Train Like a Mad Man

I had a goal of Trap Bar Deadlifting 225 lbs for 50 reps.

It was easy, mainly because I didn’t allow myself the option to fail.

I did fail, however, in my ability to count.

I watched the video and realized I did 49, NOT 50!

I’m a knucklehead, enjoy the Madness Below….

Drop a comment with your thoughts!

Lead from the Front!

–Z–

PS: Just had a dude sign up for the 1 Day Underground Mentorship coming on March 20th!

Now that is Dedication, traveling to another country for a day of training & business! I will let attendees know about our meet up the night before which oughtta be off the hook, crazy as well!

No Excuses Bad Asses can Sign Up HERE

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Full Body FREAK Strength Workout, Part II

Let’s finish off the Full Body FREAK Strength Workout with some bodyweight circuit training using chains, shall we?

Check it out below:

Three Rounds of chins, dips and squats.

I used 20 lb chains and increased by one chain each set, 20, 40 and 60 lbs total.

Finished the night off with ab work and glute ham raises….. lots of glute ham raises!

Drop a comment with your thoughts or questions BEASTS!

Peace!

Lead from the Front!

–Z–

PS: Chains are non rust and freaking awesome, get em’ from http://EliteFTS.com

PPS: Live Events are rockin’ and fillin’ up FASTER than ever before. Who wants to experience a life changing event? Check em out by clicking HERE.

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Full Body FREAK Strength Workout, Part I

I cranked the tunes.

Warmed up…. calisthenics, bands, soft tissue work, glute ham raises, ab work….

Lined up the tools….. sandbag, dumbbell, atlas stone, anvil….

Then, it was time for WAR.

But, this is only the Beginning.

Part I, Enjoy.

Sometimes, you need a workout that includes an ass kicking.

All full body lifting.

I cranked a few rounds, but, you can also set a time limit, say 20 minutes, and keep cranking for 20 minutes and see what you got.

In Part II, I pick up the pace. Stay tuned.

Lead from the Front!

Peace!

–Z–

PS: The Live Events are filling up FAST.

Level 1 Mentorship in Va. Beach is coming soon. Attendees all get hooked up with constant support through private web sites, mastermind areas and ass kicking training and business information.

Bring your A Game!

Level 1 on March 20, Click HERE

Level 1 on April 9 – 10, Click HERE

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Get Comfortable Being Uncomfortable

vasily alexeev water

I woke up earlier than normal today.

It was VERY tempting to stay in bed, shut off my alarm and just wait until my kids jumped on my bed to wake me up.

But, I got out of bed instead. The mind often tells you one thing and the body another.

If I slept in, it would have eaten at me all day and I would have questioned my edge, and if I’m losing “it”.

I understand the need to be comfortable being UNcomfortable.

It’s the Key to much of my success.

It’s also the key to many other people’s success.

Successful people are doing what they love because at some point in time they had to deal with a lot of doing what others would NOT dare do.

Sure, I hate flying and motion sickness, so rather than be controlled by it, I press onward and drive and find ways to get where I need to be, no obstacles in my way.

I don’t follow someone else’s rules or their creed, I follow my own way, and create my own path.

Trust me, many people thought it would be impossible for me to be as strong as I am or as successful as I am in business, especially back when I first began.

I was accused of being on steroids once I began to surpass others.

** NOTE ** Prepare for the haters to come out of the wood works when you begin to achieve success.

Others laughed at me when I was talking of opening a unique gym where members could only be invited and many would be turned away.

When it comes to the training and the business and my entire life and getting things done, I forge ahead and get up every time I fall down. Gone are the days of being stopped by others or by hills, mountains and brick walls – I’ll crush em’ every single time.

I have no special skills, other than the fact that I know how to work like a Demon and believe in myself like grif muscle upno one else could even imagine.

I am highly motivated to WIN at everything I do. Others are a laundromat full of excuses.

It means eating differently when I go out and everyone else eats whatever they want.

It means doing what others will NOT do in business, the gym and life.

It’s a BIG key to my success.

It is THE Key to my success.

It can be the Key to YOUR Success.

I don’t fear the painful workouts, or getting under heavy loads, or wondering if I’ll throw up during a workout or not.

I don’t give 2 sh*ts when some internet guru talks smack about me or how I train, because I know in the REAL World he could never hang with me during a workout.

I believe in what I do. I believe in where I’m going. I know mountains and road blocks will come but I’ll crush them. Do you believe in yourself this intensely?

This is why I believe in training the mind and the muscle together, through HARD workouts.

Because you are reading this, I am committed to YOUR success.

I don’t want you to experience my painful past.

If you wanna dominate, then you’re in the right place.

Thought I would just remind you :)

Lead from the Front.

–Z–

PS: I wanna give props to the FIRST ever sponsor of the Underground Strength Show. Built by Navy SEALs, check em’ out by clicking HERE.

PPS: For those who wanna change their life and learn my keys to success, get your ass to an Underground Strength Coach Mentorship. This is NOT just for those who are in the Strength Industry, it is for those who want a life changing event based around becoming strong in mind and body, allowing you to create Massive Success in your life.

1 Day Underground Mentorship, March 20th, Click HERE for Details

2 Day Underground Mentorship, April 9-10, Click HERE for Details


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How to Kick Ass in Life AND a Warehouse Gym

arnold predatorThere are those who “Get it” and those who simply don’t “Get it”.

Some struggle with how to train athletes, having no system of their own, no time in the trenches and too much time on their ass sitting in front of a computer and in the books, NO Real World application.

Some try opening their business and quickly crumble and fall out of “business”.

Some see adversity and cower away, while others stare it straight in the eyes and keep charging.

Some have a laundry list of excuses and very few take responsibility.

Some Kick ass and Take names while others get their ass kicked.

Some are The Hunters, other are the Hunted.

If the Devil was facing you in the cage would you still fight, or would you lie down and quit?

You must be relentless when attacking your goals if you ever want to achieve them and start living life on your own terms.

Who cares what others think or say you should do. You can follow or you can lead, doing both doesn’t cut it.

Blaze your own trail. Yes, you will mistakes and be knocked on your ass and on your back, you can lie down and quit or get back up…. again and again.

Here’s a guy who “Gets it”…. BIG Time.

He Kicks ass and is on a mission, with fire his in eyes.

The Virginia Beach Beast, Matty Wichlinski, a Bruddah who Leads from the Front!

Check it…

When Matt opened his warehouse gym he was struggling in more ways than one in his life. While others could have given up, lied down or simply never have taken the first step, Matty took massive action to achieve his dream of opening a warehouse gym.

He has been growing his business quickly and not only is he kicking ass with his warehouse gym, but as a Coach, he is constantly evolving and growing, learning, making him self better, and in turn, making his athletes that much better.

Drop a comment on Matty’s Video.

Matty and I hope to see you in Virginia, click HERE for details.

Lead from the Front!

–Z–

PS: The night before our Virginia Underground Strength Coach Mentorship I will arrange a gathering (optional on your part) and we’ll talk training, business, life and of course, how to start living life according to your own rules.

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Bodyweight Workout & Animal Training

I’m a HUGE fan of Bodyweight training and full blown Bodyweight workouts.

This morning I had some work to do at the new house and my nearby neighbor, Uncle Mike Stehle, owns a gym 10 minutes away, you can check it out HERE, it’s a Kick Ass Place!

I was planning on doing heavy Deadlifts and Kettlebell work but Uncle Mike asked me to jump in on the group workout he was about to Coach, and his partner, one of the most bad ass dudes on the east coast, ‘The Milk Man’ was gonna take the class.

Our workout was pretty damn nasty, training for 30 minutes with 30 seconds work / 30 seconds rest.

We cranked weighted jump ropes, Animal crawls, pull ups, squats and more. My upper body was especially hammered from supporting myself on my hands during the workout.

Last time I trained with The Milk Man I got crushed, so I had to try to stay neck to neck with him, it was close, but Milk Man still outconditions me easily!!! I WILL redeem myself!

Anyway, sometimes, it’s easy to get caught up in your “own” style of training, whatever that style may be. It’s a great idea to get outside your normal environment and normal training circumstances and do something different.

You can’t just be strong with one tool such as a barbell or kettlebell, you must possess the ability to demonstrate athleticism, body control and overall conditioning. Strength without endurance is NOT a good thing in the real world.

Even powerlifters, bodybuilders and olympic lifters need conditioning, it improves recovery ability and the ability to tolerate intense workouts.

I’m a HUGE believer in Bodyweight training integrated into your existing workouts as well full blown, bodyweight workouts.

At my gym, we climb ropes, jump on and over objects, walk on our hands from various positions, perform handstand push ups and countless pull up variations with countless handles to grip onto allowing us to improve our grip strength as well.

curls hill sprintsSprinting up hills are older than dirt yet they are brutally effective for conditioning and improving your speed.

You can also perform jumps up hills or stairs.

I want to see more athletes with the ability to perform the following:

50 push ups

10 pull ups

5 handstand push ups

climb a 15′ rope

squat 50 reps

I see too many athletes who can bench BIG but yet can’t do 50 push ups, let alone TEN PUSH UPS!

I’m excited to be living near the beach, this means more sprints in the sand and more bodyweight workouts, most certainly with Uncle Mike and The Milk Man.

Time for you to train like an animal!

Lead from the Front.

–Z–

PS: Here are two of my favorite Bodyweight Training Resources.

Bodyweight University – This is my ultimate bodyweight training resource with workouts for upper body, lower body, full body, jump training, plyometrics, partner exercises and animal movements.

Convict Conditioning – I have TWO copies of this awesome book, 1 for me and 1 for my Coaches at the gym. YES, that is my affiliate link and I only encourage products I personally invest in, personally use and personally believe kick ass BIG time. This is definitely one of those resources! This program is strength focused through the use of Bodyweight training and man will it push you past any limits you once had in bodyweight training.

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Louie Simmons: Westside Barbell Trainining Methods, Part I

Article by Louie Simmons

There is much talk about training philosophies, methods, and methodologies. It seems everyone has their own, which they devised on the basis of their own experience. They recommend such strategies as doing reps to failure to eliminate assistance work and doing only the squat, bench press, and deadlift.

Have you ever wondered what the author has accomplished as a lifter, a trainer, or a scientist? Did they ever total Elite or field a team of Elites at a national meet? Did they ever make a top ten lift in one or more categories? Or is what they are doing a personal philosophy with no proven results?

It has been asked what philosophy Westside adheres to. The answer is none. We use training methodologies and the science of methods. Everything we do is based on a scientific principle.

We can not be so arrogant as to form a personal philosophy. At Westside, we are responsible not only for our own training but for the training of our loyal readers. Many of our “extended members” have become national, world, and European champions.

Training is not as simple as doing five sets of five reps, five sets of ten reps, or any combination of sets and reps. You must plan to obtain certain objectives. Increases in speed, explosive strength, absolute strength, and stamina are equally important. It has been known and discussed in Weightlifting for All Sports by Ajan and Baroga that a greater training result can be obtained over a greater length of time by using special exercises than by doing the classical lifts.

Doing the same exercises repeatedly will rapidly decrease your coordination. There are many reasons for this. Our observation is that very few lifters can increase their abilities without special exercises.

How do we train heavy continuously? The answer is to pick several special barbell exercises for a particular lift (e.g. the deadlift). The good morning is very similar in motion to deadlifting.

sled drag curlsA conventional deadlifter will no doubt bend over. Therefore, bent over good mornings will increase the deadlift. But remember, when doing the good morning, you must duplicate the action of your deadlift precisely in your brain. It is not so important to raise your good morning as it is to raise your deadlift by performing the good morning. We do many types of good mornings such as one with a safety squat bar suspended from chains. Remember to use the same body mechanics as you do in the deadlift.

Conjugate Method

A question that should be addressed is, when handling max lifts, how do you recover? And how do you at the same time increase muscle mass? The conjugate method is the answer.

This is a complex method of rotating special exercises that are close in nature, in our case, to the power lifts. This method also increases special strength qualities and perfects coordination, which will help advance technical skill.

First, and most important, is to properly select exercises that address your particular problems. It could be an exercise that will build up a lagging muscle group or a special strength such as starting, eccentric, or accelerating strength.

Many methods are combined and rotated in the conjugate system. Combining the speed and max effort days, five elements of strength are trained:

1. quickness
2. explosiveness
4. speed-strength
5. strength-speed
6. absolute strength

This is much like a five-speed transmission in a car. We all know what happens if you miss a gear or take off in the wrong gear. Your car doesn’t run very efficiently and neither will you. One must learn many methods to develop special strength and when to use them. You must also know your sports’ goals. In some sports, speed is foremost and absolute strength is secondary. Both are more closely related than you think.

When lifters repeatedly use the same simple method of training to raise their strength level, they will eventually stall. Like the scholar who must utilize many sources of information to achieve a higher level of knowledge, the lifter must incorporate new and more difficult exercises to raise their standards.

Many have the theory that to squat, bench, or deadlift more, you simply have to do the three lifts. If it were that simple, no one would need special exercises, machines, or systems of training. But we know this is not true.

Because lifters have different body types, they may excel at one lift but struggle with another. The great Lamarbill peanuts west Gant was the only lifter I have known who held the world record deadlift and bench at the same time. There are men who hold three world records in the deadlift, yet can’t make the top ten bench list. Their muscles in the upper body are, I’m sure, as strong as anyone’s, but they are limited by body structure (e.g. short torso, long arms). Many of us are affected by this. But is there an answer?

In the early 1970s, the Dynamo Club in the former Soviet Union had 70 highly skilled Olympic lifters. They were introduced to a system of 20–45 special exercises grouped into 2–4 exercises per work out and were rotated as often as necessary to make continuous progress.

They soon found out that as the squat, good morning, back raise, glute ham raise, or special pulls got stronger, so did their Olympic lifts. When asked about the system, only one lifter was satisfied with the number of special lifts. The rest wanted more to choose from. And so the conjugate system was originated.

When you have a body type that lacks say the muscles that squat and yet you squat on a regular basis, then a coupling of special exercises for the glutes, hamstrings, hips, and lower back are needed to fortify those areas. These special exercises will enable you to raise your squat once more.

Think about it. If you read only one book, you will only learn so much no matter how many times you read it. If you only squat, you will get only so strong because no new stimulus is introduced. This may not happen in the early stages of training, but as you become more advanced, you will need a more strenuous method of training. This training will indeed help your motor potential and help you to perfect your technical skill.

Before I present some examples of conjugate training, think about this. How much could you bench press the first time you tried? 200? Maybe 300? Now, how did you achieve that level of strength without ever having benched be fore? You did it through simplified training such as pushups and pull-ups. Those of you who could bench 300 the first time will never double that amount without doing specialized work to raise your strength, right?

Here are some examples of the conjugate method:

Glen Chabot bench presses only twice a month. Both times, he uses a close-grip style. He can do 405 for reps in the low teens. His best single close grip is 635 without a shirt. In between each workout, he rotates heavy dumbbell work on a flat or incline bench or very heavy bodybuilding exercises for lats, delts, pecs, and triceps.

This linking of special exercises has given Glen a 705 bench press at 275. Glen does not arch when he benches and has fairly long arms. He realized that he needed a special program to fortify his pressing muscles. This is a simple but very effective training program.

Kenny Patterson had a more complex system. He did floor press, chain presses, board presses, incline presses, and overhead presses, just to name a few. He rotated a different exercise each max effort day. On dynamic day, Kenny used three different grips on the bench press and used 60% of his no-shirt max for eight sets of three reps. He added many triceps extensions with dumbbells or the barbell, rows (one-arm, two-arm, chest-supported), pulldowns, delt raises, and forearm work.

This is a more complex system than Glen’s, but it suited Kenny’s needs. Kenny was a legitimate 700 bencher, having done it several times across the country.

Back in 2001, me and Mike Ruggiera made 900 squats. It was a 50-lb increase for him and a 40-lb increase for me, yet we did not do a single regular squat in between meets. We did box squats on speed days with a large amount of bands and weight. We also used the reverse hyper machine and did glute ham raises, pull-throughs, and abs.

I pulled a weighted sled before my squat workouts. On max effort day, we did good mornings (five varieties), belt squats, speed deadlifts (60% for 6–8 singles), and safety power squat bar squats to different box heights. Mike also pulled his fi rst 800 deadlift without having done any conventional squats or big deadlifts.

After squatting, he did deadlifts for singles with 60% for speed, and three days later he maxed out on special work. This is the conjugate method.

To push up a squat, heavy good mornings or squatting with different bars is done on max effort day. The different bars make squatting very awkward and extremely hard to do, much harder than a regular squat. (The same is true of box squats. They are harder than competition squats.)

On max effort day, we may do a type of squat in week one, a good morning in week two, and a front squat in week three. Each exercise contributes to the next week’s exercise, which in turn will build a bigger squat by strengthening the weaker muscle group and perfecting form.

The training is linked together, enabling you to raise your total. For instance, to build the glute and hamstring area, push up your reverse hyperextensions as hard as possible until your progress slows. Move on to pull-throughs for a week or two until progress in these slows as well. Then go to glute ham raises and again push as fast and hard as possible. Then pull a sled walking forward to build the glutes and hamstrings. It is possible to continuously gain strength in any body part by switching special exercises. As the effectiveness of the exercise decreases, switch to another one.

By training in this manner, it is possible to raise all types of strength throughout the year.

On max effort day, the entire volume consists of unidirectional  loading. One training workout contributes to the next. Keep in mind that if you train a lift at 90% or more for more than three weeks, your central nervous system is negatively affected and your progress will go backward. But by switching exercises each week (for the high level lifter), you can use 100% and more each week.

The sequence of exercises you use doesn’t matter just as long as the load is maximal. The time it takes to do a maximal effort (i.e. a low box squat with a Manta Ray) lift is at least the same amount of time that it takes to do a max deadlift or squat. This is called “time under tension.”

The conjugate method also improves special physical preparedness (SPP) (e.g. speed deadlifts, plyometrics) and general physical preparedness (GPP) (e.g. sled drag ging). This is the most effective method to gain strength continuously throughout the year with no ridiculous off season.

No one can afford to take time off. By maintaining the speed work for the three lifts and increasing general work (e.g. upper and lower body sled work, lats, abs, triceps), you won’t go backwards. There are many methods of training, but by incorporating the conjugate method, you can’t miss.

A popular special exercise for the deadlift is squatting off a very low box. Angelo Berardinelli does his off a six-inch box. At this depth, Angelo’s back is in a position similar to his sumo deadlift style. We use a safety squat bar very often. When raising out of a squat or deadlift, the shoulders should raise first. The five inch camber on the safety squat bar teaches you to raise the head and shoulders first. Otherwise, you will buckle over forward.

To summarize, pick a core lift with a barbell and try to duplicate the same motion of the lift that you’re trying to increase. Pick 4–5 core exercises that work for you and rotate one of them every two weeks. Do a max single for a 2-3 rep max, but no more.

For example, you could do bent over good mornings, safety squat bar squats, Zercher squats, or very low box squats and then finish with two weeks of rack pulls. This represents a ten-week cycle, rotating each of the above exercises in two-week mini-cycles. It is important that you end with the most productive exercise for you leading into the meet.

After your selection of a core barbell exercise, pick 3–5 special exercises. Your workout should last less than 60 minutes. Pick a few special exercises and do them very intensely.

If your form is good, then your lower back may be holding you back.

Again, select four exercises for the lower back such as back raises, straight leg deadlifts off a platform, pullthroughs with the legs straight, and reverse hyperextensions. Rotate them when necessary. For weak hamstrings, do heavy reverse hyperextensions, squatting pull-throughs, glute ham raises, and sled pulling with your hands behind your back or below your knees while holding onto a strap.

For weak glutes, do heavy reverse hyperextensions, low belt squats, high rep deadlifts (two sets of 20 with back arched, glutes pushed out to rear, shoulder-width stance, hands outside shoulder-width; after the first rep, drop the bar to just below the knees, and catch and raise it as fast as possible for the entire 20 reps), and glute ham raises. If your abs are weak, do side bends with a cable bar or dumbbell, leg raises, standing lat machine curl-overs, and strict sit-ups.

Again, pick one exercise for each muscle group, use it until it becomes ineffective and then switch.

For the bench press, you could do board presses, floor presses, inclines, declines, or rack lockouts for singles. Rotate one of these every two weeks. You could do ultra wide bench presses for a 6RM or three sets to failure with dumbbells with a two-minute rest between sets for singles and a 5–6-minute rest for high reps. Then pick some type of triceps extensions with a bar or dumbbells, some type of lat work, and raises for the front, side, and rear delts.

There are many types of exercises for each muscle group. Just change when one stops working, and your lifts should continue to increase all year long. By training with this system, you can max out every week of the year while working continuously on speed and building muscle mass. It works for us, and it will work for you. It is the most effective form of training we have ever tried, and in the past 36 years, Westside lifters have tried them all.

Just remember, it’s the selection that counts. You must pick a lift or exercise that builds your particular weakness. Don’t get caught up in doing an exercise that your friends like but that does little for you. George Halbert has special exercises he uses for his bench. Chuck Vogelpohl does things that no one does, but they help his squat and deadlift. Amy Weisberger did front and overhead squats to help her squat.

=====

Part II Coming Soon

=====

For more info on Louie’s Westside Barbell Methods, guaranteed to get you Strong as Hell, Click HERE. If you’re a Strength Coach, Athletic Coach or simply want to make dramatic gains in your Personal workouts, this is a MUST read book that I have learned tons from and can’t put down. Check it out HERE.

Lead from the Front,

–Z–

PS: Be smart when applying methods you read or learn from others and elsewhere. Do I personally use and apply EVERYTHING Louie speaks of? NO. I learn through trial and error what works best for me and my athletes and adapt accordingly, as should you.

On the flip side, you must always expand your knowledge and learn more, especially from those have been under the bar and in the trenches longer than you have.

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The Underground Creed

The Underground Creed


I understand that I am different yet will be given no special treatment here.

I will go through hell, and there will be no excuses, no turning back once I walk through these doors.

if I vomit, that is no excuse to stop my workout. I will get back up again …and again.

I will lift heavy and break records.

if it’s easy, I will go heavier.

I understand that this is a battle, I am here to dominate, nothing less. sitting down … lying down … these are not options.

I will earn my respect by getting bigger, stronger and faster.

I will outwork my opponents and do the extra work that no one ever told me to do.

I will train with fire in my eyes.

I will not back down.

I will be prepared for battle.

I am an Underground Beast!


After hearing stories last night about why some athletes are training in health clubs or their high school weight room and talking smack, I felt compelled to write our creed. The creed will certainly evolve into something deeper, and of course, you can add your own thoughts and comments below, I welcome them.

I also wrote This Article which you can and should check out NOW.

Lead from the Front,

–Z–

PS: Recommended Resources for fellow Undergrounders who Lead from the Front:

http://UndergroundStrengthManual.com

http://UndergroundStrengthCoach.com

http://CombatGrappler.com/Store.html

http://RareBreedAthletics.com

http://UndergroundSandbag.com

PPS: Live Events for fellow Undergrounders:

http://zacheven-esh.com/blog/live-events/

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Mental Toughness Training, Football & Wrestling

A question was sent my way and I pulled it out of the Mail Bag :)

It was an interesting question and I bet you can add your own answer(s).

Check out the video below and drop a comment when you’re done.

What’s cool to see, on an added note, is that in my area, the Head Football Coach is also the Assistant Wrestling Coach. He has the Football players wrestling as well.

Football, with all the hitting involved makes his guys meaner.

Wrestling, makes his guys more athletic, mentally tougher and more conditioned.

I’ve see BIG dudes get their asses whooped on the mat by a highly skilled wrestler who looks like a skinny nerd.

I’ve seen BIG, 220 + lb Football players move like shit and die on the Football field, and then Football players in the 185 – 195 lb range who are kicking ass all over the Football field.

We need a medium. Drop a line and be heard.

Lead from the Front.

–Z–

PS: I’d love to see Wrestlers and Football players training like THIS.

PPS: And, for those who are hungry to learn the trade and the business, they should be at 1 of my Live Events. Can’t get better if you’re not investing in your knowledge, make no mistake about it!

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Weak is for the Dead

Check the video below. Athletes are throwing weights overhead. I don’t think we need a crying argument here whether this is a push press, military press or whatever you want to call it.

The arguing is for the internet gurus who sit on their fat ass and don’t lift jack shit anyway.

Weakness is NOT good. If you have a weak point, attack it with ferocity. Throwing weight over your head makes you strong from head to toe.

I just interviewed Jim Wendler, who favors the strict press, and we spoke about weak areas and attacking the hell out of them.

Lots of people argue that overhead pressing is bad for you.

It’s bad to be weak, period.

It’s bad if you never cycle your lifts or movements which leads to overuse injuries.

Check out Matty Wichlinski, throwing heavy weights overhead.

We believe in STRENGTH here, what do YOU believe in?

Lead from the Front.

–Z–

PS: Matty & I will be unleashing a kick ass Underground Mentorship come March 20th, check out the details HERE.

PPS: 2 Day Underground Mentorship is Open HERE. Serious Applicants Only.

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