Dexter Jackson

Jay Cutler


Branch Warren
Hidetada Yamagashi

Kai Greene



Ronny Rockel


Ed Nunn
 
back to top //PART 2