Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2127: Bench Press Masterclass
Episode Date: July 27, 2023In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin cover what you need to know to master the bench press. The bench press is the gold standard in the strength world. (1:38) The requirements your body needs to pe...rform a proper bench press. (2:59) “Hot take, there is more shitty bench press happening right now than deadlifting.” (9:33) Priming is key! (10:57) The correct bench press form, proper technique, and sets & reps. (20:24) The best carryover exercises. (27:34) Advanced techniques. (32:17) Related Links/Products Mentioned Limited time offer exclusively for Mind Pump Listeners ONLY: 50% off the Stress, Mood & Metabolism At-Home Lab Test + Health Coaching Call – Reserve yours today here July Promotion: MAPS Starter | MAPS Starter Bundle 50% off! **Code JULY50 at checkout** Do You Have Back Or Shoulder Pain? YOU NEED TO TRY THIS! | Mind Pump THE BEST Exercise For Back Strength, Stability & Posture with Bands Improve Your Shoulder Press with Shoulder Dislocates Prime Your Shoulders with Handcuffs with Rotatation on a Bench Mind Pump #1950: Shoulder Building Masterclass How to Bench Press with Proper Form (AVOID MISTAKES!) Bench Press Properly With Ben Pollack (AVOID MISTAKES!!) | MIND PUMP How to Perform the Overhead Press (the CORRECT way) - YouTube Grow Your Chest with the INCINE DUMBBELL PRESS | Mind Pump The ONLY Way You Should Be Doing Dumbbell Bicep Curls! How To Do Chest Dips For A BIG Chest! Sling Shot Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Mark Bell (@marksmellybell) Instagram
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the most downloaded fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump.
Today's episode is the Bench Press Masterclass.
You're going to love this episode.
Now it's brought to you by one of our sponsors,
Dr. Stephen Cabral and his functional medicine team
right now is giving you a discounted
stress, mood, and metabolism at home lab tests.
So it's testing things that affect stress management.
You were moved and then my favorite part,
your metabolism, how well are you able to metabolize things?
Of course that affects things like body fat percentage, muscle growth, inflammation, and
so on.
It's pretty cool.
And right now our listeners get 50% off that task that includes, by the way, a coaching
call with one of their practitioners. You can get this at stevencobral.com, that's STEPH,
ENCAPRAL.com forward slash MP.
Again, that link gives you 50% off
that test with the health coaching call.
We're also running a sale on some workout programs.
Maps starter is our beginner strength training program.
That's half off.
Then we have a bundle that includes
Maps and a bulk and maps prime. It's called a starter bundle program. That's half off. Then we have a bundle that includes Maps and Obolic and Maps Prime.
It's called a starter bundle.
That's also half off.
You can find both at maps, fitnessproducts.com,
but you have to use the code July 50 for that discount.
All right, here comes a show.
All right, this episode is the Bench Press Master Class.
Everything you need to know about the Bench Press,
how to get a bigger
bench, the muscles they develop, why you can't bench very well, why you hurt, what's going
on, let's talk about one of the most popular exercises in gyms across the world.
The gold standard is whether or not you're stronger or not.
That's what it used to be, right?
That's cool.
When we were kids.
It was all about you.
How much you bench?
That was terrible, man. This has to be my worst lift of the big ones originally.
Yeah, well you tall, long arms, the leverage.
You know, it's up there always among the top,
like four or five exercises I would say.
And I would argue it belongs there.
I don't think it's one or two,
but I think it's definitely a good upper body exercise.
Yeah.
Because it is functional in the strength that it provides
and it builds.
And it's a phenomenal exercise for developing
like the pushing muscles of the upper body.
The chest, the shoulders and the triceps,
you get really good at a bench press
and all
of those muscles are going to get pretty well developed.
It's pretty incredible.
It's ability to do so.
So it's a good exercise.
It's part of the big five, but it's the last one of the big five, my opinion.
Yeah, I would say so.
Yeah, but I mean, I think tremendous.
Do you want to start this by talking about a lot of the issues or things
that hold people back from having a successful bench press
first before we get into all the techniques and tips.
Yeah, I think maybe we should talk about
the requirements, right?
Like the things that your body needs
to be able to perform a bench press well
and then that could lead us directly
to kind of what you're talking about.
You need to have, I guess the first thing would be like a stable shoulder girdle, right?
So the shoulder girdle is the shoulder joint plus the scapula, it's kind of that whole
area needs to be pretty stable.
If it's not stable and you do a lot of bench press or you start adding weight to the bench
press, then you run into a lot of problems.
In fact, I would say the bench press
is of all the strength training exercises
has to be one of the most likely
to cause shoulder injuries in people
because they don't necessarily enter into it with good,
like shoulder girdle stability.
Yeah, it exposes any kind of weak point in terms of
like you being able to track and maintain
Your shoulder in that position and have it stable while you're loading it so substantially
Okay, so that's gonna go over the head of a lot of people
So what what do we mean by how does somebody know that they have a stable shoulder girdle or not?
Well, like what what are the key indicators that I need to improve that and what does that
even mean? I think the easiest way to communicate that would be to communicate really good bench press
form first. So when you're bench pressing in a safe and effective way, which also is the way you'll
also be able to lift the most amount of weight by the way, because it allows for the best recruitment pattern and the best leverage.
It's a high chest, so you stick out your chest
and your shoulder blades are pulled back and down
and locked in that position.
So your shoulder blades aren't rolling forward
while you're benching and trying to get the weight up.
You're in this kind of high type position,
shoulders back, but down also not the weight up. You're in this kind of high type position, shoulders back,
but down also not hiked up.
And this puts you in a very safe type position.
But in order to maintain that position
while lifting a bar off your chest,
the muscles that hold that position have to be strong.
That's what I mean by shoulder girdle, I guess, the ability.
Yeah, and really with the bench,
we're trying to get as expansive as we can
to allow the chest to really work
and the pectoralis to be able to contribute
as much as possible and not bear the load so much
on the shoulders.
And that's a lot of times that's where we get a lot of,
potential injury.
So it helps to understand why this is such a challenge
for most people, right?
So like if I were to stand up right now
and shove Justin as hard as I could.
Ben idea, first of all.
He's tried once, yeah.
This biggest thing.
What would happen?
Naturally, you would see yourself do this.
Yeah, real one.
You would just roll everything forward.
So it's natural for us to kind of roll the shoulders forward in this pushing motion.
But for a more optimal bench press for building your packs, for building your chest, you got
to be able to keep your shoulders in that retracted position.
Anchored.
Yes.
Anchored down.
And it's just, it's unnatural.
Because like I said, if you were to get up and just push somebody
You wouldn't do that it would flop forward yet
When you teach somebody a proper bench press
They're in that role present then you add the problem that we have is that not a problem
But just what we do all day long is everything is in front of us right?
So when we you drive you brush your teeth you eat everything, everything we're doing, yeah, nobody does anything back here, right?
So you're constantly tightening and shortening all these muscles up here that force you to
already be in this round of position.
So not only is it natural for you to roll forward when you were to shove or push something,
but then you're already in that advantageous position for rounding, okay? So we have to find a way
to teach somebody to get in that position and then be able to hold that position and then be stable
and strong in it. And it's just, it's probably, in my opinion, I know a lot of people think that
like the deadlift is like one of the hardest things to teach a client, teaching a lot of clients to
bench press really well. Very technical exercise. I'm so glad you said that.
Very, very technical.
Everything's basic.
Yeah.
It's very technical movement.
Your low back is off, not your butt.
Your low back is arched.
Your shoulders are pinned down and back and stable.
And there's a technique to the...
You have to have, first of all,
you have to have a strong mid back
in order to have a safe, strong bench press. You think, what does the back have to have, first of all, you have to have a strong mid back in order to have a safe, strong bench press.
You think, what does the back have to do with anything?
The back is what's stabilizing your shoulder girdle, your scapula.
It's what keeps you in that safe position because the shoulder joint is very complex.
It's a very complex joint. It's not just the arm that's moving up and down.
The shoulder blade also moves along with us.
And the humorous is like floating.
Right, right.
It could twist and do.
And now, evolutionary speaking,
they think that the reason why we have such,
I guess, technical or advanced or complex shoulder joints
is because we throw with accuracy, right?
It's this really amazing joint
that allows us to throw with accuracy.
But in a bench press, you don't want 50 million moving parts floating around.
You want anything stable as possible, and you want to generate power and kind of this,
you know, almost straightener. Not quite straight line, but in this, you know, linear fashion
to keep everything really stable. You need to have a strong stable mid back for some
fact. Oftentimes, people's bench press suffer because they're back
as weak, they're mid back as weak. They don't have a good, you know, rhomboid strength and
lower trapezius strength. Then you have the muscles that rotate the upper arm, the ones
that cause you to be able to rotate the arm and stabilize the humerus. Those are smaller
muscles, you know, like you're super spinatus, infersp spinatus, the terras minor, sub scapularis, like all these muscles that are on the,
you know, when you hear someone say they injured the rotator cuff, the rotator cuff literally
is like the part of the shoulder blade that all these muscles attach to. So when someone
says, oh, I tore my rotator cuff, you can actually ask the question, which muscle, which
one got
injured because there's so many that attach there.
So you need those strong stabilizers to keep your upper arm from twisting and doing weird
things when you're trying to bench press.
Here's a hot take for you.
There's more shitty bench pressing happening right now than deadlifting.
Probably.
And I'll tell you the reason why.
One, most people that are afraid of doing a deadlift are afraid of doing it so they have way more cautious
They're way more cautious. They avoid it in the first place if you have shitty deadlift form
It is very obvious right like which is why a lot of people won't do it unless they feel confident
I remember being a trainer and not deadlifting because I was self conscious of not doing it well
So I avoided but bench press is actually really difficult
to see somebody who's bench pressing bad.
If you don't know what you're looking for,
I can totally get on board with that
because it's not as respected.
And that's one of those things.
You'll get from your doctor, your physician,
like, oh boy, deadlift, so I'll call it hurt your back.
Like, there's all this misinformation,
deadlift-wise, where I think two people
are a bit apprehensive towards that,
but nobody considers that technique is crucial
for bench pressing, especially when you start getting
into maximum load.
Yeah, it's, again, it's a technical exercise.
It's a very effective exercise though, when you do it right,
if you treat it with respect, it can be incredible.
And a lot of that has to do with making sure
your mid back is strong, your positioning is good,
and you've got healthy stabilizers.
And you're, like I said, the ones that attach
to the rotator cuff, how do we do that?
Well, you could prime properly, we can get into that.
And then there's exercises you could do that help with that.
But priming is a way to wake these muscles up and also allow yourself to connect to the muscles
that you need to to provide you with a kind of stable position. A very, this is funny because it sounds
like, you know, one about to say everybody's like, well, I know that exercise. One of the best ways
to prime your bench press is to do some rows before you bench press.
Band rows are my favorite for this.
Band rows they emphasize the squeeze because the band gets harder as you stretch it out.
It's not so heavy to where you might have bad technique.
But doing some band rows where you squeeze the shoulder blades back and down, doing a
couple sets of that before you bench press, I say it with almost all my clients because
it would almost always improve their technique and that before we bench press, Isaiah with almost all my clients because it would almost always improve
their technique and form when they bench press.
What are my favorites?
I like isometric stuff too for that, right?
So like zone one, the isometric hold against the wall,
or what I'll do like if I don't have a band,
because I think bands are phenomenal too.
I would like, I would carry bands with me normally
and have them in my bag.
If I don't have that, I'll actually get over in a bit over row position and hold an isometric hold in the in the row position for my mid back
So I'll just bring the bar. That's really light for me to do that right?
Yeah, it's not a workout by the way. Yeah, yeah, you're just trying to activate. That's right
You don't want to get fatigue. You don't want to fatigue you or else that will hinder how much you can lift on the bench
The idea is just to prime, wake all those muscles up
because you're trying to help them stay active
when you are getting into the bench.
Yeah, you know what's funny is, you know,
talk about like a old wisdom or a bro science.
I remember learning, it's like bench press technique
for some older lifters.
And now they didn't communicate it like we are, right?
Cause they don't think they understood why it worked.
They just showed me one of the
ways that they set their bench press up. And what they would do is they would get under
the bar of the bench press. And they would use, they would do like an inverted row with
the bar from the bench press. So they get underneath it and then they pull their chest
up to the bar and do some reps squeezing back. And then they'd get into position and bench.
And I remember not understanding like why he did it,
but he's like, oh, when I do this I could bench more.
He was literally priming his mid-back.
It was intuitive.
It was intuitive.
It's one of those.
I do the same thing, not knowing what I know now
in terms of the significance of that,
but it's really to activate those muscles
that are gonna keep you anchored there to the bench,
to keep everything in contrast
to what you're doing in terms of pressing outward. We want to stay stable. The thing about physics
and leverage and all this kind of stuff, it's like, if you think about a less stable body in this
position, if I have any kind of movement left to right, if I'm loose at all. If you're in a water bed.
Yeah, exactly. How efficient are you going to be you're in a water bed. Yeah, exactly.
How efficient are you gonna be lifting something
in a water bed, right?
That's a great example.
It's all about efficiency and effectiveness.
So the more tense and rigid I could make my body
and create that sort of like anchoring all the way
from my shoulders all the way down,
even through my feet, which is something
I learned later on in terms of leg drive, incorporating that into the bench, you get so
much more output.
I love when we talk about things that take me back and remind me of a moment that there
was this moment in my training career where this this light ball really went off from me.
So for, we've talked about this.
For many years, most of us, definitely me,
maybe not just as much, but for sure,
sound, I did a lot of the bro, single body part stuff.
For example, like arm day, chest day, back day, leg day,
and the theory then is that like,
if I'm just focusing on one muscle,
I can give it all to that.
I'll get the most out of that muscle because I'm focused just on that muscle, I can give it all to that. I'll get the most out of that muscle
because I'm focused just on that muscle.
And so I always thought that there was a superior way
of training.
And I remember this is years into already being a trainer.
And I have still training this way.
And my buddy who is doing a push pull type of routine
and he's doing a back routine first fall by chest.
And I remember thinking like, that's a stupid idea.
You're gonna be so exhausted from your back exercises.
By the time you get to chest, you're gonna be so weak.
And I followed it with him.
I hit a PR.
And that was the moment for me that went holy shit.
I know I'm tired from all those back exercises we did,
but I just hit a PR on chest from doing that.
And I realized how important it was for me to get
in that stable, rigid, get those muscles all activated
so that when I went into the bench press,
I could get everything out of that movement.
And that was like such an aha moment for me
that I could exhaust myself in these other back exercises
and be stronger going, it just didn't be going fresh
into my chest.
Like that was so mind-blowing.
So people might argue,
like what are you talking about?
Like you made your back tired.
How are you able to use your mid-back muscles
to stabilize you better?
It's not that he, they were dead before
and he had to wake them up.
What happens is he's able to feel those muscles
because he just worked them out. So now when he gets in the bench press, he can put himself. what happens is he's able to feel those muscles
because he just worked them out.
So now when he gets in the bench press,
he can put himself.
He's very blonde better.
So as trainers, we used to do this with clients
where if I was trying to get them to activate a muscle,
sometimes what all I would have to do is touch it.
I put my finger on it and be like, right here,
squeeze right here and then, oh, there it is.
Now I can feel it.
And that's hard to do with the back for a lot of people,
especially when you're pushing.
How to activate my back while I push?
Doesn't my back want to pull?
So that's exactly what you notice.
So even though you were more tired,
you were able to activate those muscles
and give yourself a more solid stable base.
Another priming movement I love that primes
the rotator muscles really well,
without you having to focus on exactly
what you're doing necessarily, or shoulder dislocates.
Shoulder dislocates are excellent.
All you need is a stick, a broomstick would work, or a PVC pipe, or a lot of gems now
have them, just a stick.
And that allows your rotator muscles to kind of warm up and activate, and you can feel
how you need to move your shoulder.
And it's a great way to quote unquote warm up before a bench press, especially if you tend
to have shoulder pain in the back of the shoulder or the top of the shoulder when you're bench
pressing.
It's one of my favorite videos for that.
Obviously, there's techniques to consider while doing that, grabbing it as wide as you
can to start pulling outward to create tension.
So this is all important things and also not allowing your back to arch substantially,
just to make sure that you're performing that at a high level. But yes,
it's going to go ahead and wake up and prime and activate a lot of those rotational muscles that
are there around the shoulder that
will help to contribute, keeping it in place, keeping it in that track, the more we can keep it in place,
the more effective lifts can be. Yeah, you mentioned earlier too, leg drive, Adam, you're talking about
a hot moment. Boy, that was out of huge room for me. I always heard power lifters talk about
leg drive when they would bench press, And it never made any sense to me.
What the hell do the legs have to do with the bench press?
They don't do anything.
I could push all I want off the floor,
as I lift the bar, I have to use my arms.
It made no sense to me whatsoever.
Then I had this guy working out who explained it to me.
And he said, look, and this is example I've used on the show.
He said, squeeze your right hand as hard you can,
but relax every muscle in your body, including your face. Not allowed to tense any of the muscle He said, squeeze your right hand as hard as you can, but relax every muscle in your body, including your face.
You're not allowed to tense any of the muscle,
but just squeeze your right hand as hard as you could.
And then he said, now squeeze your right hand
and squeeze the rest of your body,
which one are you able to generate more force with?
And I was like, oh, that's what's happening.
Why does that happen?
The central nervous system can fire more effectively
when it's firing throughout the body
versus just in an isolated place.
So if I bench press and my legs are just hanging off the bench
and my feet are on the floor,
I can't press as hard as when I'm driving my legs
into the floor, tightening my glutes
and literally activating the lower half of my body.
Powerlifter's known this for decades.
So leg drive, it's what they call it,
is very important in creating an effective bench press.
So not only that, but then you also get the other factor
because you're so locked in tight
and everything's firing, you're rigid,
and there's no leak in power.
And back to like, you're just in love
to talk about this with like the shoulders.
You know, that was another big aha moment for me
was learning how to prime my shoulders and get them
very all the muscles around the shoulder to be primed warmed up and and stable so that when I go to press
there's not any of this you know, floppyness or movement in the shoulder. If you're going to lift really heavy weight
you're braced with your legs or brace with your core you're in that. And then there's this movement in the shoulder. It's not stable and locked in and rigid.
You're leaking power.
And when you're doing a movement,
that big with that much potential weight on it,
it could be the difference of like 25, 50 plus pounds
that your body can load more,
just by being able to be primed, warmed up and stable
in order to do that lift.
That was a huge one for me was piecing that together
and really noticing that like, wow,
when I do all these rotator cuffs or wall circles
or zone one, really give, I love W's
on the suspension trainer, like that movement,
just kind of primes and wakes all those up.
I'm so rigid and stable to bench press.
One more thing with technique is a good,
there's now, there's different bench press forms
and techniques and yes, they all have some value
but generally speaking for most people,
you want to have a form where your elbows are not
completely flared out and also not completely by your sides.
You want them slightly tucked.
Okay.
So you've got this kind of slightly tucked shoulder position as you're pressing that
maximizes leverage and it minimizes risk of injury.
Elbows flared way out.
Sometimes you'll see bodybuilders do this.
That can maximize maybe chest involvement, but the risk of injury goes through the roof with that position.
And I would say until you are a master at bench press, you've got good stable shoulders,
you know how to perform it really well, I would not mess with those different varieties
and versions.
Like if I take somebody who's really learning technique on the bench press and then
I have them flare their elbows out, I've just increased the risk of potential injury by
twice, by double, right?
So you want that kind of slightly elbow tuck position.
People always ask to hand, like grip positioning.
You want your hands outside your shoulders.
You don't want them super wide and you also don't want them too close together.
That's a different exercise.
I think an easy way to teach it is that when you bring your elbows down, you've made
a 90 degree angle.
Yeah, this is the position where your hands should be. I think an easy way to teach it is that when you bring your elbows down, you've made a 90 degree angle.
Yeah, this is the position where you're answering.
You should have this nice in your elbow, you should have this nice 90 degree.
And by the way, that doesn't mean that you can't ever do a bench press like this.
You can't ever do a bench press like there's like put for a standard like teaching consistency.
Yeah, basic bench press, what does it look like to get ready for?
If I take the bar, take no weight on it or stick just so you can see it and I bring it down
You know if my hands are out here. I got that huge angle my hands are way in here
I want to be right at 90 degrees when I'm looking at it
Yeah, and I mean the barbells have
Definitely designed these like neural and this etching in there for you to kind of line up your hands
And to make sure that your thumb is sort of outside.
And, you know, it's somewhat of a generalized starting point, at least, for you to experiment with,
you know, widen it out a little bit. But again, it's not going to be too far away from what that's
already designed for. Yeah, I like the standardized lines because most barbells will have a line
right around the same place. Once you kind of figure out your grip, what finger goes on that.
Yeah, so like if it's taller guy, it's going to be a different than a shorter guy, but
you kind of know where your hand goes and you know your hands are even on the bar.
This is important because, by the way, the reason why those lines exist in the first
place is because if you're too far to the right of the left, obviously the leverage changes
and you made it here in trouble.
Yeah, you made it a dangerous exercise.
You also want your wraps to be controlled with the bench press.
There is a tendency with the bench press
to do, to wanna do two things.
Either one, rebound off the chest a little bit.
So come down to the chest, bounce and come up.
Or two, not completely finish the rep at the top
and you kinda see these these half like not full extension
type reps. If you want a really good bench press, that's really effective across the board.
You want to come all the way down to the chest, touch the chest, but don't rest on the chest,
then press all the way up to your arms are fully extended in a controlled fashion, meaning
there's no bouncing or jerking, it's a very controlled type of rest.
This is the must way.
If you're coach and trainer, it's the must way to teach first.
It doesn't mean that those two other ways that you just suggested or talked about, doesn't
have value or you can't do an explosive, but it's like ignore any coaches or trainers
that are suggesting that as a way for you to get good at the bench press, taking it through
its full controlled range of motion, get very good at that bench press, taking it through its full controlled range
of motion, get very good at that, get very strong at that.
And then when you get into advanced techniques, you can start to play with shortening reps
up to increase the tension on the chest.
Yeah, explosive stuff where you're using momentum to help you out.
But when you're learning that movement, doing advanced techniques that somebody might
have taught you or showed you to me has little to no value
and or carries a lot of risk with it.
Yeah, you know, here's an area people never talk about,
is the grip on the bar when you're bench pressing
because you're a false grip.
Yeah, because you're pushing the bar,
people tend to not focus on the grip.
You want the bar to sit in the palm of your hand here,
not too far up on your hand,
because that'll cause wrist issues,
but you want to also be able to do so
with your thumb wrapped around the bar.
This is the best way to learn how to bench press
and trust me when you get good at it with this,
you're gonna be totally fine.
Some people will do what's called a false grip.
I don't ever teach that.
Now, if you're super advanced,
then you know how to do it right and whatever fine,
but I've seen way too many people start to lose it on a bench press and lose the bar and you're
under the bar. That's just loose. Not a good idea. And it doesn't make you bench more by having
a false grip. It doesn't really contribute to anything other than maybe someone learned that
way and that's how they felt most comfortable. So thumb around the bar and squeeze the bar.
Yeah. And you know,
to your point of like going full range of motion
and making sure like, you know,
you teach that technique first,
like we can get to all these other nuances
of like how to, you know, address some of those things,
but like, yeah, you'll see,
see guys where the wrists are broken
and they're doing the false grip.
Like I've, I've just always, whenever you're grabbing a barbell,
you wanna make a nice tight fist
so it's supporting your wrists.
And so to be able to wrap that thumb all the way around
to grip it really tight,
and create, even create a little bit more force
intention through the muscles by squeezing
a little bit harder, maven contribute
towards your overall performance,
but it's protective for the wrist.
The wrists are very exposed in the bench press.
Yeah, absolutely.
All right, now there are exercises that,
oh, by the way, I want to go over this as well.
Frequency, bench press is an awesome exercise
because it's one of those that you could do quite frequently.
You could bench press, I mean, three days a week,
you could bench press and get phenomenal results. Now, I wouldn't say you bench press heavy mean, three days a week, you could bench press and get phenomenal results.
Now, I wouldn't say you bench press heavy and hard three days a week, but you could bench press three days a week.
You can't really say that about every exercise, but with the bench press, it seems to be true.
Most people in my experience do better with the bench press if they do it more frequently than they do it less frequently.
Now, what does that look like? There's typically one heavy day in there.
There's typically not maxing out every single time.
Yeah, there's another day where you may be higher reps
and maybe another day where you're just
perfecting technique, but the practice of the bench press,
the frequency seems to work very well.
Yeah, I like having a day that is really heavy,
a day that is really light and speed,
and then another day that's kind of like
mild hypertrophy pump
type of like day.
Like those three I think work really well.
And then again, spread them out based off
of how your body feels,
but that's kind of a good standard way
to like increase your bench press
is lifting three times a week, modifying the intensity.
One of the ways to modify the intensity
is by lightening the load, doing one day that's like speed technique day, and then another day that's more of like feeling
the muscle and pumping, and then one day of the getting after it, trying to really load
it.
Yeah, I agree.
Now, there's, there's, there's, lots of different exercises will help contribute to the
strength of the bench press, but there's a, there's a few that seem to have the most
carryover with most, for most people. One of them is the overhead press, but there's a there's a few that seem to have the most carryover with most for most people.
One of them is the overhead press.
So this is more true for someone.
Let's say when bench pressing for a couple of years, they kind of get stuck.
Sometimes getting better at other exercises will get the bench press better.
And overhead press is one of those movements where if my overhead press goes up, my bench
press almost always also goes up. It's almost never the case where my overhead press goes up, my bench press almost always also goes up.
It's almost never the case where my overhead press goes up, but my bench press doesn't
see an improvement.
In that same kind of vein, I would say, because people think the bench press and they think
flat barbell bench press, that's what they think.
And I think that one of the most neglected exercises in client bench press, I just think
that I did for years and so did all my friends.
Like, because we were weaker at the in client press.
And nobody asked you how much you can in client.
Yeah, nobody asked how much you can in client press.
It was all about how much you could barbell bench press.
And so, and we know the loss specificity, the more I'm practicing barbell bench press,
I'm going to get better and better at that.
So I'm just going to focus on getting better at that.
Meanwhile ignoring the incline.
And there was a time when I had a massive discrepancy.
I mean, I could barely do 135 on the incline,
but I'm pushing over 250 on the bench press.
I had that much of a discrepancy between my incline
and my flat bench.
And then I went on a kick of just focusing
on getting that incline up and it shot up my bench press.
So there's huge value in focusing on the end climb bench
and don't avoid it or make it like the,
oh, every once in a while I do it
because you're not good at it, like get good at it.
Same thing with the dumbbell varieties, right?
Dumbbell chest presses.
Obviously carry over.
Yes.
That's the bench press.
And then another one is dips, heavy dips.
I know Justin, you talk about this.
Yeah.
This was very enlightening for me and too.
And I was taking a year of just focused training body weight.
I tried everything I could with gravitational forces with instability.
So I was working with suspension trainer and with Olympic rings.
And I started to try to work on dips,
which is very difficult to do dips with the rings.
There's just so many factors of like having
to stabilize myself in space.
And then also working on getting depth with that.
And then once I start working on getting depth
and really being able to generate force
at the very bottom position and drive my way back out.
It was amazing how that transferred over to my bench press in terms of where that sticking
point is for the most part where you don't have a lot of ability to generate forces at
the very bottom.
And this is why you want to bounce off your chest.
And this is why a lot of people get stuck down there at the very bottom.
But if you can grind and generate more force, the really low dips, it's great exercise
to work on that.
It's also good for shoulder health.
Yeah, as an intro.
That's the best.
You know, if you go back to the things that we pointed out, right?
Being able to have a stable shoulder girdle, having a primed, warmed, stable shoulder,
being able to take something through full range of motion.
The dip really, a loaded dip really addresses all those things.
It really does a really good job
of getting you strong at all those positions.
And definitely, this was a later one for me, right?
So again, you're thinking back of like those a-ha moments or like when this a later one for me, right? So again, thinking back of those aha moments
or when this really came together for me,
I never really did heavy loaded dips.
If I ever did dips, it was like a bodyweight thing
that we would throw in there as a superset
or just an exercise I would do ever once.
So I would get a pump or if I was limited to equipment,
never did I ever try and get how strong could I I get at dips and actually doing two to three reps?
Like that just seems silly to me like why would I ever do two to three reps for dips?
But boy, if you've never trained yourself like that before like manage, let's see how much I can load and how much I can dip
dip with even to the point where I'm starting to train three, four reps at a time, just continuing pushing the load.
Man, that carryover into digging out of a bench press,
huge, huge difference.
Totally, dips are interesting because they help you
at the bottom of your bench.
They also help you at the lockout.
Yeah, the lockout.
Yeah, you do really good with dips at top.
You have to really lock your arms out and stay strong.
You'll see that lockout because that's the other area.
I'd say most common sticking point
on a bench press is the bottom.
Second would be lockout.
And more advanced lifters tend to get messed up
with the lockout.
So why you see a lot of power lifters training
that lockout portion.
Dips tend to help that pretty well.
Advanced techniques, let's talk about maybe some advanced ways
of getting your bench press to go up higher.
Bands on the bar made a huge difference.
Now Mark Bell has a slingshot, which is very similar to what a band will do, so people
will use a slingshot.
But man, I saw, I was so stuck for so long, and just adding bands to the bar.
And bands what they do is, when you feel like a band properly on a bench press, the bottom part of the bench press,
you don't feel much resistance,
but as you stretch the band out,
the resistance gets harder,
well, I'm also getting stronger as the bar moves up.
So I'm getting resistance that's kind of matching
my strength curve.
Oh my God, I added like 20 pounds of my bench press
in such a short period of time from using bands.
It gives you help at just the right portions
of the left,
which is, it's an amazing tool,
especially if you start hitting those sticking points
in plateau a little bit,
to be able to increase weight,
but give yourself just enough help
where your body just isn't producing that amount of force,
because there are those portions of the rep,
you do
increase your strength and so then it challenges that you know portion of the rep
very effectively with the bands. So I like using chains for how you guys are explaining around. Chains are my favorite to increase load as I get through the top of the bench press. I love
bands for the speed training that you can get with bench press.
So I think there's that's a lot of flop around.
Yeah, you go fast.
Yeah, so typically if I'm chains, I'm going to load, right?
So I'm going to put, I'm lifting heavy that day and I want to progressively get heavier
and heavier through that lift.
So it's more like that.
And then if it's a day where I'm like, I want to do speed, I'm going to put really, really
lightweight, but then I'm gonna add bands to it
and I like doing speeds.
Yeah, because then the bar doesn't fly at your hands.
Yes.
Speed work with bench is really good.
What does it look like, by the way,
speed work with a bench?
You're not going down and up real fast.
I've seen people do this before.
They're like, oh, I gotta practice speed.
And they're like,
no, no, no, no, really what you wanna do
is you wanna go down control, get tight.
And then come up.
And now with the speed press, it's important to maintain that stable shoulder girdle because
what you're going to want to do is roll your shoulders forward.
And if you're doing that with the speed bench, you're going to hurt yourself.
So it's be able to stay stable with the shoulder girdle and then push it up.
Stable anchored and controlled.
So you start to maintain control as you're moving fast.
You only want certain parts of your body to move like that.
And then one that requires no additional equipment
is just pausing the wrap at different parts of the bench press,
like pausing it at the bottom
where it's like barely touching your chest
or pressing up halfway, pausing for three seconds,
and then pressing all the way up.
Like paus reps are awesome because you don't need
any additional equipment to make a rep more challenging
in the points that you need it to be more challenging with.
So, it's the same.
In that same space, like floor presses or like that,
or like pause reps, only you're using the feedback
from the floor that's actually supporting it.
Kind of like where you take bottoms up type of squats.
I think there's a lot of value in that. especially if you have that sticking point, right? Digging
out the hole. You can control the weight down really well, but then from that coming out,
like if you come from a dead stop, it's really tough to do that. You have to learn to really put
yourself in a really good position to be able to get out. Also switch over to kilograms.
So you don't really know what weight it is.
Just gonna throw that one in there as a sidebar.
That's a good one.
So there you have it.
There's your bench press, masterclass.
Look, if you want more free information from MindPump,
go to MindPumpFree.com.
You can also find all of us on Instagram.
Justin is at MindPump Justin.
Adam's at MindPump Adam, and I'm at MindPump to step in on.
Thank you for listening to MindPump.
If your goal is to build and shape your body,
dramatically improve your health and energy,
and maximize your overall performance,
check out our discounted RGB Superbundle at Mind Pump Media.com.
The RGB Superbundle includes MAPS and Ebola,
MAPS Performance, and MAPS Esthetic,
nine months of phased, expert exercise programming
designed by Sal
Adam and Justin to systematically transform the way your body looks, feels and performs.
With detailed workout blueprints in over 200 videos, the RGB Superbundle is like having
Sal Adam and Justin as your own personal trainer's butt at a fraction of the price. The RGB Superbundle has a full 30-day money bag guarantee, and you can get it now plus
other valuable free resources at MindPumpMedia.com.
If you enjoy this show, please share the love by leaving us a five-star rating and review
on iTunes and by introducing MindPump to your friends and family.
We thank you for your support, and until next time, this is MindPump.
Introducing Mind Pump to your friends and family.
We thank you for your support.
And until next time, this is Mind Pump.