Subject: Q&A: How to build your stubborn calves...
If your calves stink,
I've got the solution for you....
Because just a few days
ago, I got this question from a reader, Eric Y.,
that I thought was an extremely good one (and pretty entertainingly
phrased;)...
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Question:
Nick,
My name is Eric, and I have been subscribed to your mailing list
for some time now. In reading the "20 dumbest things"
article,
I noticed that on #20 you specifically call out guys for making
excuses for not getting their calves to grow. I am hoping that
you can give me some tips, shoot me an email, send me a link,
anything to help me achieve calf awesomeness.
The problem I run into is, guys with great calves seem to have no
idea how they got them, and guys like me with sh---y [expletive
edited] calves have no idea HOW TO get them. I have access to
a leg press and a ton of free weights, but can only find exercise
plans for generic 3 sets of 12 calf raise workouts. If anyone has
some crazy ass, off the wall, flamingo leg altering plan, you
would be that guy.
So please, hook a brother up with some black magic voodoo
calf exercise, and help me not be one of those excuse making
#20 guys anymore.
Thanks for everything you do
Eric Y.
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My answer...
I can definitely
help you with that!
If youre ready to do high-frequency calf training, thats
exactly
whats going to do it for you. Calves are a tough nut to crack,
especially for those of us who arent genetically gifted (Im
in
that boat with you).
The first part is doing one set of THIS exercise twice a day every
day first thing in the morning and last thing at night:
I
call it the Full-Range Calf Raise
It uses just bodyweight for resistance, uses no equipment
other than a calf block or stair edge and gives you maximum
anatomical stretch and maximum anatomical contraction in
one continous exercise.
Aim for about 4 to 6 reps per
leg under total control with
your mind fully in the muscle.
Here's the full article on Daily
Specialization Training that explains
the concept of this 2-a-day training in detail
Next, at the start of EVERY single workout you do, no matter
what bodyparts you're working, I want you to do ONE "1
and
1/4 Rep" rest pause set (Ill explain) before you do anything
else.
This is called Priority Specialization.
It can be done on the leg
press or on the standing calf raise machine (if youve got
one).
Start with a fairly light weigh
the first time you do this one, then
go up from there as you get stronger. Aim for 6 to 8 reps on
each part of the rest-pause set.
Part 1 top and bottom 1/4 reps. Start in the bottom
stretch
position, hold the stretch a few seconds then come up 1/4 of the
way. Then come back down into the stretch. Then come all the
way to the top. Then come down 1/4 of the way, then back up
and hold the peak contraction at the top again. Then come back
down into the stretch. Repeat the 1/4 rep at the bottom.
So basically, youre doing
1/4 reps at the top and the bottom
using the full rep as the bridge between the two. These are done
under total control no momentum, with a brief pause on
each phase of the rep. It'll look like a chopped-up exercise but
the idea is maintaining continuous muscle tension.
Rest 20 seconds
Part 2 now use the same sort of format only just do
the 1/4
at the bottom stretch position, NOT at the top.
Rest 20 seconds
Part 3 same again only with the 1/4 rep at the top,
NOT at
the bottom.
When you cant do any more at the top, come down into the
stretch and hold for as long as you can (itll hurt like a
bugger
but just hold that stretch as long as possible).
Ive used this technique and its tough to do but it does
work! The
calves respond to strict form and very high frequency, as well as
hard stretching.
If you try it, let me know how
it works for you!
(here are the links to the exercise
and technique again)
Full-Range
Calf Raise
Daily
Specialization Training
Nick Nilsson
The "Mad Scientist of Muscle"
P.S. If you know anybody else
who might benefit from this
information, feel free to forward this email to them!
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Plain text links from this email
http://www.fitstep.com/Misc/Newsletter-archives/issue40/calves.htm
http://www.fitstep.com/Misc/Newsletter-archives/issue27/weak-strong.htm
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