28-Days-to-Lean Meal Plan
With the right plan and the right discipline, you can get seriously shredded in just 28 days.
Read articleIf your goal is to be classically built, you’ll have no choice but to attack your back with intensity, focus, and a meticulously designed program that will build the perfect combination of width, thickness, and separation.
This means that each exercise must be carefully selected and serve a specific purpose each workout. A haphazard, kitchen-sink approach has no place in the quest of a classic physique.
What follows is a three-week program I have put together exclusively for M&F readers who covet the classic look. It provides you with three unique training protocols meant to stimulate growth via different pathways, using strategically chosen exercises and intensity techniques meant for creating a jaw-dropping, showstopping back that is purely…classic.
WEEK 1: THE SPEC (STRETCH/PEAK CONTRACTION/ECCENTRIC/CONCENTRIC EMPHASIS) METHOD
This training protocol utilizes four distinct rep tempos (one for each movement), each emphasizing a different “section” of the range of motion. This forces the muscle to withstand a unique form of tension with each exercise, allowing one to tap into several muscle-growth (anabolic) pathways.
WEEK 2: THE FTX2 (FAST-TWITCH EXPONENTIAL) METHOD
This training protocol helps set up maximum fast twitch muscle fiber firing through the utilization of high reps (to exhaust slow-twitch fibers) and then heavy explosive lifts (to excite the central nervous system). This combination will make the final two movements substantially more effective for igniting hypertrophy.
WEEK 3: THE PRRS (POWER/REP RANGE/SHOCK) HYBRID METHOD
This training protocol utilizes various rep ranges, lifting tempos, and intensity techniques to blast all your muscle fibers, manifesting a massive pump and shocking the system into igniting growth. It is the perfect way to put the finishing touches on this three-week program.
Tempo is the term used to describe how fast you lower, lift, and pause with the weight in each phase of a repetition. It is expressed in seconds and begins with the negative (lowering) portion of an exercise, then the midpoint (stretch) portion, then the positive (lifting) portion, and if there is a fourth number used it will be the peak contraction (squeeze).