Why We DON'T Use Upper Lower Splits For Athletes
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This is why we don't recommend upper
lower splits for athletes. There's a
really common pathway of learning where
a child starts playing a sport or a
teenager starts playing a sport and then
at some point they come across gym
training through watching online videos
or following people on social media.
Then they decide, "I'm going to start
using gym work to make me better at my
sport or just getting better shape." If
this sounds like you, then you're not
alone. The problem is the people who
cast the widest net are the ones you're
going to see first on the internet and
it just so happens the people who are
most common in terms of gym con that
online bodybuilders. And sure, it makes
perfect sense, right? You look at these
guys and girls, you think, "I want to
get better at gym work or being in the
gym." And they spend their entire lives
in the gym and they have a very good
understanding of that. So, why would you
not listen to them? And then you might
say, "I want to gain some muscle and get
a bit more jacked and look a bit
better." And they're super jacked and
look amazing. So, why would they not be
the people you should follow? And why
would you not follow their kind of gym
splits? But the problem is, if you're
playing a sport, whether that is rugby,
soccer, football, tennis, whatever the
sport is, we can do so much better than
an upper lower split. The problem here
is bodybuilders are here to gain muscle,
to lose fat, and that's about it. They
don't worry about speed, coordination,
power, motor skill learning, any of
that. They're there to be jacked and
that's their main job. To give you an
example, right? Bodybuilders will
literally lament the thickening and
developing of their core musculature
from doing back squats. So, they'll wear
belts or they'll try and limit the
degrees of freedom at the movement
itself so they don't get this thickening
of their midline. They are anti-fridges.
They want this line to be as aggressive
as possible. But as athletes, we need to
think about these things like developing
muscle, being good and lean and in good
condition, and much, much more. So,
certainly, there's a lot we can learn
from the bodybuilding community, but
there's quite a bit else to it aside
from just smashing the muscles. Right,
upper lower splits. Athletes need big
strong legs and they need big strong
upper bodies. So, why might this not be
the most effective thing? So, the best
way of explaining this is to start off
by explaining why this split is so
popular. So, the first reason it's so
popular is it works. Volume is one of
the main drivers of hypertrophy and boy,
oh boy, does an upper lower split make
it super simple to get a lot of high
volume training done. So, on a
traditional lower body day, you'll come
in, start with some sort of general
warm-up.
Once you're good and warm, then you're
going to go on to one of your main
exercises. Probably going to be
something like high bar back squats on a
Smith machine or just normal back
squats. Nice high volume, let's say four
sets of 15. Once those legs are good and
pumped, then you're going to move on to
something like a Bulgarian split squat.
So, we're going to load up, go a bit
lighter weights, and then we're going to
go for, let's say, three or four max
sets each side.
So, at this point now, our legs are
getting pretty pumped up. We've done
some maximal sets, we've done some high
volume squatting, both bilateral and
unilateral. Next thing, let's start
hitting the hammies up. Let's start
getting into the posterior chain. So, a
super common thing to do would be
getting into your deads and RDLs.
You're probably then going to finish off
the session with a couple of supersets,
maybe a finisher or two. You see how
these sessions run, right? It's an
absolute smash fest. You're going to
destroy your legs. Once that part of
your leg is destroyed, you're going to
move on to the next part and it's super
focused site-specific training. So, for
a bodybuilder, right? That session is
great. Come back later on the week, do
something very similar again, and we're
really getting closer and closer to our
goals. We've surged a massive amount of
blood to all those capillary beds, which
gives us good trigger for angiogenesis.
We've done a lot of damage to those
muscle which triggers hypertrophy. We're
now getting to the point where we're
going to be gaining muscle, getting in
better shape, doing exactly what we want
a bodybuilder to do. But what in God's
name do you think is going to happen if
you show up to your soccer, tennis,
rugby, or any sporting session, let's
say later on that evening or even the
next day? I'll tell you exactly what's
going to happen. You're going to be
walking around the place like John Wayne
after getting off his horse and it
doesn't matter what sport you're trying
to play, no matter what athletic
endeavor you're trying to do, if you're
that sore and that fatigued, even if the
pain isn't that bad, you're just not
going to be in a position to do anything
reasonably athletic. The challenge here
is, right? There's a contrast between
the goals of a gym-goer, gym monkey
bodybuilder, and the goals of an
athlete. On one side, the athlete must
maintain readiness, whether it's
readiness throughout the week, a month,
a year, or a training block. Certainly,
there are periods of every athlete's
year where they can kind of mess
themselves up a bit more. In the
off-season, they can do a lot of high
volume training, but generally speaking,
if you're playing a sport, you have to
be ready and capable to play that sport
for most of the year. For this reason,
athletes are concerned with finding
something called minimum effective dose.
It's not the most training we can do, it
is the least amount of training to get
us the best possible results. On the
other hand, then we have bodybuilders,
right? So, they want to do as much
damage to those muscle tissues as
possible and then signal the most amount
of muscle growth following on from that.
They're looking for how much training
can I get away with doing before I
either negatively influence the next and
upcoming session or damage those muscle
tissues to the point where they can't be
repaired easily. This is the contrast
between these two things. On one side,
we're looking for efficiency, on the
other side, we're looking for maximizing
one specific silo. So, the first reason
is pretty clear. We don't like athletes
using upper and lower splits because
they mess athletes up a little bit too
much. Whether that's through DOMS,
whether that's through local muscular
fatigue, and all the rest that comes
along with it. But that is definitely
not the only negative to them. Our next
reason then is strength development. So,
in the first part, we talked about the
hypertrophy side of things. And this is
where athletes and bodybuilders have
very concurrent goals. Both of them want
to gain more muscle tissue. But the real
issues with the upper lower style splits
is when we start looking at their
non-concurrent goals. The first of these
is strength training. Well, the reality
of it is, we look at strength training
athletes, powerlifters, weightlifters,
strongmen, whatever, a lot of them are
going to have training splits that might
necessarily be too different from the
specificity of upper and lower because
they'll have a big day where they squat,
a big pull day, a big press day, and so
on. So, if it gets such good results for
them in the strength training realms,
why would we not use it for athletes to
get stronger? This really isn't too far
from the truth, right? This isn't too
far away from how most athletes would
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