Hi Stacy,
Funnily enough, this email came through today (quote):
Unless you’ve had your head in the sand the last few years, you’ve probably heard about the 5×5 workout featured on Stronglifts 5×5, Starting Strength and so on.
Although Mark Berry was using something resembling 5×5 in the 1930’s, Bill Starr – author of the 1976 book The Strongest Shall Survive: Strength Training for Football – seems to get much of the credit for coming up with the idea.
As the title of Starr’s book suggests, the 5×5 workout was designed mainly for building strength.
It’s true that size and strength are linked, up to a point anyway.
But you can gain strength without a corresponding increase in muscle size. Stronger does not always mean bigger, and bigger does not always mean stronger.
I should also point out is that there’s nothing “magical” about 5 sets of 5 repetitions (as opposed to, say, 4 sets of 6 repetitions or even 3 sets of 8).
As he points out in the book, Starr only picked that particular configuration of sets and reps because “it was easy to remember.”
If building muscle is your main goal, there’s a very simple way to make the 5×5 workout work even better. And that’s by adding a little more volume.
There are several ways to increase your training volume. The one I want to talk about today is something called a back-off set.
To do a back-off set, complete your regular 5 sets of 5, then simply reduce the weight and crank out an additional set of 10-30 reps.
Interestingly enough, there was a study done a few years back where researchers found that the addition of a back-off set led to faster gains in muscle size and strength.
Basically, one group of subjects performed two leg exercises for 5 sets of 3-5 repetitions, while a second group did exactly the same thing, but added a back-off set (25-35 repetitions with a lighter weight) 30 seconds later.
Over the course of four weeks, the guys using the back-off set added more muscle and got stronger faster than subjects doing only 5 sets of 3-5 reps.
This kind of “combination training” is nothing new. In fact, it was very popular with some of the top bodybuilders in the 1950’s, such as Bill Pearl and Reg Park.
In his book The Wild Physique, Vince Gironda describes how Pearl and Park used to mix up their training, using both heavy and light weights.
“I remember studying Reg Park’s physique when he was power training,” writes Gironda.
“He was doing 5 sets of 5 reps. His physique looked thick. Obviously, he had maximized his muscle fiber size.”
“Park then went to South Africa and followed a system of 10-rep exercises. The appearance of his muscle changed because the capillary count looked higher, but the thickness appeared to suffer fractionally.”
“A few years later, Park mixed up his training and his physique reached its ultimate potential. He had both cross-sectional thickness and muscle height. He looked superb.”
According to Gironda, both Pearl and Park would perform 3-4 sets with a heavy weight and low reps, and then finish off with 2-3 sets of higher reps with a lighter weight.
In summary, the 5×5 workout is a highly effective way to get stronger.
Add a bit more volume and you’ll find that it’s a great way to add size at the same time.
And if it's more muscle and less fat that you're after,
here's a training program that will do the job.
Talk soon,
Christian
Christian Finn, M.Sc.
Founder of Muscle Evo
Stamford Cottage
Upper Green
Moreton Pinkney Northamptonshire NN11 3SG
UNITED KINGDOM
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Does that help at all?