Thread: Another Circuit! I got slayed
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06-08-2016, 04:25 PM #1Banned
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Another Circuit! I got slayed
Station #1 (perform in a circuit mode)
Push-ups, 20 reps
Crunches 40 reps
Wide grip push-ups, 20 reps
Crunches, 40 reps
Knuckle push-ups, 20 reps
Crunches, 40 reps
Diamond push-ups, 20 reps
*******************************
Station # 2 (circuit mode)
Split squat jumps, 30 seconds timed
Mountain climbers, 30 seconds timed
Repeat three more times for a total of four sets.
Crunches, 40 reps
*******************************
Station # 3 (circuit mode)
Pull-ups, 20 seconds timed (if you can’t keep pulling, just hold the bar
but always strive for another rep)
Leg lifts, 20 seconds timed (holding the bar, lift legs up)
Repeat three more times for a total of four sets.
********************************
Station # 4 (circuit mode as fast as possible)
25 push-ups
50 body weight squats
5–10 pull-ups
25 sit-ups
Repeat three more times for a total of four sets.
**********************************
Not my words, but the selling point of the EX
Weight training over long periods of time can burn out athletes from all
different sports. Whether he or she is a world class MMA fighter or your
average Joe who wants to stay in shape, athletes can get bored with not only
their current regimen but with lifting weights period. Most will just take some
time off from the gym and come back ready to hit it hard again. However,
others will take longer periods of time off and become lazy. They lose a good
portion of their strength and size and lose sight of their overall goals.
The best thing that athletes can do when this type of situation happens is to
change up the entire training regimen to make it more exciting. Just to let
everyone know, I love weight training, but sometimes I get tired and banged
up. Instead of taking a few weeks off and doing nothing, I have other options.
Back to the basics
When I started to grow tired and bored of weight lifting, I thought back to
when I wrestled in high school. I remembered that my coaches were big
believers in body weight training. I had old school coaches who would make
us do countless push-ups, sit-ups, pull-ups, and squat thrusts. I should note
that I wrestled in 2002, not the 1980s. We had many different types of weight
training equipment at my school, but our coaches insisted that all we needed
was “running shoes and a pull-up bar.” I remember getting great results
training with these types of body weight routines. My conditioning and
strength levels went through the roof. My body fat percentage also went
down. So I thought, “if it worked for me, it can work for anyone.”
You always see “in shape” military personnel who have never lifted weights in
their life. Most of them are in great shape and live off of pull-ups, push-ups,
and running. In the old days, boxers never touched weights, and look at the
shape that they were in.
Motions
While coaching wrestling this past season, we had many strong wrestlers on
the team. Many of them lifted all year long, and as the season approached,
they got bigger and stronger through the off-season. As the season started,
most of them were burned out on lifting weights. We had a two-day a week in-
season program, but the wrestlers just didn’t seem to progress on it. Most of
the guys were just going through the motions, and I felt that going in the
weight room was becoming a waste of time. I preferred to just do more
technique drilling. That’s when I decided to bring back the old days of body
weight training. I wanted to see what kind of shape these kids could get into.
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