Placing exercises in the wrong order can completely negate all the correct decisions surrounding sets/reps/exercise choice etc. Sometimes you may want to pre-fatigue, sometimes you may want to ‘fire-up’ a group of muscles with one exercise before using another as the main exercise in your workout. Larger muscles and those with a high proportion of fast twitch fibres should be trained first as a greater degree of neural drive is required in order to fully recruit these muscles.
More neurologically difficult exercises (such as the olympic lifts) should be performed earlier in the workout when motivation levels are high and the nervous system is fresh. There is a large skill component in these types of exercise and it is almost impossible to develop skill when the fatigued. This principle filters down throughout the entire workout where snatches would be performed before squats and squats before biceps curl.
There seem to be many differing opinions on how often to change exercises in a programme with some feeling that this should be done almost every session while others feeling that the same sessions may be performed for long periods of time. As usual, the truth for the general population is somewhere in the middle.
We often see people changing exercises or stopping a programme to keep themselves entertained. Small changes such as moving from a back squat to a front squat will allow you to master your technique and progress through a programme without slowing down your results.
If a programme is working then stick with it, once you stop seeing results or progress it may be time to mix things up. This is where tracking and monitoring the goals that are important to you becomes vital.
Exercise frequency basically comes down to how fast you can recover from your last session. There are so many factors that affect recovery, from sleep, nutrition, lifestyle and occupation that it is impossible to create one rule to fit all. Obviously, the more often you can train, the better the results will be. But, over training, especially for newbies, can lead to an increased risk of injury and be detrimental to your progress.
When training after an Injury you may require greater frequency. Those muscles that are either weak or are recovering from the injury require greater training frequency as the loads lifted are often very low and do not create a massive amount of total stress on the body. At the opposite end of the scale it should be noted that low exercise frequency can still help to maintain an athlete’s strength. Numerous athletes can attest to the fact that in-season, when they can devote less time to strength training, strength levels do not decrease.
We would love to give you the perfect programme, in fact we’d love to have it ourselves and use it every day, but the truth is no one programme will work for everyone and no one programme will work forever. Use these simple guidelines to help put together your next training programme and you’ll be amazed at the progress you can make.
With our personal training team by your side, it’s all possible in as little as 8 weeks.
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