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"Hey Charles, I'm
training a Muay Thai fighter, he has had 18 fights. Wants
to fight in about 18 weeks. I was planning to do some periodization
for him. Was thinking EDT for the first 6 weeks: Core routine
from Muscle Logic: Dumbbell Snatches Left/Right side, Squats/
Pullups, Dumbell Turkish Get-Up, and abdominal work.
Then the next six weeks
I was going to introduce kettlebell work, more speed/power
work etc. Increasing speed & power component as we get
into the 2nd and 3rd six week blocks. As you probably know,
Muay Thai fighters need to keep their weight down, and cut
a bit of weight as they get close to fighting. What do you
suggest to keep the program challenging and interesting
with a strong weight training component without him gaining
too much weight (even if it is all muscle?)"
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Of course, the first problem (in this case) is that I don't know
the fighter's relative strengths and weaknesses. So my response
will be only generally useful at best. But with that said, this
question illustrates what is perhaps the primary decision facing
you when you're thinking about how to assign workloads over a
period of weeks: do you assign one type of work for a while (let's
say 3-4 weeks for the sake of this discussion), then another type
of work for a while, and finally, a third type of work for the
final phase of training.
Or
Do you basically decide
what type of work is needed most, and then just keep doing that
type of work for the entire training cycle?
Or is there a third
option?
"Traditional" Periodization
The first option is
how most people think of "traditional" or "classical"
periodization. After all, the very word "periodization"
is rooted in the work "period," and is defined as breaking
up a long period of time into several shorter periods of time,
each with a distinct character and/or objective. Now this approach
hinges on two important premises, otherwise you'd never even consider
using it:
#1: Jack Of All Trades,
Master Of None: One important premise of the traditional approach
is that if you try to improve a number of athletic attributes
simultaneously, your efforts (and results) will be diminished.
And this is a valid point.
#2: The Development
Of Some Attributes Can Form The Foundation For The Development
Of Other, More Specific Attributes: To cite an example, the development
of muscular hypertrophy can help to maximize the acquisition of
maximal strength during a subsequent cycle. This is because all
else being equal, a thicker muscle fiber can produce more force
than a thinner fiber. So the idea is you first make the fibers
thicker during the hypertrophy phase, then train the nervous system
to recruit those fibers more effectively during the subsequent
maximal strength phase. Again, a valid premise for the traditional
approach.
Before There Was Traditional Periodization, There Was
I thought it might
be worthwhile to consider how athletes trained prior to the advent
of periodization. And as you might have guessed, athletes basically
just practiced their sport event, whatever it happened to be.
Fighters fought. Runners ran. Weightlifters lifted the heaviest
weights they could, all the time. SO what premises (if any) was
this approach based on? I'd submit two:
#1: Training consisted
of the most specific activities possible. The principle of specificity
rules.
#2: No better option
had been developed (yet).
OK, so there you have
it: 2 approaches, both with valid conceptual underpinnings. What
I haven't yet mentioned however, is the down-side of both approaches,
so let's explore that right now
The Downsides With Periodization
Problems With The
Pre-Traditional Approach
Whenever you employ
highly-specific means over long periods of time, you risk neural
accommodation, psychological burnout, and overuse injuries. You
also lack a procedure for taking advantage of advantages gained
through more modern approaches to load-distribution. No foundational
progressions, no deload cycles, and so on. Another problem as
I discussed earlier is that you still have the jack of all trades
problem.
Problems With The
Traditional Approach
Interestingly, the
traditional approach solves all of the problems I just mentioned,
but in the process, new problems arise. The most troubling of
these problems is the lack of continuity that plagues the traditional
approach: time and energy spent on developing one attribute (for
example, hypertrophy) is wasted, because said attribute deteriorates
during the subsequent phase where attention is re-directed toward
the development of a new attribute. As I've mentioned in the past,
it's like learning Spanish in first grade, French in second grade,
and Italian in third grade- you never get bored, but you also
never make any real progress.
Toward A Better Approach to Periodization
Interestingly, the
best approach to periodization may be a cross between both approaches
- a concept that I've never seen anyone else write about. It's
an amalgam of the "serial" approach and the "concurrent"
approach. In other words, you use a multi-stage, serial progression
against the backdrop of a high degree of specificity. The best
of both Worlds.
Let's look at how this
might look for the sport of powerlifting. Using the oldest approach
we covered earlier, if you had 18 weeks to train for a meet, you'd
go as heavy as possible, using sets of 1, pretty much every workout,
unless you were sick or injured.
Using the second approach,
you might do general fitness training for the first 3 weeks, then
work on hypertrophy for 6 weeks, maximal strength for 8 weeks,
and finally a deload on the 18th week.
What would a "better"
approach to periodization look like?
First, you'd always
put the lion's share of your energy into the 3 competitive lifts.
You might (and probably would) perform a handful of "assistance"
lifts to bring up weak attributes that can't be addressed purely
by working the competitive events. These attributes might include
things like injury rehab, hypertrophy, speed-strength, or work
capacity. As competition nears however, less-specific work recedes
to free up resources for more-specific tasks.
If recovery is needed,
it is not obtained by switching to non-specific tasks or lower
intensity brackets, it's facilitated by lowering training volume.
In other words, instead of performing 6x2 with 90% on the bench,
you might perform 2x2 with 90%. As a powerlifter, you must live
and die by the 3 competitive events. They always take priority
over everything else. The only exceptions to this rule are as
follows:
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1) One or more
of these 3 lifts causes or exacerbates an injury which
now must be addressed.
2) One or more
of these 3 lifts is no longer a primary weakness. An example
of this might be a lifter with an exceptional bench but
a poor squat. In this case it becomes prudent to redirect
resources away from bench training and toward squat training.
Finally, any
approach worthy of being called "better" must
be capable of "turning on a dime:" as the weakest
link is improved, it is no longer the weakest link, and
a new weakness becomes the new weakest link. Your training
approach must be flexible enough to address this reality
at any given time.
The approach
I've outlined is how all smart athletes train, and it's
how all smart trainers and coaches train their athletes.
All successful training systems utilize the principles
I've discussed above, even if you don't know it, and even
if the people using those systems don't know it.
I hope this
article sparks your creative thinking on the subject.
If it has, please share your thoughts by clicking the
discussion link below!
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About
The Author
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His colleagues call him
an iconoclast, a visionary, a rule-breaker. His clients
call him The Secret Weapon for his ability
to see what other coaches miss. Charles calls himself
a geek who struggled in Phys Ed throughout
school. Whatever you call him, Charles methods
are ahead of their time and quickly produce serious
results. His counter-intuitive approach and self-effacing
demeanor have lead to appearances on NBCs The
TODAY Show and The CBS Early Show.
Currently, Charles competes
in Olympic-style weightlifting on the masters
circuit, with a 3-year goal of qualifying for the 2009
Masters World Championships.

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