2018-03-05 training log

Week 2 of the new cycle.

I do hope I didn’t over-estimate on the weights. I think I’ll be OK tho. I mean, I’m still working to stop 3/fail and reps are in the desired 7-10 range, so in the coming weeks as intensity goes up and “x/fail” goes down, it should all work out.

I still feel weird with this approach of getting volume over the course of a week instead of one day. I still have that Arnold “chase the pump” mentality, where by the end of the session you should have that skin-splitting pump. I get a pump, but it’s not skin-splitting. But this is a different approach and methodology, which is sound. I’m just not used to it. But results in the end are what matters. Plus the fact I just don’t feel totally beat up is always a plus.

Since the sessions are going to be getting longer soon, I’m going to try to cut down on rest times. For the heaviest stuff, I’ll still aim for 3 minutes. Most things I want to cut down to 2 minutes, and even 1 minute where I can (e.g. warm-ups, abs, etc.). That should also increase perceived intensity a bit. I won’t do it at the expense of good work, but if I don’t take a little care to vary the rest period times, I’m going to be in the gym forever. 😉

RP Physique, Mesocycle 1.1, week 2

  • Incline Medium Grip Bench Press
    • bar x 10
    • 95 x 10
    • 135 x 5
    • 185 x 10
    • 185 x 7
    • 185 x 7
    • 185 x 7
  • Dips
    • BW x 8
    • BW x 8
    • BW x 8
    • BW x 8
  • Close-Grip Bench Press
    • 140 x 10
    • 140 x 10
    • 140 x 10
  • Barbell Bent Over Row
    • bar x 10
    • 95 x 10
    • 135 x 5
    • 175 x 8
    • 175 x 8
    • 175 x 7
    • 175 x 7
  • Narrow-Grip Pulldown
    • 130 x 10
    • 130 x 10
    • 130 x 8
    • 130 x 8
  • Upright Rows
    • bar x 10
    • 75 x 5
    • 100 x 10
    • 100 x 10
    • 100 x 8
    • 100 x 8
  • Reaching Sit-up
    • 5 x 10
    • 5 x 10
    • 5 x 10

2018-03-02 training log

OK end to the first week of this new mesocycle approach.

My mind is heavily weighed by stress at work, so things didn’t start out well – I’d try to clear my head, but stuff would just creep back in. I did not want to finish the hex-bar deadlifts because of it, but all the more reason to just press through.

Good mornings may be something I need to keep doing forever, to keep working on technique. You’d think it would be easy, but it’s not. Very easy to turn into a low-back exercise instead of a hamstring exercise. Even if the templates say for me to go up in weight, I may stay here because better technique will take me further on these than more weight will.

Leg press – foot positioning is “medium”. That is, not high, not lot, not narrow, not wide. Just a reasonable mid-way-to-everything foot placement on the plate.

Overestimated the weight on the curls. I’ll adjust.

Otherwise, an alright way to end the first week. Again, I know this meso is going to be grueling, but I expect good results as a consequence. 🙂

3/fail, 2-3 minutes rest (tho 1:30 for calves)

RP Physique, Mesocycle 1.1, week 1

  • Hex-Bar Deadlift
    • bar x 10
    • 135 x 10
    • 225 x 5
    • 270 x 10
    • 270 x 9
    • 270 x 8
  • Low-Bar Good Morning
    • bar x 10
    • 115 x 10
    • 115 x 10
    • 115 x 8
  • Leg Press
    • 135 x 10
    • 245 x 5
    • 345 x 10
    • 345 x 10
    • 345 x 10
  • Calves on Leg Press
    • 120 x 10
    • 120 x 10
    • 120 x 10
    • 120 x 10
    • 120 x 10
    • 120 x 10
  • Barbell Curl
    • bar x 10
    • 65 x 5
    • 85 x 8
    • 85 x 7
    • 85 x 7
  • Barbell Shrug
    • 135 x 10
    • 255 x 10
    • 255 x 10
    • 255 x 10

2018-03-01 training log

Today was ok, but I have some fine-tuning to do.

All in all happy with today, and generally went as expected for a first week of a new mesocycle. That said, I did have to do a bunch of estimation, especially to ensure I hit the lower-rep range, and my estimates weren’t quite right.

Pulldowns were fine. As an aside, I did like the neutral grips then the wide-grips. That ordering felt good.

The EZ-Bar Underhand Rows I’ve never done before, so I had to make a complete guess on weight. The weight was a little light, but I’m going to go with it because I think I can get more out of it if I keep these really strict — working to row the weight into my hip-crease and below my belly button. Using the EZ-bar was nice because it really kept the extreme torque off the wrists/elbows. I might dig these.

Upright row was way off in weight.

Benching went in too light, and I adjusted it before I did my set. I think I adjusted a hair too heavy for this first week (remembering, stopping 3/fail).

Inclines were too light, but again I think I’ll kept it here considering the road ahead.

So, didn’t really make the mark on the setup, but it’s alright for a first week.

RP Physique, Mesocycle 1.1, week 1

  • Neutral-Grip Pulldown
    • 90 x 10
    • 120 x 5
    • 150 x 10
    • 150 x 10
    • 150 x 9
  • Wide-Grip Pulldown
    • 125 x 9
    • 125 x 8
    • 125 x 8
  • Underhand EZ-Bar Row
    • 40 x 10
    • 75 x 5
    • 115 x 10
    • 115 x 10
  • Cable Upright Row
    • 100 x 12
    • 110 x 10
    • 110 x 10
  • Bench Press
    • bar x 10
    • 135 x 5
    • 175 x 5
    • 205 x 10
    • 205 x 8
    • 205 x 6
  • Incline Wide-Grip Bench Press
    • bar x 10
    • 140 x 10
    • 140 x 10
    • 140 x 10
  • Slant-board Sit-up
    • BW x 15
    • BW x 10

2018-02-27 training log

When there are a dozen other squat racks free, why do you have to pick the one next to me?

Anyways…

First lower/leg day of the new cycle.

Generally happy with the results. I do want to get back to low-bar squatting someday, but for now this is fine. I’ve said in the past that adding front squats after “back” squats would be good assistance work — and today I started doing that. I like it. It’s humbling.

Calf work continues to be one of those things that I appreciate more and more. My feet are so much happier for the stretch and the strength.

Skullcrushers were a bit different. I did them on a normal/straight olympic bar, and worked to bring the bar to my forehead — so my elbows actually pushed towards my feet a bit instead of being a pure hinge; had to do this to avoid the uprights/hooks. I started to think to myself that maybe I should have just programmed in JM Press instead. Next time.

And the usual first-week stuff: 3/fail, 2-3 minutes rest between sets. I foresee this mesocycle being grueling as the weeks go on. 🙂

RP Physique, Mesocycle 1.1

  • High Bar Squat
    • bar x 10
    • 135 x 5
    • 185 x 3
    • 210 x 10
    • 210 x 10
    • 210 x 10
  • Front Squat
    • bar x 5
    • 145 x 10
    • 145 x 9
    • 145 x 9
  • Seated Leg Curl
    • 115 x 10
    • 115 x 10
    • 115 x 9
  • Stair Calves
    • 50 (24kg kettlebell) x 10
    • 50 x 10
    • 50 x 10
    • 50 x 10
    • 50 x 10
    • 50 x 10
  • Skullcrushers
    • bar x 10
    • 75 x 5
    • 90 x 10
    • 90 x 10
    • 90 x 9
  • Military Press
    • 115 x 10
    • 115 x 8
    • 115 x 8

2018-02-26 training log

Today starts my second go-round with the Renaissance Periodization Male Physique Templates. This time I’m trying them with a slight modification.

Jared Feather, one of RP’s coaches, has made some suggestions on an alternative way of running the templates, and I’m giving that a shot. So this first mesocycle will be “tab 1” of the templates with slightly greater intensities and a slightly lower rep range (aiming for 6-10 reps). For me personally, I decided when selecting exercises to pick exercises that are barbell and more oriented towards “heavier lifting” (if you will). For the next mesocycle I’ll run tab 1 again, hitting 8-12 rep range, and will select exercises that start to mix in dumbbell work.

Today went pretty good! I of course knew what to generally expect — a lot of disappointment. 😉 Mostly because this is the first week so it’s lighter intensities, only 2-3 sets, and I have to stop 3/fail. So it’s just not a ton of work, but it’s all good towards setting the stage for what’s to come.

I am happy with my weight estimations. That was the toughest part, because the template spreadsheet is oriented towards what it’s expecting, which isn’t quite Jared’s modifications — so I had to do a bunch of refinements and re-refinements. But I am happy with where things landed. A couple things were under, like close-grips, but I’m going to leave them alone because I expect as intensities increase, more sets, that there will be accumulated exhaustion and things should work out ok.

All in all, happy with the start.

RP Physique, Mesocycle 1.1

  • Incline Medium Grip Bench Press
    • bar x 10
    • 95 x 10
    • 135 x 5
    • 175 x 10
    • 175 x 10
    • 175 x 8
  • Dips
    • BW x 8
    • BW x 8
    • BW x 8
  • Close-Grip Bench Press
    • 135 x 12
    • 135 x 12
  • Barbell Bent Over Row
    • bar x 10
    • 95 x 10
    • 135 x 5
    • 165 x 10
    • 165 x 8
    • 165 x 8
  • Narrow-Grip Pulldown
    • 125 x 12
    • 125 x 10
    • 125 x 9
  • Upright Rows
    • bar x 10
    • 70 x 5
    • 95 x 10
    • 95 x 9
    • 95 x 8
  • Reaching Sit-up
    • bw x 15
    • bw x 12

2018-02-20 training log

Another deload day.

Truly, nothing to report other than that. 🙂

RP Physique, Mesocycle 3, week 3

  • Front Squat
    • bar x 10
    • 95 x 10
    • 135 x 5
    • 165 x 3
    • 185 x 4
    • 185 x 4
  • Seated Leg Curl
    • 110 x 6
    • 110 x 6
  • Stair Calves
    • 40 x 8
    • 40 x 8
  • DB Skullcrushers
    • 20e x 10
    • 35e x 5
    • 35e x 5
  • High Incline DB Press
    • 40e x 10
    • 60e x 6
    • 60e x 6

2018-02-19 training log

Deload time.

Go in, do a bit of work, leave.

Still, they are great times to focus on technique, which I did.

RP Physique, Mesocycle 3, week 3

  • Incline Bench Press
    • bar x 10
    • 95 x 10
    • 135 x 5
    • 165 x 3
    • 195 x 3
    • 195 x 3
  • DB Bench Press
    • 60e x 10
    • 90e x 4
    • 90e x 4
  • Barbell Row
    • bar x 10
    • 95 x 10
    • 135 x 5
    • 185 x 4
    • 185 x 4
  • Normal Grip Pulldown
    • 125 x 5
    • 125 x 5
  • DB Lateral Raises
    • 25e x 6
    • 25e x 6
  • Reaching Situp
    • BW x 6
    • BW x 6

RP Male Physique Templates – Impressions

For the past 13-ish weeks, my weight lifting has been following the Renaissance Periodization Male Physique Templates.

Why?

My bodyweight was rising, and not in a good way. I wanted to spend a few months on a weight(fat)-loss (cutting) diet to shed some fluff. To succeed in that, not only is diet (i.e. caloric deficit) important, but one must also strive to preserve as much muscle mass as possible. So the best way to lift during that time is in a hypertrophy-oriented manner. So instead of my preferred strength/powerlifting format (great for building strength, OK for building muscle mass), I needed to do something purely oriented towards building – or in this case fighting to retain – muscle mass.

I’m OK at assembling this sort of work, but I know I could do better. I have used RP for a bunch of things in the past with great success, and I know they know their stuff. So why not try their Male Physique Templates? Might as well see what I can learn from it and how it might go for me.

The other consideration is that I’ve been feeling pretty beat up. While I love to lift heavy, it’s been killing me. I’m trying to learn how I can still lift in ways I enjoy and cultivate the sort of progress I want, but not beat myself up so much. This seemed like a good deviation from the norm, with something I could learn.

And learn I did.

Things I Learned

Barbell rows. I typically did them pulling the bar to the upper-abdomen. MPT wants you to pull to your belly-button. Wow. That’s a massive difference! Can’t move as much weight, but it hits the lats like I’ve never experienced.

I can actually handle more volume (at moderate intensities) than I think. BUT, recovery must be on point.

When doing lat pulldowns, keep the torso more upright. It hits the lats harder. Think about the angles and body mechanics.  But yes, this can also be dependent upon the grip you use (e.g. a narrow underhand grip vs. a wide overhand – look at the plane of motion of the upper arm).

Front squats suck. I should do more of them.

Calf raises have been surprisingly productive. I use a bit of a cue from Paul Carter here of ensuring a good stretch at the bottom, which not only stretches but removes the bounce reflex. Then, hold/squeeze at the top. Make sure the movement is purely by flexing the calf muscles. You don’t need a lot of weight.

But really what was great about the calf raises? My feet feel better. It’s probably from the stretching under load, but the soles of my feet, my feet in general, standing, walking, etc. just feel better. I may not stick with so many sets of calf raises, but I think it would be wise for me to always have some amount of calf work in my routine.

The MPT really challenged my notion of how to get in volume. When I would do hypertrophy stuff, I tended to gravitate to one body part per day per week, the classic bro-split. But here I found more ways: x/fail, reps in reserve, more exercises, more sets, more work per week. Like it’s good to start with fewer sets in the early weeks, but over the weeks add more: more sets, more reps, more weight. Over time the volume goes up. But it’s also things like doing more work during the week, even if it seems small. For example, while “push” (chest, triceps, shoulders) may have been primarily focused on days 1 and 3, there was a little bit of work done on day 2. It wasn’t much, but it was something – enough to create some stimulus. Over time, it will add up. Yeah, it feels kinda weird to have “leg day” or “squat day” and then throw in a few sets of curls or pressdowns; but the break-up of dogma is welcome.

I did like the constant increase. I’ve found in the past that I start on a program, it’s painful at first, but after a couple weeks I’m used to it and it feels like I’m just going through the motions — am I gaining any more from it? But here? I felt like it was constant impact. I didn’t really have a chance to get used to it. So yeah, maybe some written program says to do 5×10; you can approach it by doing 3×10 the first week, 4×10 the next, then 5×10. Something like that. Allow yourself to work into it and gradually increase.

Overall I didn’t feel beat up, which is great! Yes, on that 4th week there was some serious overreach, but that I think that worked great because that’s what you want. If that level of work continued or increased for a 5th or 6th week, I doubt I’d be able to handle it. But constantly increasing as it did with the structure it did, seemed to be good for work and growth, but not making me feel beat up.

Another dogma buster was that my approach usually is to do the big movement first, then scale down to smaller, isolation movements. So as a rough example, bench press first, then incline dumbbells, then flies. Here? Not so much. It’s not so much that it was using the old Weider “pre-exhaustion” principle, because it wasn’t that sort of thing. Rather, it just broke the dogmatic approach. For example, the second upper-body day started with a bunch of back work, specifically lat pulldowns. Flat bench pressing was done until well after the back work. So not only is one of the big 3 movements saved until later, when you’re more fatigued, but lat pulldowns are almost never something I’d do as my first back movement. But by doing so I was able to go heavier on them, which has its own benefits.

Metabolite training is very different. You really find that the mind wants to give up well before the body gives out. It’s one thing to push for “one more rep” when you’re maxxing out at 5 reps. It’s another to push for it when you’re maxxing out in the 15-25 range. It’s not necessarily one is harder than the other, just a very different experience requiring a different mental approach.

I’m very curious to see how metabolite training will work when I’m on a “massing” diet. When I can be fueled by a lot of carbs, creatine, beta-alanine — things to help pushing into those higher rep ranges.

I found myself liking more and more dumbbell work. The freedom of movement has been much nicer on my joints. It’s also really helping to improve my grip strength. I tended to gravitate away from DB movements in the past; I’ll probably gravitate more towards them in the future.

Hex-bar/trap-bar deadlifts. Never did them before the MPT. They are quite a different beast that traditional deadlifts (regardless if conventional or sumo). Yes, more legs and less back. I often found lots of conventional deadlifts to be just exhausting and not necessarily good for me (e.g. Boring But Big 5×10). However, I could see doing hex bars for 5×10 and gaining much from it. I might even try putting Fat Gripz on them; not sure as I don’t want grip strength to be the limiting factor, but it’s a variation to consider.

Diet Learning

For about 10 weeks I cut, using the RP Diet Templates.

I started at 252, I ended at 236. I spent exactly 2 months (Nov. 27 to Jan 27) on the templates. Losing 16 pounds in 8 weeks is quite fine. The original plan was to cut for the entire length of the MPT templates, but I had some scheduling matters that caused me to end early. I was OK with it tho because 16 pounds is fine. I spent the past couple weeks brining myself back to a set-point. I’m hovering around 239-241 depending on the day, which is to be expected at this point (carbbed back up, etc.).

What was great about this go-round was all my past experience with RP dieting helped. First, I was using the “new” 3.0 diet templates, which continue to improve on things. I started with RP when it was only personal-coaching (no templates). I used prior versions of the templates and didn’t like them so well. I think they made good adjustments to the 3.0 templates.

I started on Base with medium workload and lost decently to start. Then I moved to Cut 1, medium and kept losing. When that began to stall, I went to Cut 1 light and added in a bit of cardio. Yes, I could have moved to Cut 2, but I didn’t see the point. When did the math on the caloric intake of Cut 1 medium vs. light, I forget the numbers off the top of my head but it was significant enough that it, coupled with adding in 20 minutes elliptical every gym day, that would be enough of an incremental change in caloric deficit. I could save Cut 2 for when Cut 1 light + cardio stopped working. But it never did.

The trick is incremental caloric deficit. I could make small adjustments to the diet, reducing the caloric intake. Then I could also make small adjustments to the workload, increasing the caloric expenditure. No need to do everything at once. Modify one small thing, let it work. When it stops working, make another small change. I found this worked for me. And part of the reason? Mental health.

See, staying on Cut 1 light still allowed me to eat more food than Cut 2 medium. It becomes a more difficult thing on the mental (and emotional) side when you just are deprived of more food and have more hunger. So you gotta fight it on that mental and emotional front as well.

I found a few other things to help with my meals this go-round.

I ate more fresh veggies. In the past I’d use a lot of frozen because it was useful and convenient. But frozen vegetables just don’t have the same texture and satisfaction as fresh. So I’d take fresh broccoli, cut it up, and saute it (no oil) with some salt and pepper. To have the crunch, the browning, the better flavor and texture, made a big difference.

I ate a lot of sirloin. I love beef. In the past I’d try to stay lean, and cost-effective, by eating chicken or things like ground meats. That’s OK here and there, but it really grows tiresome. This time around I ate more sirloin. It’s lean. I’d take 5-8 pounds of it, give it dry seasoning, then put it on the grill outside with some wood smoke for improved flavor. Try to cook it to a medium-rare because it’s going to get heated up again later, and that will cook it a bit to medium — just right. This helped me a great deal, again because of flavors, but also mouth-feel and texture. It was nice to chew something! And it wasn’t chicken. Granted, I’d have some ground or chicken for 4-5 days in a prep-run, because even having sirlion 3-4x day for 4-5 days in a row got old. But it still helped to break things up and was something more to look forward to eating.

I did not prep days in advance. I know people that spend all day Sunday cooking and box up every single meal for the entire week. I was considering doing that, but it didn’t work out. What I would do tho is prep a bunch of stuff and just leave it in a big container (e.g. 1 big-ass container of cooked rice; 1 big-ass container of sauted broccoli; 1 big-ass container of cubed-up sirlion). Then what I might do is the day before, weigh out and box up all my meals for tomorrow. That allowed me to make some variations if I wanted it, but still be fairly convenient to eat.

Another thing that helped mentally was something I read. I forgot who said it (maybe Shelby Starnes?). It’s good to get used to eating the same thing over and over. Accept it. Be happy about it. It makes life easier. Because this is a choice, your choice. You’re doing it for a reason, a reason of your choice. So – enjoy the process of becoming lighter.

Next

I’ve hum-hawed for a while about what to do next, because there’s a number of avenues I wish to explore. That said, I’ve decided how to spend the next 18-ish weeks.

I’m going to run the MPT again, with some modifications from Jared Feather (RP’s physique guy).

I want to run MPT again because I want to see how it goes when not running a caloric deficit.

I have some knowledge of how things work, so I think a second time through I should be able to run things better, smarter, more effectively than last time.

I expect this should continue to allow me to make progress, without beating me up too bad. Yeah, I’m not sure how my strength will fair after over half-a-year on this “lighter” work, but hopefully I’ll have some good muscle mass to show for it all. Then I can focus on making that mass do something useful.

Jared’s modifications are something discussed on the MPT Facebook group. Instead of running the templates as-is, you run them like this:

  • Tab 1 (Basic hypertrophy) – 7-10 rep range
  • Tab 1 again – 8-12 rep range
  • Tab 2 (Metabolite), 8-12 rep range, with the intensity techniques
  • Tab 3 (Resensitization)

The intention is spend more time in traditional hypertrophy ranges to push out the time between metabolite cycles (assuming you run the MPT over and over). Jared states this is because stuff like that is great for a time, but may decline in effectiveness more rapidly than traditional intensity thresholds. So, save that extreme build-up of metabolites for when it can really be effective, to help from getting stale too fast. It’s an effort to try to squeeze out more long-term improved results.

So you do tab 1 at a lower but still effective range. Then tab 1 again at a higher range. This allows for good work, but that rep range on average goes up and thus volume does too.

Note tho that tab 2 work actually is a bit lower than the original docs prescribe. This helps to bring the weights back into a better range (e.g. at least 60%+).

This is what I’m going to try. I’m kinda thinking it may scratch my “go heavy” itch a bit too, especially how the first mesocycle will run. I mean, it’s not heavy triples, but it’s heavier than things have been. 🙂

One thing in terms of my exercise selection is during the first tab 1, picking barbell exercises, more compound, more “difficult”. Things that allow me to lift purely heavier. During tab 1-again, I’ll still have those sorts but I’ll want to throw in more DB work. Then tab 2 will be whatever it winds up being, probably with more tilt towards DB work if I can.

As for diet? I’m not being strict. The funny thing is that I’m still not eating much — I do think I have a new setpoint. I put a carb source on my plate, and I still size it where I have been — kinda small. Not a bad thing. I am eating more carbs yes, but my weight’s been pretty steady for a few weeks now. My hope is during the coming 18 weeks to only gain maybe 5 pounds? If I do that it’s a pretty safe bet it was 5 pounds of muscle gain (or maybe like 4 muscle 1 fat). Then I’ll see about doing a mini-cut for 4-6 weeks, and probably start back to the world of powerlifting.

Huzzah.

 

2018-02-16 training log

Well, my first run of the MPT are pretty much done. Yeah, there’s a deload next week, but basically this is it.

I’ve enjoyed it. I’ll write more on my overall impressions soon.

Meantime, today was just what it was. I hate hex/trap-bar deadlifts, but I also think they are great and will find more of a regular place in my life.

I also do want to put more DB work into my life. It’s harder, and I really love what it does for grip.

On stiff-legs, I need to be better about not bending my knees. Yes there’s a slight bend, but that bend should remain stable. I found myself bending a little more as the bar descended, which took the stress off the hamstrings. When I kept the knees “locked” (again, still a slight bend/break, just don’t change the angle), that really worked the hamstrings better. Something for me to keep in mind.

Anyways, that’s that. I’ll take deload, then I’m 95% sure I’m going to run the MPT again with Jared’s modifications.

For the record, today: 3/fail, 2-3 minutes rest between sets (tho calf raises maybe were 90 seconds)

RP Physique, Mesocycle 3, week 2

  • Hex Bar Deadlift
    • bar x 10
    • 135 x 10
    • 225 x 5
    • 275 x 3
    • 290 x 9
    • 290 x 8
    • 290 x 6
    • 290 x 6
  • Stiff-Leg Deadlift
    • 195 x 10
    • 195 x 10
    • 195 x 10
    • 195 x 10
  • Leg Press
    • 135 x 10
    • 245 x 5
    • 385 x 10
    • 385 x 10
    • 385 x 10
    • 385 x 10
  • Calves on Leg Press
    • 105 x 12
    • 105 x 12
    • 105 x 12
    • 105 x 12
    • 105 x 12
    • 105 x 11
  • Hammer Curl
    • 25e x 10
    • 40e x 10
    • 40e x 10
    • 40e x 10
  • DB Shrug
    • 80e x 10
    • 120e x 12
    • 120e x 12
    • 120e x 12

2018-02-15 training log

Today felt really good. Hooray for carbs! 🙂

The more I have sessions like this, the more I think sticking with MPT for another cycle — with Jared’s modifications — will be good. Very curious to see where they take me.

All in all, happy with today. Things moved well. My bench technique was solid. Just a good day.

3/fail. 2-3 minutes rest

RP Physique, Mesocycle 3, week 2

  • Wide-Grip Pulldowns
    • 90 x 10
    • 105 x 8
    • 120 x 6
    • 150 x 10
    • 150 x 10
    • 150 x 9
    • 150 x 9
  • Cable Row
    • 150 x 12
    • 150 x 12
  • DB Upright Row
    • 45e x 12
    • 45e x 12
    • 45e x 12
    • 45e x 11
  • Bench Press
    • bar x 10
    • 95 x 10
    • 135 x 5
    • 185 x 3
    • 215 x 8
    • 215 x 8
    • 215 x 6
    • 215 x 6
  • Incline DB Press
    • 45e x 10
    • 70e x 12
    • 70e x 12
    • 70e x 12