トランスクリプトEnglish

Why We DON'T Use Upper Lower Splits For Athletes

15m 24s3,296 単語481 segmentsEnglish

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This is why we don't recommend upper

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lower splits for athletes. There's a

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really common pathway of learning where

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a child starts playing a sport or a

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teenager starts playing a sport and then

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at some point they come across gym

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training through watching online videos

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or following people on social media.

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Then they decide, "I'm going to start

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using gym work to make me better at my

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sport or just getting better shape." If

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this sounds like you, then you're not

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alone. The problem is the people who

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cast the widest net are the ones you're

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going to see first on the internet and

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it just so happens the people who are

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most common in terms of gym con that

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online bodybuilders. And sure, it makes

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perfect sense, right? You look at these

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guys and girls, you think, "I want to

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get better at gym work or being in the

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gym." And they spend their entire lives

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in the gym and they have a very good

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understanding of that. So, why would you

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not listen to them? And then you might

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say, "I want to gain some muscle and get

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a bit more jacked and look a bit

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better." And they're super jacked and

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look amazing. So, why would they not be

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the people you should follow? And why

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would you not follow their kind of gym

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splits? But the problem is, if you're

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playing a sport, whether that is rugby,

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soccer, football, tennis, whatever the

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sport is, we can do so much better than

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an upper lower split. The problem here

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is bodybuilders are here to gain muscle,

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to lose fat, and that's about it. They

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don't worry about speed, coordination,

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power, motor skill learning, any of

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that. They're there to be jacked and

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that's their main job. To give you an

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example, right? Bodybuilders will

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literally lament the thickening and

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developing of their core musculature

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from doing back squats. So, they'll wear

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belts or they'll try and limit the

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degrees of freedom at the movement

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itself so they don't get this thickening

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of their midline. They are anti-fridges.

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They want this line to be as aggressive

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as possible. But as athletes, we need to

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think about these things like developing

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muscle, being good and lean and in good

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condition, and much, much more. So,

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certainly, there's a lot we can learn

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from the bodybuilding community, but

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there's quite a bit else to it aside

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from just smashing the muscles. Right,

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upper lower splits. Athletes need big

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strong legs and they need big strong

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upper bodies. So, why might this not be

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the most effective thing? So, the best

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way of explaining this is to start off

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by explaining why this split is so

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popular. So, the first reason it's so

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popular is it works. Volume is one of

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the main drivers of hypertrophy and boy,

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oh boy, does an upper lower split make

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it super simple to get a lot of high

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volume training done. So, on a

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traditional lower body day, you'll come

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in, start with some sort of general

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warm-up.

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Once you're good and warm, then you're

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going to go on to one of your main

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exercises. Probably going to be

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something like high bar back squats on a

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Smith machine or just normal back

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squats. Nice high volume, let's say four

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sets of 15. Once those legs are good and

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pumped, then you're going to move on to

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something like a Bulgarian split squat.

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So, we're going to load up, go a bit

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lighter weights, and then we're going to

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go for, let's say, three or four max

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sets each side.

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So, at this point now, our legs are

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getting pretty pumped up. We've done

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some maximal sets, we've done some high

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volume squatting, both bilateral and

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unilateral. Next thing, let's start

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hitting the hammies up. Let's start

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getting into the posterior chain. So, a

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super common thing to do would be

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getting into your deads and RDLs.

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You're probably then going to finish off

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the session with a couple of supersets,

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maybe a finisher or two. You see how

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these sessions run, right? It's an

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absolute smash fest. You're going to

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destroy your legs. Once that part of

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your leg is destroyed, you're going to

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move on to the next part and it's super

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focused site-specific training. So, for

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a bodybuilder, right? That session is

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great. Come back later on the week, do

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something very similar again, and we're

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really getting closer and closer to our

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goals. We've surged a massive amount of

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blood to all those capillary beds, which

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gives us good trigger for angiogenesis.

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We've done a lot of damage to those

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muscle which triggers hypertrophy. We're

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now getting to the point where we're

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going to be gaining muscle, getting in

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better shape, doing exactly what we want

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a bodybuilder to do. But what in God's

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name do you think is going to happen if

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you show up to your soccer, tennis,

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rugby, or any sporting session, let's

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say later on that evening or even the

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next day? I'll tell you exactly what's

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going to happen. You're going to be

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walking around the place like John Wayne

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after getting off his horse and it

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doesn't matter what sport you're trying

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to play, no matter what athletic

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endeavor you're trying to do, if you're

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that sore and that fatigued, even if the

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pain isn't that bad, you're just not

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going to be in a position to do anything

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reasonably athletic. The challenge here

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is, right? There's a contrast between

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the goals of a gym-goer, gym monkey

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bodybuilder, and the goals of an

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athlete. On one side, the athlete must

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maintain readiness, whether it's

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readiness throughout the week, a month,

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a year, or a training block. Certainly,

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there are periods of every athlete's

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year where they can kind of mess

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themselves up a bit more. In the

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off-season, they can do a lot of high

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volume training, but generally speaking,

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if you're playing a sport, you have to

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be ready and capable to play that sport

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for most of the year. For this reason,

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athletes are concerned with finding

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something called minimum effective dose.

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It's not the most training we can do, it

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is the least amount of training to get

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us the best possible results. On the

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other hand, then we have bodybuilders,

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right? So, they want to do as much

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damage to those muscle tissues as

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possible and then signal the most amount

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of muscle growth following on from that.

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They're looking for how much training

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can I get away with doing before I

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either negatively influence the next and

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upcoming session or damage those muscle

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tissues to the point where they can't be

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repaired easily. This is the contrast

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between these two things. On one side,

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we're looking for efficiency, on the

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other side, we're looking for maximizing

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one specific silo. So, the first reason

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is pretty clear. We don't like athletes

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using upper and lower splits because

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they mess athletes up a little bit too

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much. Whether that's through DOMS,

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whether that's through local muscular

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fatigue, and all the rest that comes

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along with it. But that is definitely

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not the only negative to them. Our next

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reason then is strength development. So,

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in the first part, we talked about the

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hypertrophy side of things. And this is

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where athletes and bodybuilders have

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very concurrent goals. Both of them want

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to gain more muscle tissue. But the real

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issues with the upper lower style splits

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is when we start looking at their

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non-concurrent goals. The first of these

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is strength training. Well, the reality

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of it is, we look at strength training

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athletes, powerlifters, weightlifters,

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strongmen, whatever, a lot of them are

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going to have training splits that might

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necessarily be too different from the

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specificity of upper and lower because

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they'll have a big day where they squat,

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a big pull day, a big press day, and so

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on. So, if it gets such good results for

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them in the strength training realms,

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why would we not use it for athletes to

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get stronger? This really isn't too far

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from the truth, right? This isn't too

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far away from how most athletes would

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