Does one exercise per body part work?
Does one exercise per body part work?
I met a guy at the gym who does only one exercise per body part and he is huge and very ripped. He has been working out for long time though. He is also purely natural does not even take supplements. His protein mainly comes from Eggs, Soya and chicken.
On asking him about his workouts. He says he like to keep it simple and does only one exercise per body part and works out each part twice a week and exercises 6 days a week.
He follows a pyramidical approach to working out. On his way up he does REPS of 10,8,6,4,2 and continues to add weight and then he reduces weight for each set and increases the REPS from 2,4,6,8,10.
His program looks like :
Monday : Bench Press, Skull crushers, Pull overs.
Tuesday : Overhead Press, Squats OR Deadlift
Wednsesday : T-Bar Rows, Shrugs and Preacher curls.
Repeats the same and takes a day off on sunday.
He does his AB Work every morning at home. He also changes his program every 3 months. Keeps the program same but changes the exercises.
Does this routine make sense? Can it add both add size and make someone ripped?
2 Comments
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Dedication > Programming
Lots of programs work. Twenty-rep squats get people plenty big and strong. Working on deadlift singles gets people plenty tough. Three reps, five reps, eight or ten or twelve or twenty, with one set or ten sets or whatever--the major factor is that if you're lifting and recovering, you'll get somewhere.
That's not to say that some programs aren't better in some circumstances. Different people have better results from different programs, and people need different programs at different points in their progress. But if someone consistently works hard, if they dedicate themselves to proper recovery, they will get results.
Given hard work, plenty of good food and sleep, and some time, lots of programs can have surprisingly good results. That doesn't mean that the program is optimal for that person, or that point in someone's progress. It means that hard work and consistency pay off.
One Set per Muscle
Generally, I'm of the opinion that doing fewer exercises is better than more exercises. Most people don't need to do both squats and leg press, for example. It's usually a waste of time to do lat pull-downs and curls and chin-ups, instead of just chin-ups. I think that focusing one's effort on fewer lifts is better than spreading one's effort across many similar things.
However, I don't think "muscles" is the right thing to divide one's workout on. I prefer "movements", like pressing, pulling, squatting, and hinging. (I cribbed this from Dan John.) But if you prefer muscles, that can work too.
What seems to work is lifting heavy things. If you only lift light things many times, then you never lift the really heavy things. If you only lift a super-heavy thing a few times, maybe you're not lifting it enough times, so maybe it is better to lift a heavy but not super-heavy thing also. Pyramiding up from ten reps with less weight to two reps with more weight sounds like a fine way to do that.
First impressions about this program:
This isn't really one exercise per body part. There are several exercises that hit his triceps, for example.
This person is focusing almost entirely his upper body. Maybe he's trying to fix an imbalance, and his exercise selection that he does every few months is for that purpose... choosing to work on what he thinks needs the most work in those few months.
Guesses:
This lifter may have started out using a simpler program suited for novices, without the complicated rep scheme, just using a few compound barbell lifts. It could only be in his later years that he's needed to specialize.
If he was actually using this program for his entire 8 years, I think Dave is correct, that his progress would have been quicker on a simpler program.
What you should take away:
This program is working, for this guy. But, this guy is at an advanced level of training, and "working" can have various meanings. If you go to the gym and come out tired, you're "working" something. But, compared to what? Would another program be better? It's hard to tell, but most people, especially novices, do best using a very simple program, with 3 or 5 sets of 5 reps on a small selection of compound lifts. Novices would get more return for their time investment in the gym on a simpler program.
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