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Varying your workouts is critical to avoiding training plateaus and seeing continuous results, but that doesn't mean you have to change every variable every time out.
The two weekly workouts below contain the same four exercises but are significantly different.
In Workout 1, reps top out at 10 with moderate rest periods and the two rowing moves sandwich the two pulldowns. There's even a dose of pre-exhaust mixed in, with straight-arm lat pull downs (an isolation exercise) preceding the multi-joint variation.
In Workout 2, reps increase, rest periods decrease and pull downs sandwich the rows. The exercises don't change, but your muscles will feel the difference.
Perform the two workouts with 2 or 3 days of rest in between: If you do Workout 1 on, say, a Tuesday, do Workout 2 on Friday. Training pace is key so each session hits the back muscles in its own unique way. The second due to the shorter rest periods, but you should feel a good burn throughout. In the first workout, don't be afraid to go heavy, even if it means extending the rest periods by 30 seconds or so. Think of Day 1 as your strength and size workout, and Day 2 as endurance training.
[RELATED1]
[RELATED2]
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Topics:
Back
Beginner Workouts
Mass building
Strength Training
Build Muscle
Continue reading...
EXTREME-PHOTOGRAPHER / Getty
Varying your workouts is critical to avoiding training plateaus and seeing continuous results, but that doesn't mean you have to change every variable every time out.
The two weekly workouts below contain the same four exercises but are significantly different.
In Workout 1, reps top out at 10 with moderate rest periods and the two rowing moves sandwich the two pulldowns. There's even a dose of pre-exhaust mixed in, with straight-arm lat pull downs (an isolation exercise) preceding the multi-joint variation.
In Workout 2, reps increase, rest periods decrease and pull downs sandwich the rows. The exercises don't change, but your muscles will feel the difference.
Perform the two workouts with 2 or 3 days of rest in between: If you do Workout 1 on, say, a Tuesday, do Workout 2 on Friday. Training pace is key so each session hits the back muscles in its own unique way. The second due to the shorter rest periods, but you should feel a good burn throughout. In the first workout, don't be afraid to go heavy, even if it means extending the rest periods by 30 seconds or so. Think of Day 1 as your strength and size workout, and Day 2 as endurance training.
[RELATED1]
[RELATED2]
No
Topics:
Back
Beginner Workouts
Mass building
Strength Training
Build Muscle
Continue reading...