Joe Weider’s Training Principles for Beginners – Progressive Overload Principle

Joe WeiderProgressive overload principle is a basic principle to succeed in each form of physical training including strength and stamina building, muscle development, etc. It means subjecting your muscles to higher degree of stress and tension compared to previous workout. Aim for progressive overload. For example, building strength can be achieved by lifting each-time-heavier weights. But it is not enough for boosting muscle gain just to repeat with progressively heavier weights. Increase the number of exercises, sets and reps during each session as well.

Developing Muscular Endurance

For developing local muscular endurance, shorten progressively the rest time between sets with greater number of reps during each of them. All these progressively increase workout intensity. Progressive overload technique is fundamental for both any form of sport training and Joe Weider’s bodybuilding training system.

Set System

During a formative stage of Joe Weider’s system, most experts recommended the amateur athletes to perform only one set of each prescribed exercise in their programs. Thus they performed only 12 sets for every of 12 exercises per single whole-body sculpting workout. Weider was the first to stand for the greater amount of sets (up to 3-4 sometimes) for each exercise. It both exhausts every individual muscle or group of muscles, and maximizes their growth.

Isolation Principle

All muscles act either cohesively or in a relative isolation from each other. Any given muscle contributes to the movement as stabilizer of body position, or as synergist, antagonist or protagonist. If you want to build up or develop a single muscle to the limit, you have to isolate it as well as possible. It can be achieved by changing the anatomical position. For example, by doing curls with your arms rested on a Scott bench you isolate brachialis better than by doing a reverse-grip lat pulldown.

Muscle Confusion Principle

Changing your training program routines is a key for making constant progress. Don’t let your muscles adapt. They need a stress for growth. If you keep varying exercises, the number of sets and reps, your muscles will never adapt to the applying load. You have to surprise your muscles to keep them grow.

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Posted by GenXXL Staff on Oct 14th, 2008 and filed under Workout. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response by filling following comment form or trackback to this entry from your site

5 Responses for “Joe Weider’s Training Principles for Beginners – Progressive Overload Principle”

  1. [...] Joe Weider’s staggered sets principle is actually an extended muscle priority training principle. Priority training emphasizes large muscle groups or underdeveloped muscles. Usually, it is those muscles that need more energy. They are the muscles of hips, chest, back and shoulders. Some muscles are denser than the others and, thus, they are slower to be built. Yet, they don’t need much of energy when you train them. With staggered sets, you train smaller, slower-developing body parts in between the sets for large muscle groups. You can use this technique while doing exercises for any of major body parts you are working. [...]

  2. thinking is flawed here, sorry but i dont agree

  3. This is a nice blog i must say, usually i don’t post comments on others’ blogs but would like to say that this post really forced me to do so!

  4. [...] like to make up your own … Tags: body bot, body weight training, geek, progressive overload …Joe Weider's Training Principles for Beginners – Progressive …Progressive overload principle is a basic principle to succeed in each form of physical training [...]

  5. BodyMuscul says:

    Nice Site layout for your blog. I am looking forward to reading more from you.

    Good posting, thanks a lot!

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