
Originally Posted by
phreezer
Being sore or DOMS (Delayed Onset of Muscle Soreness) is not always indicative of training properly. I bench over 500lbs and squat over 700, and I rarely get sore anymore.
So what exactly is DOMS? - whether it's degraded proteins and other waste
byproducts or just plain old microtrauma has been and will continue to
be debated for quite some time. (I'm in the microtrauma camp myself) but if a muscle is or is not sore, is in no way indicative of a successul workout. NOW, with that being said, I think it does effect you body builder guys a little differant. Most of you guys do not do any type of dual factor training nor do you do any kind of GPP (General Physical Preparedness). Often you guys stick to the 1X per week training session per body part. So you guys will use soreness as a compass for whether or not you had a succesful workout.. This isn't always wise, but for the way you guys train (You BB's tend to train to failure A LOT) it can give some insight as to how your mesocycle is going.. Training to failure often forces your body to depend on more recovery time before you can lift again..hence the soreness, you get sore more often because your body is used to having longer periods to recover between workouts....
There is something else to consider here.. being it training frequancy or volume.. You may have simply become to stagnant in your current training program to tax or challange the muscle any longer.. Something as simple as changing rep scheme and % of 1 rep max and amount of sets may make the biggest differance in the world to your workouts..
The one way to know for sure is to take and keep regular measurements.. If you're growing you doing something right..if you're staying the same..then you definitly need to start making some adjustments..
Good luck,
Phreezer