in bodybuilding its all about 'bang for your buck' exercises .. you need to get the highest hypertrophy results for the least amount of fatigue out of the exercises you do. deadlifting is the absolute least bang for your buck. it generates the most fatigue and hinders recovery the most out of any other exercises
I'm going to start a thread on this in the training section .. I will entitle it something like "Recovery is like managing a $ budget" , you only have so much resource to work with.
if you have $100 to work with , every exercise you do is demanding of some funds . lets say curls take up $2 and bench press takes up $10 , well deadlift may take up $50 , yet not give you much in return in regards to actual hypertrophy to recovery ratio
I've tweaked my training a little since the thread and by just contracting before the "pull", I've managed to gain a lot more details. I think I've been pulling first and contracting in the end each time
which has more "swing lifting" to it and way less quality.
Loosing some bf% has done wonders as well recently - basically just eat veggies, white rice and pork each day now and it feels easier for me to hit the right spot on.
Agreed regarding e.g. deadlift and bang for buck. However, by going for a more "stiff-legged" approach with less weight, you can really blow the middle to lower back up with a nicely painful
pump! Or atleast that is what I've found out (careful tho with the form).
But all of those athletes did get their foundation by doing a ton of squats and deadlifts in their early and mid years and then toward the end of their careers switched to machines when they had a better mind-muscle connection or didn't really need more size but just maintain with more definition.
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