Let’s wake those pecs up. They’ve
fallen asleep as of late, haven’t really grown any bigger or stronger in
months. And can you blame them? Week in, week out, your chest routine,
we’re guessing, is glaringly stagnant – inclines, followed by flat
bench, then maybe some declines, flyes, pec deck, etc., always in the
same rep range. Sound familiar?
It’s time to throw a wrench into your pec training with
some hardcore, intense, extreme techniques, all intended to spark new
muscle growth and take your chest beyond where it’s ever been. The
following 5 chest-shocking methods have been tried many times over by
expert trainers, champion bodybuilders and muscle-hungry gym rats with
smashing success. So give them all a try (just not in the same workout –
that’s cruel) and when your pecs refuse to go back into hibernation,
feel free to blame us.
1) Train Chest Two Days in a Row
Why to do it: Forcing
a stubborn bodypart to grow takes serious action, and no practice is
more serious than training a muscle two days in a row. It may sound
extreme, but it works. We like to refer to this method as “priming the
pump,” where the first day of training employs high-rep sets to open up
the muscles to take in more nutrients for the next day’s session, which
will be a heavier workout. Our only caution is to not use this technique
too often (do it for a month, then step away from it for at least a
couple months), so as to avoid overtraining.
What to do: Pick
two consecutive days on which to train chest. The first day, do only
single-joint, isolation exercises from at least four different angles –
pullovers, cable crossovers standing upright and bent-over, incline,
flat and/or decline flyes, etc. – and keep the reps high, at around
25-30. Do around 16 total sets this day, without going to failure of any
of them. The next day, after consuming an abundance of protein and
carbs following the first workout, go heavier (6-12 reps) and train to
failure on all compound exercises (flat, incline, decline dumbbell
and/or barbell presses). Do a total of 16-20 sets on these moves, and
then take a full week off from training pecs.
2) Increase Your Reps
Why to do it: It’s
easy to get stuck in a rut of working in the same rep range week after
week, month after, and (dare we say) year after year. Most common are
individuals who are married to sets of 6-10 reps. If that’s your
situation, take a brief hiatus by dropping the weight and using higher
reps, which will help bust through any plateau you find yourself in.
“While I’m a proponent of low volume training,” says IFBB pro
bodybuilder Mark Dugdale, “I do think it’s important to take a couple
weeks every few months and do high reps – high being around 20 reps per
set. Often we fail [in a given set] due to lack of muscle endurance
rather than actual muscle failure. Building up this endurance with a
couple weeks of high reps helps overcome this problem.”
What to do: For
the next two weeks, don’t worry about changing the exercises you do, or
even the total number of sets per chest workout. Do 3-4 sets of each
exercise with no fewer than 20 reps. If you underestimate the amount of
weight you should use, no problem – do 25 or 30 reps (or more) that set
and add some resistance for the next.
3) Rest Pause to 40
Why to do it: The
whole point of doing rest-pauses is to do more reps than you’d normally
be able to do with a given weight in a given set. For example, say your
6RM on bench press is 250 pounds. You can do more than six reps in a set
by doing 2-3 reps, then resting for a short period of time, doing 2-3
more, and repeating this until you’ve reached a desired number of reps
(10, 20 or even more). That’s one rest-pause set. The benefit of this
technique is obvious: To perform more work (albeit over a slightly
longer period of time) and thus overload the muscles in an attempt to
stimulate more growth than can be achieved by straight sets alone.
What to do: On
either flat-bench or incline dumbbell presses, choose a weight that’s
approximately your 5-6RM. Do two reps at a time, resting 15-20 seconds
between each pair, and go as high as 40 total reps. Due to the immense
intensity and volume of work this entails, don’t do more than one
rest-pause set in this manner.
4) Go Down the Rack
Why to do it: While
on rest-pauses you extend a set by giving yourself more rest to
complete, sometimes doing some good hardcore drop sets, where you
essentially don’t rest at all, is just what your pecs need to start
growing. In this case, we’re dealing with dumbbell presses (either
flat-bench or incline), which means you’ll be going down the rack. “This
overload of continuous sets will really shock those stubborn pecs,”
says Jim Ryno, owner of LIFT, a private personal training facility in
Ramsey, New Jersey (InsideLift.com). “This technique works best with
virtually no rest between sets, so be sure to move quickly when changing
weights.”
What to do: Select a pair of dumbbells on flat
or incline presses that you would normally do for a set of eight reps.
Complete the set as usual, but instead of stopping, immediately go back
to the rack, grab a pair of dumbbells that are 20 pounds lighter, and
rep those out to failure. Proceed to go down the rack in 20-pound
increments, going to failure with each weight, until you’re literally
using 15-20-pound dumbbells. Do this 2-3 times total as your last sets
for compound exercises that day.
5) Pre-Exhaust the Pecs
Why to do it: The
pre-exhaustion technique, where you do single-joint exercises before
compound movements in given workout (the opposite of what most people
would typically do), is especially useful for training chest. Reason
being, the triceps often tire out before the pecs on pressing exercises.
By doing your isolation work first, you all but guarantee that the pecs
will fatigue first, which, after all, is the whole point of training
chest. Besides, anything different is a good bet for sparking new gains.
“With this reverse order of exercises,” says Ryno, “you’ll be hitting
the pecs in a unique way, giving your chest muscles a stimulus they’re
not use to.
What to do: The next time you train chest, do
all isolation exercises (cable crossovers, flyes, pullovers) first in
your workout, making sure to exhaust the pecs by any means necessary –
training to failure on every set, doing drop sets, rest-pauses, etc.
Follow that with your pressing exercises (flat, incline, decline
dumbbell and/or barbell presses). Exercise selection should go something
like this: 2-3 isolation exercises followed by 2-3 compound moves.
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