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How To Increase Your Bench Press
Key Elements for a Bigger Bench Press
Proper positioning on a weight bench to maximize leverage
Keep the bar in line with the eyes; if you are too far towards
the top of the bench it puts your shoulders in a weak position
and wastes energy, and creates unsteadiness when lifting off.
Firm foot contact with the floor close to the bench is Paramount!
Feet on the bench, straight legs with feet lightly touching the
floor is a recipe for failure; it decreases force and puts you
out of balance. Feet planted firmly on the floor and push from
that foundation to blow through sticking points. When your feet
are close to the bench, it's easier to keep the arch in your
back.
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Press |
Keep a solid foundation by retracting your shoulder blades and
powerfully push yourself through the bench. Keep the chest the
highest point with the back slightly arched and shoulder blades
retracted, stay tight in the midsection; this will keep your
back securely in contact with the bench and create the stability
needed for heavy benching. Keeping the chest with a slight arch
in the lower back will decrease the distance the bar has to travel.
A word about grip strength
You will notice most Big Benchers have huge forearms; that is
because grip strength is a huge factor in controlling the bar.
Wrap your thumbs around the bar and squeeze hard as if you squeeze
right through the bar.
Grip the bar low in the palm towards the heel of your hand and
lock your wrists straight to create leverage! If you correct
the frequent mistake of holding the bar near the base of your
fingers causing a backward bend in your wrist you will notice
an immediate increase in your max bench due to the improved leverage
and increase in sending the force of the chest, deltoids, triceps
bicep tendon… straight through to the bar
Use the width of your grip to exploit your strengths!
Sticking Points result from weakness in secondary muscle groups.
Where the bar stalls will pinpoint the weak muscle.
- Mid point = weak pecs and/or triceps
- Bottom = weak front deltoids
- Lock out = triceps.
Use a wide grip if you have strong pecs and are weak in deltoids
and triceps
Choose the grip width and elbow placement based on your body
Long arms use a wide grip to shorten the path of the bar (elbows
out)
Short arms use a closer grip (elbows in more)
Employ your strengths
Strong triceps? use a closer grip and elbows close to your body
Weak in the Delts? use a close grip keeping elbows wide
Strengthen assistance muscles and eliminate weak points!
A Big Bench = Powerful Deltoids, Lats, Triceps, Forearms and
Bicep Tendons.
Work with heavy weights on these groups and your bench will
improve, (especially go heavy on triceps!)
Use rows to exercises the lats think of barbell rows as a reverse
bench press this trains the back in the same plane as the bench
press.
Lifting Form = Physics. The shortest distance between 2 points
is a straight line!
If you have
shoulder pain, (like I do), keep your elbows and arms at a
90° angle and lower the bar a bit below the nipples
to increase leverage, recruit more of the assistance muscles
mentioned above and prevent external arm rotation which is hard
on shoulder joints.
Lift right away once the bar is above your chest, it’s a little
late to get “geared up” so don’t just hold the bar over your
chest, get on with it!
You are stronger on the eccentric, (negative), so slow down
and lower under control
Pause at the bottom to prevent momentum, this is important on
working any muscle for hypertrophy. Quick movements are better
suited to certain sport specific training.
Press straight up unless it feels causes shoulder pain or feels
too abnormal
Again for most people developing tricep strength will help form
the most so train them heavy!
Breath in deep on the eccentric stage hold your breath during
the initiation of the concentric phase
Push as hard as you can through a full range of motion
Between set resting
The one minute rest won’t get it on a heavy bench day 2 to 3
minutes is more like it, many advanced lifters adhere to a 5
minute rest between heavy sets.
Initially strength is determined by your nervous system and
connective tissue integrity
80% of initial strength increase is determined by nervous system
motor unit recruitment. A motor unit is a nerve and all the muscle
fibers innervated. Heavy tension is required for the recruitment
of high threshold motor units- these are fast twitch which tend
to grow, (increase in mitochondria and supporting cytoplasm).
Slow twitch become more metabolically efficient. If the impulse
from the nerve is too weak you’re muscles are weak the more motor
units recruited have more muscle innervations and strength increases.
Once that nerve fires once in the movement it will fire every
time; this is called the all or none principle.
When a motor unit is sufficiently activated once the entire
pool of fibers contract. The central nervous system can increase
the strength of muscle contraction by:
Increasing the number of active motor units (i.e., spatial recruitment)
Increasing the firing rate at which individual motor units fire
to optimize the summated tension generated (i.e., temporal recruitment)
Both occur concurrently
Heavy Benching is very taxing on the nervous system overtraining
is a common mistake as trainees don’t take into account nervous
system recovery!
Mindset
Benching near your max has as much to do with your mind as it
does with strength and technique weight mentally, you need to
believe, (even picture yourself), or it will not happen
Sometimes little rituals before the lift are a good idea to
clear your thoughts and put you in the mindset, you've seen this
with field goal kickers and other sports that are primarily mental;
these are called “anchors”. Develop a simple action, (anchor)
such as: clapping, stomping, or something as simple as deeply
breathing a given number of times. It should be an uncomplicated
movement that you don’t normally do.
It is common for lifters to hit sticking points at times when
they add another 45 lb plate (i.e. 225, 315, 405…); this is obviously
a mental barrier not physical. When training people I would have
them go from say 215 to 230 to avoid this (but that is just a
band aid for mental barriers!).
Focus and maintain your concentration and be only selectively
aware of your surroundings.
You must picture in your mind doing and believing you will make
the lift, a grain of doubt will = an avalanche of failure, a
valuable lesson successful lifters learn early.
Apply these techniques and get the proper equipment and I guarantee
serious results and a bigger bench!
The Author: Michael Francis
President & CEO
FitnessScape.com
Bachelors
of Science Degree-Human Nutrition and Dietetics-The Ohio State
University, 20 Years Experience-Fitness Equipment
Manufacturing & Consulting, ACE Certified Person Trainer
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
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