Resistance Training: Does Exercise Order Matter?

Exercise order is another training variable. Just as you can manipulate training variables like exercise speed, intensity, volume, rest period between sets, the type of equipment you use, the speed of each rep, and workout frequency, you can change the sequence with which you do exercises.

Every resistance training routine should always begin with a warm-up to raise body temperature and increase blood flow to the muscles you’re working. After that, you decide the exercise sequence you want to use. You might think exercise sequence is unimportant as long as you complete the exercises you set out to do, but that’s not necessarily true. Although exercise order or sequence isn’t as well studied as other training variables like intensity and volume, it’s still a factor that can impact your workout.

Large Muscle Groups before Small Muscle Groups

Is your goal is to maximize the volume of weight you lift during a resistance-training session? Then work large muscle groups, using multi-joint exercises, before single-joint exercises that target smaller muscles. Why? If you work small muscle groups before large ones, the smaller muscle groups will be fatigued by the time you zero in on the large muscle groups and your performance on the compound lifts will suffer. When fatigued, the smaller muscle groups are a weak link that limits how well you perform on the compound exercises that work the same muscle groups. Because you’ve pre-fatigued the smaller muscles with an isolation exercise, you may not be able to complete as many reps.

The take-home point? To maximize performance, focus on large muscle groups and compound exercises before using isolation exercises to work small muscle groups. Don’t train your calves before your quads and hamstrings or your biceps and triceps before your shoulders. Likewise, don’t train your shoulders before your chest or back. Compound exercises and exercises that target large muscle groups burn more calories, create more metabolic stress, and lead to larger strength and hypertrophy gains as well. So, why shouldn’t you do these exercises first when your muscles are “fresh”?

Remember, when you do compound exercises that target large muscles, you’re also indirectly working smaller muscles since their part of the chain. That’s why most fitness experts recommend limiting the number of isolation exercises you do unless you’re trying to correct muscle imbalances or work a lagging muscle that’s not developing as well as the others. Every time you do a compound exercise, you’re working large AND small muscle groups.

What Research Shows

Does research support the idea that training large muscle groups first leads to greater gains? In one study, researchers asked 17 resistance-trained men to do two workouts consisting of 6 exercises (4 sets of each) at an intensity that led to muscle failure. In one session, they began by working large muscle groups using compound, multi-joint exercises, and in the other, they did single-joint, isolation exercises first.

The results? The men were able to lift a greater volume when they began with compound, multi-joint movements and progressed “downwards” to single-joint exercises. Another important point – researchers in this study concluded that whatever muscle groups you’re trying to develop the most are the ones you should work FIRST. This comes into play when you have a “lagging” muscle group that isn’t growing as quickly as other muscles.

For example, suppose you’re pleased with the strength and size you’ve developed in your glutes and hamstrings, but your calves just won’t seem to grow. In this case, start with an isolation exercise – calf raises – before doing a compound lower body exercise because you want to maximize the number of reps you can do for that particular exercise.

Does Exercise Order Impact Strength Gains?

It’s one thing to say you can lift a greater volume of weight when you do compound exercises first, but does this translate into greater strength gains? In one study, 31 men trained twice weekly for 12 weeks Their training consisted of two upper-body compound exercises – bench press and lat pull-downs, and two isolation exercises, biceps curls, and triceps extensions. One group did the compound exercises first while the other did isolation exercises first.

The results? Compared to a control group, both groups of men became stronger but they gained the LEAST strength on the exercises they did at the end of the workout. What does this suggest? Focus on the big, more important muscles first when you structure your workouts to get the most bang for your weight-training buck.

Should You Vary Exercise?

Although it makes sense to work larger muscles groups before smaller muscle groups when your muscles have their highest glycogen stores, if you do this consistently, the muscles you work towards the end of your workouts will consistently get short-changed. One way to avoid this problem is to periodically change the order in which you do the exercises. Changing things up will help you avoid plateaus as well.

The Bottom Line

Exercise is a training variable most people don’t think about, but it can make a difference in your training, especially if you have muscle groups that are lagging behind in strength and development. If your development and strength are symmetrical, that’s not a concern and you can work large muscle groups using compound exercises first. However, if you do have a muscle group that’s not as strong, move exercises that target that muscle to the front of the sequence so you can work it early when you’re not fatigued. Doing this will help you fine-tune your workout and get better results.

 

References:

Sports Med. 2012 Mar 1;42(3):251-65. doi: 10.2165/11597240-000000000-00000.

Does Exercise Order Really Matter in Resistance Training? Len Kravitz, Ph.D.

Journal of Sports Science and Medicine (2010) 9, 1-7.

 

Related Articles By Cathe:

Does Exercise Order Impact Strength Gains?

Exercise Order: Does It Matter in What Sequence You Do Resistance-Training Exercises?

5 Reasons You Should Do More Compound Exercises

Do You Need to Do Isolation Exercises?

 

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One Response

  • Great article, thanks. I think you have a typo in the first sentence of the last section entitled “The Bottom Line”.

    The sentence reads:

    Exercise is a training variable most people don’t think about,

    I’m guessing it should read:

    Exercise order is a training variable most people don’t think about,

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