Network Magazine (NZ) Summer 2019 | Page 33

CEC ARTICLE 1 OF 5 ARTICLES TRAINING FOR MUSCLE MASS: AN UPDATE Recent study findings have seriously challenged decades of firmly held belief that heavy loads, high volume and post-exercise anabolic hormones are required for the growth of muscle, writes exercise physiologist Tony Boutagy. n 1988, at a weightlifting meet in Canberra, the Russian Leonid Taranenko successfully clean and jerked 266kg. Due to restructuring of the weight classes in 1993, 1998 and 2018, Taranenko’s official world record is, sadly, no longer recognised (that honour now belongs to the Georgian Lasha Talakhadze, who lifted 264kg in 2018, after coming back from serving a 2-year ban for doping). Despite not officially being ‘recognised’, Taranenko’s lift is the heaviest weight to be lifted in weightlifting ever – and he performed this feat of herculean strength 31 years ago. I Training to increase muscle strength If you look to classic texts on strength training from that period, such as Vladimir Zatsiorsky’s Science and Practice of Strength Training, Dietmar Schmidtbleicher’s Strength Training: Structure, Principles, And Methodology or Yuri Verkhoshansky’s Programming & Organization of Training, you find a very consistent approach to the development of muscular strength. All strength authorities agree that the repetition range for the development of maximal strength is between 1-6, the number of sets for each primary exercise is 4-8 and the rest between sets is 3-5 minutes. A casual glance through the autobiography of the world’s most successful weightlifter, Naim Suleymanoglu (The Pocket Hercules), detailing his training in the 1980’s or the Russian Weightlifting Yearbook, which outlines the strength routines of the world’s best at the time, reveal an astonishingly high percentage of primary lifts for maximal strength being performed in that range: 60% of the yearly repetition range for the snatch and clean and jerk was 2, and 93% of all squat sets for the year was performed between 2-7. How much has changed in the actual training methods used by the strongest weightlifters decades ago, when the clean and jerk world record was set and classic textbooks written? The answer is, not much. The sets, reps, volumes, exercises and training methods remain very similar to the programs that Taranenko used in the 1980’s. Put another way, a very long time ago, the Russians had worked out the training methods to maximally increase strength and little of significance has changed since those days. So what about muscle size? But what do the early texts say on the topic of training for muscle hypertrophy? Zatsiorsky 1 states that the training protocols to induce muscle hypertrophy have a rep range of 5-7 or 10-12, short rest periods (1-2 minutes), three or less muscles trained per workout (a split routine) and a high training volume per muscle group. This view of hypertrophy was echoed by the ACSM’s position stand, published in 2009 2 , and NETWORK SUMMER 2019 | 33