dj training programs are great

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Dan John My philosophy for strength training, and no surprise here, is based on three concepts: 1. Movements, not muscle. 2. “If it is important, do it every day, if it isn't, don't do it at all.” This is a quote attributed to wrestling Olympic Gold Medalist Dan Gable. 3. Repetitions...lots of repetitions. Let's look at each separately. First, I believe in coaching movements, not muscles. I am almost to the point as a coach that I am suggesting that we NEVER talk about anatomy in the weight room and I insist that we run screaming from the pseudoscience that dominates the industry today. Honestly, I have been told that “we” still don't know what causes a muscle to grow...and it is obvious from the plethora of crap available on weight loss that we know even less about fat. The moment one of my lifters mentions a muscle group, I know he has been at the magazine rack at the supermarket reading the muscle mags. “Blitz the Serraseruaputus into Submission!” What I have never understood is this: are these muscles in a war or is this a group of dinosaurs threatening to take over the world? What did the muscle do to deserve this? Certainly, we should find a peaceful solution to this crisis. What begins to happen when you coach muscle groups is that you end up with what Pavel Tsatsouline calls “Frankenstein Training.” Rather than being body, soul and spirit...you end up with biceps, triceps, quads, and pecs. Well, most people don't work their quads...but you get the point. I argue a different strategy...work movements. The Big List 1. Horizontal Push (Bench Press, Push Up) 2. Horizontal Pull (Rows and variations)

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Page 1: DJ Training Programs Are Great

Dan John

My philosophy for strength training, and no surprise here, is based on three concepts:

1. Movements, not muscle.

2. “If it is important, do it every day, if it isn't, don't do it at all.” This is a quote attributed to wrestling Olympic Gold Medalist Dan Gable.

3. Repetitions...lots of repetitions.

Let's look at each separately. First, I believe in coaching movements, not muscles. I am almost to the point as a coach that I am suggesting that we NEVER talk about anatomy in the weight room and I insist that we run screaming from the pseudoscience that dominates the industry today. Honestly, I have been told that “we” still don't know what causes a muscle to grow...and it is obvious from the plethora of crap available on weight loss that we know even less about fat. The moment one of my lifters mentions a muscle group, I know he has been at the magazine rack at the supermarket reading the muscle mags.

“Blitz the Serraseruaputus into Submission!” What I have never understood is this: are these muscles in a war or is this a group of dinosaurs threatening to take over the world? What did the muscle do to deserve this? Certainly, we should find a peaceful solution to this crisis.

What begins to happen when you coach muscle groups is that you end up with what Pavel Tsatsouline calls “Frankenstein Training.” Rather than being body, soul and spirit...you end up with biceps, triceps, quads, and pecs. Well, most people don't work their quads...but you get the point. I argue a different strategy...work movements.

The Big List

1. Horizontal Push (Bench Press, Push Up)

2. Horizontal Pull (Rows and variations)

3. Vertical Push (Military Press and variations)

4. Vertical Pull (Pull up, Pulldown)

5. Explosive Full Body (Total Body lifts: swings/snatches/cleans/jerks)

6. Quad Dominant Lower Body (Squat)

7. Posterior Chain (Deadlift)

8. Anterior Chain (Medicine Ball Ab Throw)

9. Rotational/Torque?

It's funny about number nine. For years, I thought I had figured that these exercises “just didn't work” and I “didn't use them.” Then, I had a young intern follow me around for a week and note that our athletes did “Half Turkish Get Ups, Windmills (three variations), Suitcase

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Carries, tumbling and dozens of variations of medicine ball throws. Hmmm...right. Besides those 200 reps a day...we don't do any.

This isn't original, by any means. In the 1950's, Percy Cerutty recommended that his runners, including marathoners, lift! Now, I've been a fan of Percy for years. Cerutty was an Australian track coach/guru/fitness buff/nutcase who coached some of the best middle distance runners in the world in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

Some consider him a nutcase, but rarely have I found normal people to have all the answers. Again, if you strive for normal, spend an hour at a Las Vegas casino and take inventory on the what "normal" is in America today.

Why was he crazy? He told runners to:

• Run up hills.

• Lift weights.

• Eat odd foods like oatmeal, veggies, and fruit.

Arrest him, I say!

Before I was born, he insisted that all athletes do the big five lifts:

1. A deadlift.

2. A form of pressing. Cerutty liked a lift called the "bench press." I'm not sure if it ever become popular.

3. An explosive full body move. He liked the heavy dumbbell swing.

4. A form of pulling. Cerutty liked pull-ups and cheat curls. Cheat curls are like a power clean with a curl grip (power curls) or that bouncing heavy bar curl you see every gym-rat in the world do when he gets tired from strict curls.

5. An ab exercise. If deadlifts make you go one way, the ab exercise should strengthen you in the other.

After going heavy on these lifts with two to five sets of two to five (save for swings and abs where the reps go fairly high), you hang from a pull-up bar and stretch for a few minutes.

Recognize it? I think I've recommended this workout for thousands of people, after I, uh, invented it.

1. Deadlift (2x Bodyweight for marathoners!)

2. Bench Press (1x Bodyweight for marathoners!))

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3. Power Curl

4. Swing

5. Sit up

It can be that simple, really. Strive to cover the nine major movements in your training and you should be fine. More than “fine,” really. Now, the big question: how often?

2. Dan Gable: “If it is important, do it every day...if it isn't, don't do it at all.”

Great, now we know the moves...how do we decide “when” to do them? I argue: every damn day!!! Half the fitness professionals in the world suddenly just had heart attacks! So, how do we do it? We use the warm ups to attempt to do everyone of the big moves. Currently, I have my athletes do this:

• Crush Press Walk/Horn Walks/Waiter Walks/Suitcase Walks/Crosswalk/Farmer Walk/SeeSaw Press Walk

• Light Goblet Squats 2 sets of 8 Plus Hip Flexor Stretch

• Bootstrapper Squats

• Alligator Push Ups

• RDL Stretch and Deck Squats

• Hurdle Stepovers (Right, then Left)

• Pullups 3 sets of 8

• Ab Ball Throws 1 set of 25

• 50 Half Turkish Get ups

• “Rolling” Abs/Windmills

• Goblet Squats...Ten Seconds with -”123” Bottom Pause

• Swings

Don't worry about the specific exercises or names here...the general idea is to do every move...lightly...in the warm ups. “Lightly,” is, of course, a relative term. I have junior football

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players using a 110pound kettlebell on the Goblet Squats. Here is the point: I think all nine movements are important...so, we do them every single day. With most athletes, the movement needs repeating...far more than most people think. At the elite levels of track and field and Olympic lifting, the total number of full movements is simply staggering. Many young people today are out of touch with movements like squatting from using chairs their entire life and kept from deadlifting and rotating from the Safety Lifting Police.

Now, maybe you don't agree with me on this idea...it really is contrarian. “Most” people don't train this way. I just know this: people on the cutting edge of Fat Loss programs and others at the top of the food chain in sports performance are doing methods like this every single day.

There is a million ways to do all the movements, but I have found that it works best in the warm up. In other words, do all the movements — or most of them — in the daily movement warm-up! I've stolen an idea from both Steve Javorek and Alwyn Cosgrove. Do complexes to warm up. Here's one of mine, only mildly stolen:

• Power Snatch for 8 reps

• Overhead Squat for 8 reps

• Back Squat for 8 reps

• Good Morning for 8 reps

• Row for 8 reps

• Deadlift for 8 reps

Do these all in a row without letting go of the bar. Rest a minute, a minute and a half, or two minutes, and do it again. Try three to five sets of this little complex. This particular one is ideal for a day dedicated to vertical or horizontal pushing. If you do five of these complexes, you've done 240 movements that cover practically all the other moves.

Now, will this get you “strong” or “buff?” Well, it will rip the fat off of you, but the rest of the workout is the key to strength, fitness and health goals. So, how do you get strong...the base of all performance improvement?

Oh, but what about those movements that aren't important? Don't do them at all...

3. The “Formula”

Max Effort

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Speed Work (Dynamic)

Isos (Deadstop)

Repetitions...lots of Repetitions

Getting strong is probably more art than science. Exercise science generally tells us what we already figured out in the gym a century or more ago. Several things seem to work:

1. Maximum Effort. Pushing the limit on a lift seems to make you better at pushing the limit on the lift. Simply holding a heavy weight seems to help you lift more. There is no question in my mind that “going heavy” trumps all the other toys we have in the gym for getting stronger. Of course, if you go heavy all the time, parts of your body begin to break off.

2. Speed Work or the Dynamic Method. Why do guys who snatch a lot seem to be able to deadlift a lot, too? Speed works in the weight room. Going fast with weights seems to make you able to handle more weight. Yep, you can take this too far. I don't want to hear about how doing 500 fast pushups is the same as benching 500.

3. Isometrics...the Deadstop Method. Again, overhyped...but it works. Pushing as hard as you can without movement seems to make you really strong when you move. I prefer the “deadstop” method of putting a bar exactly at a sticking point and lifting from the deadstop. I even hang off the bar for a second to further limit the stretch-reflex, then try to blast the bar up.

4. But, the key is repetitions. The most obvious and most ignored of the methods is simply getting the reps in...

And, I get it. Nobody is a beginner anymore. Two weeks at the spa with a personal trainer and “I'm an advanced guy.” I recommend three sets of eight for a lifter and the world condemns me for faulty thinking. But, here is the deal: the fastest road I know to strength and body composition changes is increasing the reps. My athletes do hundreds...thousands of reps....a week in the important moves. A typical press workout for the athletes I work with on a typical day is up to 55 reps using the 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 method. Sure, it's for beginners. Remember, though, if you don't bench at least bodyweight, I consider you a raw beginner...no matter how may t-shirts you own that say “No Pain, No Gain” or whatever idiotic phrase of the day dominates the strength industry.

With Maximum Effort, I have a little thing called the “Rule of Ten.” I think you have about ten heavy, quality reps in a workout. It can be 3 x 3, 5 x 2, Six Singles, or 2 x 5, but around ten reps seems to be the maximum that an athlete can roll out in the “big” lifts like the deadlift, snatch, clean, squat, and bench. Sure, you can do more lighter movements, but in

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ME, you only get so much. Speed work, on the other extreme, seems a natural for more repetitions. Now, I am not arguing for more reps in a set, rather more total repetitions. Instead of 4 sets of 10, my athletes (for just one example) often use 8 sets of 5. Speed work doesn't seem to work with singles, doubles or triples for the younger athlete, but one little sign of growing competence is the ability of my athletes to “get faster” on less reps. It is hard to explain, but “you know it when you see it.”

For the deadstop or isometric method, the rule is simple: one rep. Now, let me phrase that in reality...it might take up to five reps to figure out the weight for the one truly heavy isometric. The weight has to be so heavy that the bar doesn't move! With the deadstop variety...isometrics crazy cousin...there might be a need for one or two (or more) lighter attempts just to be sure everything...including the equipment...is ready.

The coach has to embrace something I learned from a fabulous high school football coach years ago. When I asked him how he got so successful, he told me: “you can't get bored watching the basics.” “You?” “Yeah...the coach all too often has seen the same thing over and over and wants to move on, but the team and the individuals are just learning it.” In other words, if you want to teach someone to squat...you have to watch them squat a lot.

For the individual fitness trainee, it means that you are going to have to learn and do lots and lots and lots of movements. I can't say it any better than what I learned from a deaf discus thrower that I worked with a few years ago. He had become very good and I asked him his secret. He took his right middle finger and twisted it over his right index finger...and then slapped it into his left palm. In sign language, it means “repetition.”

Get used to it.

Two Typical Workouts using my system:

Example One

Warm up Complex (Five Total Sets)

• Power Snatch for 8 reps

• Overhead Squat for 8 reps

• Back Squat for 8 reps

• Good Morning for 8 reps

• Row for 8 reps

• Deadlift for 8 reps

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Workout:

A1. 10 sets of 2 Bench Press with Chains (Try to increase weight as you go...within reason)

A2. Lawnmowers (8 right/8 left) (One arm kettlbell Rows)

B1. Snatch: 5 Sets of 3 (Technical Work)

C1. Power Curls: 5 Sets of 3 (Increase weight each set)

D1. Hanging Leg Raises.

Example Two:

Warm up

• Crush Press Walk/Horn Walks/Waiter Walks/Suitcase Walks/Crosswalk/Farmer Walk/SeeSaw Press Walk

• Light Goblet Squats 2 sets of 8 Plus Hip Flexor Stretch

• Bootstrapper Squats

• Alligator Push Ups

• RDL Stretch and Deck Squats

• Hurdle Stepovers (Right, then Left)

• Pullups 3 sets of 8

• Ab Ball Throws 1 set of 25

• 50 Half Turkish Get ups

• “Rolling” Abs/Windmills

• Goblet Squats...Ten Seconds with -”123” Bottom Pause

• Swings

Double Chain Max Bench Press

Single Chain Max Bench Press

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Drumline: 5-4-3-2-1 (In the group of exercises, do the first lift for five, the second lift for five....then, the first lift for four, the second lift for four...adding weight each lift)

Front Squat with Two Chains

Pullups

Power Snatch and Overhead Squat

Thick Bar Deadlifts

Philosophy of strength coaching

Dan’s philosophy revolves around simple tenets that have stood the test of time. Whether it is ‘movements not muscles’ or the infamous ‘if it’s important do it every day, if its not important don’t do it at all’, Dan has a set of principles or ideas through which everything else gets rolled.

Dan talked about the difference between what you should be doing versus what you are doing. He offered a useful model for the sports coach of how to discern whether you need to be coaching greater maxes (does my athlete need a bigger deadlift?) or more qualities (do my athletes need to be more flexible?).

He also stressed the importance of repetitions as key to sport. As a discus thrower, his aim was 10,000 throws a year. That’s 830 throws a month, almost 200 throws a week, 27 throws a day.

“’If it’s important, do it every day. If it’s not, don’t do it at all’. Once you think this through, it becomes very difficult to fool yourself in your workouts. Also, the 10,000 repetitions (of your sport movement) in a year is a great way to say the same thing. Just get the important things done!”- Ville Silventoinen

As Dan comments, “It took 42 years to make it this simple.”

One of the a-ha! moments for me was Dan’s illustration of the life of a trainee – whether pro athlete or home trainer. For older people – those over 30, say – the answer to the question of lifelong health and fitness is: hypertrophy and joint mobility.

Your life’s quest should be for these two qualities. Why? Because frankly, if you don’t focus on these two qualities they are going to go down the tubes and it will get harder and harder to make an impact on them. They are the prerequisites for being able to train and stay functionally fit throughout your life.

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The JD warm up

Dan took us through the warm up he uses with his students and taught us the Kalos Sthenos method of the turkish get up.

This method fulfils a number of goals: it warms up the whole body; it is a systematic way of checking for issues as it is done exactly the same way each time; it contains valuable stretches that will improve over time; it promotes compression (or isometric) strength in the shoulder and elbow joints.

And when you perform the sequence – as we all did – with a paper cup of water balanced on the top of your fist, it promotes fierce concentration! I have never focussed so hard on an exercise as I did on that one and managed not to douse myself in water, which was unexpected.

This is also Dan’s handy tip for how to get a class of 15-year-olds to shut up and concentrate.

“The advantage of these exercises – in fact all exercises particularly for the posterior chain, not the mirror-dominated side – is that they keep you young. Overtraining the popular anterior muscles simply results in the posture of an old person.”- Daniel Hahn

Dan talked about a concentric circle model where what goes in the inner circle are those exercises essential for health and fitness which are usually done on a daily basis (the squat, joint mobility exercises); in the next circle are those activities that support your training, such as good nutrition, recovery, conditioning. And then the fun stuff around the outside. This helps you to plan a training programme, especially if you have very little time to workout. Always do what is core, add other things if and when you have the time and of course the free will.

“It was great to get live exposure to the various exercises he’s currently using too. It’s one thing to sit at home watching a dvd and say ‘ok, so that’s how Dan teaches the turkish getup’, and quite another to lie on the floor on day 2 with tired abs and shaking shoulders thinking ‘f***, so that’s what this exercise does…’”- Will Walshe

For those of us who were there, here is a summary of the full warm up:

Waiter walkSuitcase walkHeartbeat walk

Goblet squat (with curl)Hip flexor stretchx2

Scap push upBootstrapper squatTick tockMaxercist row (single leg)Maxercist press (single leg)

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Maxercist deadlift (single leg)Wide/narrow push ups

Turkish get up sequence- cuddle and roll- ear right and left- straight leg raise to ceiling- bent leg raise to kettlebell- punch ‘n’ crunch- T position- Hips high

Dan also talked about the importance of stretching and rolling the feet. This is a fairly new area for him – a personal aha moment, if you like. He’s a convert to Vibrams (as you can see in the above picture) and suggests rolling the feet using a ball every day.

Bow & Arrow: teaching the Olympic lifts

Dan John’s method is one of the fastest and most accessible ways to teach the Olympic lifts. If you have a class of people, the full range of ability and genetics, and you need to get them all snatching and cleaning without hurting themselves or overloading them with information, Dan John has the answer.

Central to this is his ‘bow and arrow’ concept. The torso is the arrow, extending from chin to butt as far as possible. Butt BACK, chin FORWARD until you can’t stretch any further (you should be feeling it in the hamstrings like a Romanian deadlift). Then the arrow is released as you extend and jump.

“The Bow and Arrow exercise is what stuck in my head the most.”- Sean Behan

“The workshop is going to do a lot to change the way I train myself, and the poor bastards under my care in CF Ireland. I thought his “JUST MAKE THE DAMN LIFT” method of coaching you on the snatch was particularly inspired” – Will Walshe

I thought so too, Will. That was all I needed to hear, and probably all the information I could cope with!

Groove in makes, not misses. If you miss at 40kg, go back and groove in makes at 25kg, 30kg, 35kg.

Summary of olymic lifting key points

Cues for Olympic lifts:- Weight on heels- Big chest

Things to practice every day with Olympic lifts:- Bow and arrow position- Romanian deadlift position- Goblet squat

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- Overhead squat position- Foam rolling- Feet rolling

Things to do every workout with Olympic lifts:- Squat Snatch- Jerk- Technique days and power days.

‘The Exercise’:- Power Snatch + Overhead Squat (= 1 rep)- Power Clean + Front Squat (= 1 rep)

‘The Drill’:- Power Snatch + Overhead Squat, Hang Squat Snatch, Squat Snatch from floor (= 1 rep)- Power Clean + Front Squat, Hang Squat Clean, Squat Clean from floor (= 1 rep)

Nutrition and recovery

This part of the seminar is typical of the Dan John style. It wasn’t on the agenda but someone asked about the Velocity Diet and we were off and away on a fascinating riff on diet, supplements and recovery. Anyone familiar with Dan’s writings will know how enthusiastic he is about fish oil and magnesium. Expect to hear a lot more about L-leucine as well.

Recovery index

This struck a chord with many people. Dan suggests that for each aspect of recovery you rate it either 0, 1, 2, or 3 every day, and note it in your journal. The aspects he suggests are:

Sleep Meals Supplements Life issues (i.e. things that get in the way of training and recovery) Relationships

So if you had an excellent day and rated all of the above at 3, your recovery index for that day would be 15.

You should also rate your workout, using say A, B, C, D and F (for failure!). So this excellent day you are having might be rated overall 15A.

The advantage of doing this daily assessment is that you can relate the quality of your recovery to the quality of your workouts. If you have a bad workout, you might be able to look back and see that your recovery index was low. On the other hand, if your recovery is in place but the workout still wasn’t great, then perhaps the training was the problem.

It is common for people to blame their training when progress isn’t being made – but what happens outside the gym is just as important. As an athlete, if you can’t get to sleep and you have trouble waking up you are likely to be overtraining.

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“my favourite part was his idea of a systematic, quantitative method of tracking recovery with a training journal. Being a gigantic wimp, I burn out very easily, so some kind of early warning system like that is just what I need!”- Will Walshe

“Recovery Index was something I haven’t done before. I know, I know, I MUST do it! Good way to spot overtraining.”- Ville Silventoinen

Goal setting

For me, this is where Dan John really excels. He takes both his own experience and models from other areas of life and applies them to strength training in a way that makes you see your entire training life in a single view. Goals crystalise, the unimportant or the lame crumbles away and you are left with what is really important.

It’s hard to do justice to the power of this process, but here are some things to ponder.

Move your goals from should or could to MUST.

Ask yourself – what is the pleasure of reaching my goal? (e.g. I am happy, proud, empowered, a winner) What is the pleasure of not reaching my goal? (e.g I can eat all the cookies I want and indulge in self pity)

Ask yourself – what is the pain of reaching my goal? (hard work, not going out, sticking to my diet) What is the pain of not reaching my goal? (all that hard work for nothing)

If you understand why you want to achieve your stated goal and you are motivated enough, you’ll be able to overcome any pain or discomfort involved in achieving it. Likewise if your goal is half-hearted or ill-defined, it will be all too easy to revert to the ‘pleasure’ of not achieving it.

“The goal setting chart with do’s and dont’s and pleasures and pains is something I’ve never done before, but I will now do. It made me wonder how serious I really am about my sport (I guess it’s more like a hobby to me, sad but true). I also really liked Dan’s comment that some people’s training suffers when they are in a relationship, which I think is true. It makes you really think hard what you MUST do to achieve your goals and understand the sacrifices that the top athletes make. How badly do you want it?”- Ville Silventoinen

Remember, the goal is to keep the goal the goal.

The kettlebell swing

We had a practical session on the hardstyle kettlebell swing.

Most kettlebell swings are an almost languid movement where the trainee drops into a half squat, swings the bell far out in front of them and lets it drift up overhead.

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The hardstyle swing is an aggressive hip snap where the kettlebell is actively pulled down from a position parallel to the ground, fast towards the groin. Yes, much hilarity as Dan proceeded to try to hit several participants in the balls with a heavy kettlebell!

Hip displacement continuum

The what??….okay, so it’s a continuum relating to how the hip moves. At one end is the squat, at the other end is the properly-performed swing with an aggressive hip snap.

SQUAT ——————————————————- SWING

Dan’s point is that most people perform the swing with a sort of squat, whereas they should perform it with a hip snap. They are at the wrong end of the continuum.

It is similar to the way Dan teaches the Olympic lifts – remember the ‘bow and arrow’ and the ‘butt BACK’ rule? The kettlebell swing is akin to the explosive hip snap required in the Olympic lifts. The standing long jump (we had a practical session on this too) and the vertical jump are also on the swing side of the continuum. Whereas the back squat, zercher squat, the front squat all live on the other side.

Dan also teaches a movement he calls the bootstrapper squat, which is right in the middle of the hip displacement continuum. Start in the goblet squat position (holding a kettlebell) and then extend your legs and swing the kettlebell back through them, extending your arms. So you end up in a Romanian deadlift position. Watch seminar participant Daniel Hahn demonstrate in this video (taken by Dominic) and listen to Dan explain further the difference between the squat movement and the swing movement:

So, it’s all in the hips – but all hip movements are not the same.

Rep rules and repeatable workouts

Another of Dan’s simple yet practical formulas that answers questions most people haven’t even asked yet. It is a rule of thumb for determining how many reps to aim for in a workout, but the bigger idea is to formulate repeatable workouts that train you efficiently without overstressing the system. They will keep you strong and keep your joints mobile.

Rule of tenTen honest, working reps – hard, heavy – is sufficient for one workout if you are an experienced lifter (a beginner can do more reps at a higher percentage of their max, since it isn’t a true max). This might include 5 x 2, 10 singles, one set of 10, 5-3-2 and so on. Best done using the following lifts:

Deadlift Back squat Front squat Snatch Clean and jerk

Rule of 15-25Rep schemes such as 5×5 fit into this category. Best done with the major half body moves:

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Bench press Military press Double kettlebell press

Rule of 50+Useful for total body, explosive but light movements, such as:

Kettlebell swings Kettlebell snatch

Dan John also likes the following rep scheme:2 – 3 – 5 – 10 x 5 = 100 reps

The 40 day program

Dan offered a practical example of these rep rules using one of his classic T-Nation successes: the 40 day program (quick summary: pick five exercises and for the next 40 workouts, do the exact same training program every day)

Choose five exercises – selecting a range of movements (push, pull, posterior, anterior, explosive and so on). Let’s say we choose bench press, snatch grip deadlift, kettlebell swing, pull up and ab roll. Here’s how you could apply the rep rules:

Deadlift – rule of tenBench press – rule of tenKettlebell swing – rule of 50Pull up – ladder of 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3 (Dan’s current favourite pull up protocol)

The point is to be able to do this workout without emotion, without psyche-up, without missing the lifts. You are greasing the groove. It is a kind of neurological training. In terms of weight, you gradually nudge your numbers up. You stay at 80% but that 80% slowly gets higher.

Phasic v Tonic Muscles

This looks alarmingly technical at first glance, but stick with it and it will make sense. Phasic muscles tend to be fast twitch and tend to weaken over time. Tonic muscles tend to be slow twitch and tend to stiffen over time. Some muscles are a bit of both.

Phasic (weaken) Middle Tonic (stiffen)Glutes Quads PecsDeltoids Calves BicepsTriceps Traps Parts of trapsRhomboids Lats Psoas (hip flexor)Abs

So the muscles that weaken over time need to be strengthened, and the muscles that stiffen over time need to be stretched. It’s a wonderfully simple way to prioritise different aspects of your training. “Stretch what is tight. Strengthen what is weak.”

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“This was a definite “a-ha!” moment for me, although I remember reading about this in Dan’s book. It’s great to hear stuff like this. It’s not too much “mobility voodoo”, just enough to understand what to lookout for.”- Ville Silventoinen

Batwings

Dan showed us one of his favourite exercises for the rhomboids – neglected and therefore weak in many people. This is the batwing. Lie face down on a bench, grab a kettlebell in each hand and draw it up in a row-like movement until your thumbs are in your armpits. Hold the weight there.

It’s a simple exercise but many people won’t be able to get the weight high enough and hold it there at first because their rhomboids are too weak. Dan suggests 10-15 reps of 5-15 seconds each (i.e. hold at the top for 5-15 seconds).

Litvinovs and Eagles

Dan introduced us to a long time favourite conditioning sequence: Litvinov sprints, named after a Soviet hammer thrower. Litvinov used to do 8 reps of heavy front squats followed by a 400m run. Dan has adapted this to be any big lift (although front squats still work best) followed by a sprint; it doesn’t have to be 400m, it can be much shorter. The training is in the transition from the big lift to the sprint.

I was the guinea pig for this little adventure so I cleaned and then front squatted 40kg (I know – massive!) eight times and then dropped the bar and sprinted as hard as I could across the gym. For the first few paces you hardly know where your legs are. We also tried this with overhead squats, still with 40kg on the bar (much more of a challenge for me – in fact it was an overhead squat PR).

Naturally this routine works best if you can take your weights outside and drop them freely.

Dan also showed us Eagles with a kettlebell. You do 8 reps of front squats, then a farmers walk out with a kettlebell; 8 reps of front squats at the other end, then a farmers walk back with a kettlebell. You do this four times. You make the weights heavy enough, this is an exhausting workout.

Is it really the end?

“I got a hell of a lot out of the two days, it’s gonna take a long time to digest all of it. I’ve literally got 14 pages of notes from day 2 alone!- Will Walshe

The end of the two-day extravaganza came far too quickly. There’s still plenty that was covered that I haven’t included in the summary above – you’ll just have to come to a seminar yourself if you want the full SP!

And not only did we have two days of Dan’s wit and wisdom in the gym, we also got to spend nights out in Dublin with him and his family, sharing beers and chatting.

Page 16: DJ Training Programs Are Great

Although we had a good-sized, enthusiastic group, I was surprised that more people didn’t make the seminar. It’s not often that you can be part of something that could influence the way you train for years. Watching Dan teach is also a lesson in itself. Powerlifter Kieran Doyle made the interesting observation that:

“the most frightening thing about the seminar is the amount of people that attended the seminar that don’t work in the fitness industry, very passionate people that could give a lot to the industry.”