Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - James Krieger on How Many Sets You Should Be Doing (and Why)
Episode Date: May 4, 2020“How many sets should I do?” “When should I add more volume and how?” These are questions I get all the time, and especially lately. That’s because some recent studies have shown that basica...lly, the more you do in the gym, the more you grow. Some studies suggest that doing as many as 40 sets per muscle group per week results in more growth than doing 20 sets. Is that really true though? And if so, how many sets should you be doing every week for optimal growth? Should we just do as many sets as possible? And on the opposite side of the coin, is there a minimum amount of volume we can get away with? To help answer these questions, I invited James Krieger back onto the podcast. Not only is he a published scientist and researcher, but he’s an accomplished writer who’s published a humongous treatise on training volume on his blog Weightology. His work is a legitimate “bible” on training volume that’s examined just about every study you’d be able to find on this hot topic. In this episode, James enlightens us on … - The different methods of counting volume and which one’s best - How many sets beginners should do and how that changes as you get more advanced - Whether you can “resensitize” your muscles to volume increases - If you should “cycle” your volume - How to specialize certain muscle groups - And a lot more! So, if you want practical guidelines on how much volume you should do for optimal training, and how to keep making gains, and breach plateaus, listen to this episode. 7:02 - What is volume? 8:56 - Why do you prefer number of hard sets over total reps? 10:13 - How much volume should I be shooting for, for each of the major muscle groups? 14:23 - Why do you have to up the stimulus from intermediate to advance weightlifting? 20:02 - At what point should you consider doing more, how far can you take it, and why? 26:37 - How would you approach focusing on one major muscle group? 36:16 - With the studies that showed growth with lower volumes, were those with experienced weight lifters? 37:22 - Is there a point where volume doesn’t become a stimulus anymore? 45:11 - What are your thoughts on direct versus indirect volume? 49:42 - Where can people find you and your work? --- Mentioned on The Show: James Krieger's Website: https://weightology.net/ Shop Legion Supplements Here: https://legionathletics.com/shop/ --- Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.legionathletics.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, my lovelies. Welcome, welcome to the latest and greatest episode of the greatest podcast on
the internet, actually, duh, where we talk about how to get more jacked, of course, where we answer
the deepest and darkest questions that have been plaguing mankind since the beginning of time.
Like, what are the best workout splits? And how often should I train my biceps every week and how much volume should I
be doing? And that last question is what you're going to learn all about in this episode. I think
you're going to like it because my guest, James Krieger, does a great job boiling a lot of research
down to some simple, practical takeaways. And this is something I've been getting asked
about more and more over the last year. So a lot of people want to know how many sets should I be
doing? And that breaks down into, well, how many sets should I be doing in an individual workout?
How many sets per major muscle group, for example, in a workout can I do? At what point does it
become counterproductive? And then how
many sets should I be doing per week per major muscle group? Can I do 10 sets and make progress?
Should I be doing 20? Should I be doing as many as 40 sets per major muscle group per week? As
some people have said, good luck trying that. Try to program that out and see what that would actually take. And so I understand why there's a
lot of confusion around volume because the research is not easy to understand. There's a lot of
information to go through and there are a lot of technical details you have to consider. There
is quite a bit of subtlety and quite a bit of nuance that you have to process and you have to
be thinking with. And who better to break it all down for us than James Krieger. Now, if you're
not familiar with James, he is a published scientist himself and he's a researcher. He's
also an accomplished writer who recently published a huge breakdown on training volume over on his blog at weightology.net,
weightology.net. And if you just Google weightology set volume for muscle size,
you will find his massive breakdown. It's like a very in-depth research review, basically.
And James is also on the scientific advisory board of my
sports nutrition company, Legion Athletics, where he has helped give input on new formulations that
we're working on, including brand new products and updating the formulations of our existing
products. We're always working on new stuff. We're always working on new products, completely
new products, and then new formulations of existing products. Because as time goes on and as research continues on individual ingredients, and then also on
ingredients that can provide certain types of benefits, we are always looking for opportunities
to incorporate that into our product line. And so in this podcast, you're going to hear
James's thoughts on training volume.
And again, this is really just him kind of boiling down the key takeaways from this Bible
of training volume that he put together over at weightology.net that involved examining
about every study you could find on the topic.
Again, I'm impressed with the amount of work that he put into this.
And so some of the things that James is going to share on this episode are how the different methods of counting volume produce
different results and which method he thinks is best and is most practical. He talks about how
many sets beginners should be doing. He talks about both in terms of individual workouts and
in terms of weekly programming targets and how that changes as you get more
advanced. He talks about whether you can resensitize your muscles to increases in volume.
This is something that's more relevant to intermediates and advanced weightlifters,
but there is a theory that you can do this and he talks about it. He talks about cycling volume.
That's another intermediate or advanced technique that is, I guess, maybe controversial or
questionable. And he talks about
that. He talks about how to specialize in certain muscle groups. So if you have a muscle group,
you really want to bring it up. How should you adjust your volume? Also, if you like what I am
doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my sports nutrition company, Legion,
which thanks to the support of many people like you is the leading
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supporting Legion so I can keep doing what I love, like producing more podcasts like this.
Hey, James, welcome back to my podcast. It's been a little bit.
Yeah, yeah. Thanks for having me on again.
Yeah, I'm excited to talk to you about volume, which is very topical these days. I feel like
it's the new frequency. A couple of years ago, I remember a lot of people were saying that
frequency was the
thing.
That was the key.
You had to train whatever muscle groups you want to grow the most.
You have to train them at least, I mean, two times a week would be a minimum.
I remember people saying three or four times a week is much better than twice a week.
And now there's a lot of talk about volume and especially in the context of frequency and people saying,
okay, frequency per se doesn't seem to make that big of a difference, but it does allow you to get
in more volume and volume seems to be a much more powerful mechanical driver of muscle growth along
the, probably in the same league as progressive tension overload. So here we are to talk about volume and get to some, I think,
some good practical recommendations of how much volume is enough, how much is not enough,
how much is too much, and how do you use that information to program your training more
effectively? So I think where we should start is what is volume? I think we should just
define the term because there are different ways of looking at it, right? And people ask me to say,
should I think of it as in terms of total reps or total hard sets as Greg Knuckles likes to say,
or should it be total weight lifted? How should I look at volume and why?
Yeah, I like to go with what the Greg Knuckles definition of just the number of hard sets.
And the reason is, is because if you try to define volume in other ways, it's kind of,
you run into a lot of issues. So for example, some people like to define volume as volume load,
which is basically the reps times the sets times the weight. But the problem is you can't compare
volume loads across different rep ranges. So, you know, three sets of 10 to failure versus
three sets of 20 to failure, you're actually going to get a much bigger volume load with
three sets of 20 to failure, but you're going to get similar hypertrophy. So it's not really
meaningful. Volume load to me is not really a great metric for assessing, you know, how something is
going to determine hypertrophy. And then part of the problem is
volume load doesn't take into consideration to just the effort you've put into a set. So,
so for example, if I do 10 reps with a hundred pounds, that's a thousand pounds of volume load.
Or if I do 10, one rep sets with a hundred pounds with three minutes rest, that's also a thousand
pounds of volume load, but the effects are quite a bit different between the two. So you might not be able to walk out of the gym. Yeah. It doesn't take into consideration
the effort level and things like that. So I'm not really a fan of those metrics of volume.
I think the number of hard sets seems to be a fairly good metric. Assuming you're doing at
least sets of six to eight reps. If you start going lower rep sets,
then it's becomes a little bit different. But you know, if you're doing at least sets of six to
eight, you know, three hard sets of eight is going to be roughly equivalent to three hard sets of 15
in terms of hypertrophy, at least. Why do you prefer number of hard sets,
which for people listening, you can just think of as working sets. It's your muscle building sets. It's the sets that you're taking close to technical failure.
Why do you prefer that over total reps? Because that's also a common way that people like to
track volume. For example, total reps doesn't consider the load and even total reps doesn't
consider the effort level. One set of 20 reps to failure is different from doing two sets of 10
reps each to failure, even though the total reps is the same in both cases. So, so again, that's why I
just kind of like the number of hard sets and the research tends to support that. We do know
that, you know, there's a fairly wide rep range you can use for hypertrophy as assuming you're
taking sets to near failure. So like I said, a hard sets of eight are pretty
much the same as hard sets of 15 or hard sets of 20 or even hard sets of 25 to 30.
Now, once you start getting lighter than 30, 35 reps, there's data suggests that
it probably starts to become inferior, but the hypertrophy rep range is fairly wide.
Makes sense. So, all right, that's how we're going to be thinking about volume in terms of the technical definition for this discussion. I think we should probably just
start with the general, then get to the more specific. So something I get asked about fairly
often is how much volume per week should I be shooting for, for each of the major muscle groups?
Let's say the ones that that that i want to improve on
so you know if it's a an intermediate weightlifter for example it might be hard to get in an optimal
amount of volume for each and every major muscle group unless you're going to spend a lot of time
in the gym and you can recover from that much training but what are your thoughts on and you
know you just recently published a long in-depth guide to volume. You cover a lot of
research there. So if you want to quickly tell people where they can find that, because it might
even be helpful for them to look through it, research background of the stuff you're about
to go into. But yeah, if you want to share where people can find that, and then I think we should
start with how much volume per major muscle group per week should we be shooting for? And maybe for
beginners and intermediates and advanced?
On my website, weightology.net, it's called the volume Bible. And basically I go over
every single study related to training volume and hypertrophy. I cover everything from
the effects of the number of sets on muscle protein synthesis, on satellite cell activity.
synthesis on satellite cell activity. Then I go into studies that actually look at changes in muscle size. And I look at the different studies and try to explain why sometimes you see different
results for different studies. And I mean, it's like a, I want to say, I don't remember,
I'll call it the time. It's like a 15,000 word piece. It's extremely in depth. And I consistently
update it as new research comes out.
But yeah, for people that want to find that, it's just, you know, weightology.net and you just look
up the volume Bible and it's in there. But yeah, I mean, you know, if I wanted to start right away
with practical recommendations, for beginners, you really don't need that much volume. And I
would say the data seems to suggest that beginners don't benefit as much from
changes in volume as experienced trainees do. So literally you could just do, a beginner can do
two to three sets per muscle group in a training session a couple of times a week, you know,
two to three times, even once a week, but you know, maybe two to three times a week,
if you want to avoid like soreness and things like that. And you'll get, you know, pretty good
results. I mean, even my own experience, you know, I remember when I first
started weight training, I'd say a big chunk of my initial gains came off of a really basic
low volume program where I was training each major muscle group once per week. And I was only doing
maybe four sets per muscle group, you know. Now, obviously I eventually reached a plateau and I had
to up my frequency and volume some, but I got some good gains just as a beginner out of that stuff.
So, so I my beginners program, whether it's for people who are new to weightlifting,
or new to proper weightlifting for men, for example, bigger, leaner, stronger,
and it's nine to 12 hard sets per major muscle group. Yeah. And split up in some cases,
it's between two training sessions.
And in the case of smaller muscle groups, you just do it. You know, you have one dedicated
shoulder workout, you know, one workout where you're doing some dedicated arms training. And
not only did that program work quite well for me when I first, I didn't do it in the beginning of
my weightlifting journey. It was probably seven years into it when I actually started learning how to do it properly. But now I've heard from thousands and
thousands of guys over the years. I mean, I have hundreds and hundreds. I might even have now over
a thousand success stories on my website over at Legion of guys doing about as good as you can
possibly do in your first year or so of weightlifting. Like if you have a guy who gains 20 pounds of muscle
in his first year doing that, what else can he possibly hope for? Doubling the volume? Is that
even going to do anything at that point? No, it won't. And the data is fairly clear that
beginners do have a little bit of a response to volume, but it's just not quite, it doesn't seem
to impact beginners nearly as much as experienced trainees. And that makes sense
from an adaptive physiology standpoint. I mean, if you've been weight training for a while,
you reach a point where you've got to up the stimulus somehow. Just constantly trying to
do progressive overload eventually isn't going to cut it. And you have to up the stimulus once
you start to moving into intermediate
to advance. And why is that? I think we should talk about that point in particular.
It's a good question. I think just what happens is your body adapts to a certain volume stimulus.
And eventually, even if you're training hard, it just doesn't seem to, I don't know what the
physiological mechanisms are, but it just doesn't seem to stimulate any further gains. And to stimulate further gains, typically, then what you, assuming you're not
training with a high volume already, then typically what you try to do and, you know,
assuming you're doing everything else, you're still trying to do progressive overload and
everything, then you think, okay, well, why don't we try adding some sets and see how that works
and see if that stimulates some further gains. And there's data to support
that. There's a study that's soon to be published. I can say it publicly because I know the author,
D'Souza, has already discussed it, some of the results publicly. But it was really interesting.
This is a study out of Brazil and they had fairly well-trained lifters. And the interesting thing
about this study is they stratified the subjects into different groups based
on what type of volume they've been training with previously and what he found is that the
people that responded the best are the people who increase their volume relative to what they were
doing before so obviously that higher volume represented a novel stimulus that stimulated
further gains so that paper actually should show up in Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research any day now. And that makes sense. And it is right in line
with many people's experience of mine, including mine, where many of the guys now, because I've
been doing this for a number of years now, I'm bigger than your strongest about there for a
number of years. I've seen it firsthand where it becomes a maintenance program. And like you were
saying, no matter how hard you try now, it's an
auto-regulated program, which there are pros and cons. I think it works well for in that program.
I think auto-regulation on the big exercises doesn't work so well as you become an intermediate
weightlifter and the weights start getting heavy and how you feel can really start impacting your
workout versus what you actually can do if you just knew like
put the weight on the bar get this number of reps but well eventually what happens isn't this
happened to me is the volume becomes maintenance volume and no matter what you try to do with
changing rep ranges or just trying to you know force yourself to put more weight on the bar
if you just try to approach with a linear kind of mindset, you just remain stuck.
And it seems to be the most effective way to break through a plateau is assuming that your programming makes sense and you have a good progression model that you're using
and you are deloading and not just beating the shit out of your body, blah, blah, blah,
is just to do more, period. Just do more. Yeah. Yeah. And that's true to a point though, because-
And that was what I was going to follow up and ask you about. So say, okay, we're at the beginners
now. So for people who are new to weightlifting, new to proper weightlifting, would you agree that
somewhere between probably six and nine hard sets per major muscle group per week?
I think that works perfectly fine for beginners.
Or work quite well. And I guess in addition to that, you're probably not going to get too much
more growth out of doing more. You can do more if you just want to spend more time in the gym,
I guess, but... Yeah. No, I don't think you're going to get much more growth by doing much more
than that. And in fact, there was another paper just published on beginners that seemed to suggest
that that was the case. They did show a volume effect, but it wasn't like this really significant boost with the increase in volume. Okay. So then let's shift to now an intermediate
where, okay, so let's say you're at that point. You certainly can do more. Like my training right
now, I'm following a program that, so I'm finishing up an updated second edition to a book called
Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, which is the follow-up to Bigger, Leaner, Stronger. And so
I've been following that program for a number of months now and refining it, whatever.
But it's around 15, let's say, 15 hard sets per major muscle group per week. And there's some
periodization in there as well. So you're not only using very heavy weights because that just kind of
beats the shit out of you, in my experience. And so what are your thoughts now on that transition from that more
beginner volume where there's no longer, it's no longer working again, my personal take on the
matter and what I have been doing personally is bumping it up into the range of 12 to 15.
Yeah. And I think that's a pretty reasonable range for intermediates. Now that's assuming
you're taking sufficient rest between sets and we can get to that a little bit later. I think that's a pretty reasonable range for intermediates. Now, that's assuming you're taking sufficient rest between sets.
And we can get to that a little bit later.
I think there's a volume rest interaction.
You know, assuming you're taking two to three minutes rest between sets.
So you're definitely well recovered between sets.
Yeah.
I think that those teens are a really good range for people to be in, in terms of weekly volume.
And again, I recommend, you know,
splitting that up into two to three sessions, not doing it all, you know, say if you're doing
15 weekly sets, not doing it all in one session, you know, split it up into two, you know, seven
sets, you know, each session or something like that. Yeah, I have that as a question I want to
get to that point specifically of how much should you be doing per session, but we can get to that
in a minute. So good. So for an intermediate, we have in the teens, and then now we get into the high
numbers. There's a bit of controversy over how far can you take it? And you just mentioned a
minute ago that you only can do this so much. There is only so much volume you can get away
with. Even if theoretically you're at a point in your training career where 40 hard sets per week would be optimal per major muscle group per week would be optimal for growth.
Like go try to do that and see what happens.
So what are your thoughts on that?
One other question there that I would like to hear your take on is how do you know?
So let's say you're an intermediate and you're doing in the teens.
At what point should you consider doing more?
And then, okay, how far can you take it and why?
Yeah, so that's a really good question.
I think for advanced trainees,
I think if you wanna get some higher volume
in a particular body part,
I think specialization is the best way to go.
So rather than, let's say you wanna get some sets
in the 20s for a particular muscle group. And why would you want to?
Because once you're an advanced trainee, it gets really, really hard to put on even a little bit
of muscle. So there could be an advantage to occasionally doing some specialization
to target like a weak body part or some body part you're trying to bring up.
And the way that I would recommend doing that is by increasing the, not necessarily increasing the volume in each session, but maybe increasing
the frequency, but keeping the volume per session the same. So let's say your biceps are your weak
point and you're doing basically seven sets per week or seven sets per session on bicep twice a
week. So 14 sets per week on biceps. Well, then maybe what you do is you add another session
somewhere in the week where you're doing another seven sets.
So now you're doing 21 sets per week on biceps.
You know, I think that's a reasonable approach to take because you can't start doing every body part, you know, up into the 20s and 30s.
It's just you're going to be in the gym all the time.
You're just going to run into potential systemic recovery issues and everything.
If nothing else, your joints are not going to joint anymore. Yeah. Yeah. That's a thing too. You know, you gotta be aware of. So
just to that point, one of the guys who works with me, he did, it was a Greg Knuckles crazy
bulk two a day program. It was probably for the lower body and 30 ish sets per week. It was in
the twenties to thirties for all the major, the big major
muscle groups per week. And it was, I think he was eating 5,000 calories per day, a thousand grams
of carbs a day and keeping his fat around 60 to 70 grams per day. Like one meal that he would have
was a loaf of bread. He would eat a loaf of bread and he would eat pasta with no fat really in the
sauce every day. It was actually just kind of disgusting to even watch. And he's 24 years old.
So he figured, hey, I'm invincible. This is the only time I'd ever be able to try something like
this. And he meant to do eight weeks. That was his plan. But by week six, again, this is a 24
year old sleeping well, eating well, eating a
shitload of food, knows what he's doing in the gym, following good programming, extreme programming,
but still good programming. And after six weeks, he was like, everything hurts. I can't, I can't
make it another two weeks. I think I need to stop. But when it was all said and done, he gained
about three ish pounds of muscle.
And he's a pretty experienced trainee.
I would say at this point, he probably has three or four years of good proper lifting under his belt.
So that's pretty impressive for six weeks.
I mean, he had to work his ass off for it.
Yeah.
So I would think that's the only way you can do it really.
It's the only way that really makes sense.
It's just special.
And specifically, would you choose one at a time?
So for a training block, you'd be like,
all right, I'm going to blast my biceps for the next four weeks.
Yeah. Yeah. Just one or two muscle groups. It could be biceps. It could be just biceps and
triceps, something like that. I mean, I know my friend Jacob Shepis from Australia, he did
something like that on arms. He did a specialization routine on arms. Now he actually did it for quite
a long time, but like the before and after pictures, and he was an experienced trainee on his arms were just
unreal. Like it was just now one caveat there is he had been training as a power lifter for a long
time. So I think he was a little bit sensitive to a volume stimulus after training like a power
lifter for so long, but still having trained for so many years and then to suddenly see the arm growth, I mean, it was visible arm growth. He's got like a before and after picture.
And yeah, he was doing probably about 30 sets per week on arms, but of course everything else,
he was just basically put on maintenance though. That's an important point to make is if you're
going to program that, would you say that, I mean, one, there's the time factor, how much time do you
have? If you're doing 30 hard sets of biceps per week, what about everything else?
Yeah, that's the thing.
It's like, and I know Brian Krohn also definitely does this with his clients.
He does a lot for his more advanced clients who do specialization, stuff like that.
It's very easy to maintain muscle.
It takes very little volume to do that.
So you can back way off on volume on other body parts and just maintain everything else and just
focus on one or two muscle groups that you really want to boost for a short-term specialization
routine. And what would that maintenance volume look like for...
You can do literally as little as six to eight weekly sets, maybe three or four sets per session
twice a week is certainly enough just to maintain gains. It takes much less training to maintain your gains versus actually getting,
you know, more gains. And especially if you use those sets on just the big exercises,
okay, do some squats, do some deadlifts, do some bench presses and some overhead presses. Yeah.
And then use the rest of your time and your volume to focus on, let's say it's if it's
your biceps and triceps, or if it's your shoulders.
If you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my sports
nutrition company Legion, which thanks to the support of many people like you is the
leading brand of all natural sports supplements in the
world. Now, what would be your take on a bigger muscle group? What if you wanted to really hit
your lower body? Would you do just that or would you go, I'll do my biceps and my legs?
I think it depends. I think if you're going to do legs and if you really want to do some specialization on legs, I'd probably just focus on either just hamstrings or just
quads, not both. Oh, interesting. Yeah. Just because, you know, when you start incorporating,
you know, like if you really want to blast hamstrings and quads with really high volume,
I mean, now you're talking a lot of Romanian deadlifts. I mean, you could probably do that
for really short periods of time, but you know, I think it also probably're talking a lot of Romanian deadlifts. I mean, you could probably do that for really short periods of time, but I think it also
probably depends on the length of how long you want to do your specialization routine
for.
And also, I think definitely when you're doing specialization, definitely bring in a lot
of isolation work because you can definitely do that volume on that isolation work without
necessarily being as systemically taxing as having all your stuff coming from squats and things like that,
you know? And that's also what makes some of these specialization programs doable is
if you're doing a fair amount of isolation work, it ends up not nearly being as bad as it sounds,
you know? Yeah, that makes sense. In the program, again, that my buddy was doing,
I think he was leg pressing every day. Oh yeah, that's...
I think it was leg press and bench press every day. And
then all your other workouts on top of that. That's not something I would recommend for a
specialization program. So, all right, now let's talk about higher numbers, 30 plus hard sets per
week, or let's say even 40 plus hard sets per week, because there was a study that you co-authored that has been criticized by some people as being either just outright wrong or just
highly impractical. So who cares? Like it might just be a straw man, which is, I'm just going to
serve it up and then you can take it. Is that, oh, well, it was claimed that this study supported
the idea that there's just a direct linear
relationship between volume and muscle growth. And you can just blast the shit out of yourself
up to even 40 plus hard sets per muscle group per week. And you'll just keep on getting bigger and
stronger. And so if you're not doing that, then you might be doing it wrong.
People have made those criticisms have basically just straw man the shit out of us. Like that's
not what we ever claimed or what we even believe from that study. When we published that study, my only thought at
the time, I just thought, well, hey, you know, maybe the upper limit of volume is higher than
we think. That's all what I thought. But I also never said that, oh, everyone should start doing
40 some sets per week per body part. And I mean, some people were trying to claim that, I mean,
they were going as far as trying to claim that we had manipulated the data and everything. It was just ridiculous
crap that was coming out. And like, it was an interesting paper because, you know, what a lot
of people don't realize, it was actually a replication of another study that was done by
a completely independent research group, an author named Ray D'Elli. Basically, our study designs
were very, very similar. And Rayiales was on untrained subjects,
but their study was on military recruits, like Brazilian military recruits, like Brazilian Navy
or something. So they had them captive on the aircraft carrier. So they were able to put them
through a training program for like six months at the time or whatever. But they had similar
results. I mean, they were doing up to 30, 40 some sets per week, and they saw increasing
gains up to the highest volumes. And we saw the same thing. And then now there's this other study
that just came out by Brigato and colleagues, which also found something similar. They did up
to like 30 some, 32 weekly sets, and they saw increasing gains all the way up to the highest
volume. So that's three different
research groups that have found the same thing, completely independent research groups. Now,
at the same time, there's been other research groups that have found very different things
where they found the gains to plateau at much lower volumes. So there's one that's,
I've already mentioned D'Souza, that's going to be published
any day now. They did three different levels of volume on quads and they didn't find any further
gains beyond the lowest volume. The lowest volume was six sets twice a week, so 12 sets. So they
compared, I think, 12, 18, and 24 weekly sets and they didn't see hypertrophy continuing to go up. There's another study
published not too long ago. Heiselgrave is the name of the author. Similar thing, they found
bicep gains to get better from going to 9 to 18 weekly sets. But then when you got up to like 27,
it actually got worse. And then there's another study, Ostrowski, which they also found gains seemed to plateau
once you kind of got in the teens in terms of weekly sets.
So the question is, why is it we've got three studies showing gains all the way up to 30
to 40 weekly sets, and then we've got three or four studies not showing that?
And if you look at the study designs, the one key factor that differentiates all of those studies
is the rest intervals. So the study I did with Brad Schoenfeld, we used fairly short rest
intervals, 90 seconds between sets. And these were guys doing squats to failure and stuff.
And if you've ever done squats or leg press to failure, 90 seconds
is not that much time between sets. This study by Brigato and colleagues, they did one minute
rest between sets. The Radieli study- That sounds terrible.
I know. They did 90 second rest between sets. It's interesting that those times were chosen
when you- The reason the researchers chose those times, including Brad, is it was the only way to make the training session short enough to be
practical for the subjects. Otherwise, the training sessions would just be way too long.
And so that's why those short rest intervals were chosen. But if you compare that to like
the D'Souza study that's going to come out, D'Souza used three-minute rest between sets.
The Ostrowski study, they did three-minute rest between sets. The Ostrowski study, they did three-minute rest
between sets. The Heisel-Graves study, they did three-minute rest between sets. So there seems
to be this volume rest interval interaction. And this matches pretty well up with the research we
know on rest intervals. So we do know there's research that actually I published along with Brad Schoenfeld
that compared one minute and three minute rest intervals, same number of sets.
Gains were way better with three minute rest intervals, like way better. It's almost like
you got twice the gains with three minute rest intervals versus one minute rest intervals.
There's another study that I know that's in review that had similar findings, basically for the same
number of sets, the short rest intervals,
just you got much less hypertrophy. And the interesting thing about that study is they
had another group in the short rest group just do more sets, right? To try to make up for maybe
the short rest. And then that short rest group then got the same gains as the long rest group
by doing more sets. So to circle back around to
these studies, the reason you're seeing these gains up to these super high volumes in some of
these studies like Brad's study and the Brigado study is because the short rest intervals are
basically impairing hypertrophy. So you have to do way more sets to make up for it, right?
So you see this volume effect, but the interesting thing is
if you compare the gains, the percentage gains, like in the Schoenfeld study and the Brigado
study at like 30 some weekly sets, it's similar to the gains that you see in the teens with these
other studies. So basically both groups of studies have a volume effect, but the volume ceiling is much higher
when you use short rest intervals.
But that doesn't mean you're going to get more gains.
It just means that you have to make up for what you're losing.
Yeah, you have to make up for what you're losing.
And so that's what's happening with these different studies, in my opinion.
It's just becoming more clear to me now, especially with the new Brigado study, getting
similar findings to what we found. But again, we use short rest intervals. So the thing is, some people will do short rest
intervals to try to save time in the gym, but you're not really saving time because if you want
to get the same hypertrophy, you got to do more sets. And not only does that take more time,
it also results in more wear and tear, especially if you're an intermediate lifter or advanced lifter moving some weight, you know?
Yeah, so I'm of the opinion
that the super high volume studies,
they don't tell us how you should train.
I think the rest intervals are a huge,
huge factor in those studies.
They do tell us, yeah,
if you're using short rest intervals
and you wanna maximize hypertrophy,
you gotta do a lot of sets.
You can also just use longer rest intervals
and you don't have to do as many sets. So I think that's really where I'm at. You know,
my thinking on this continues to evolve like any good scientist. I mean, a good scientist will
continually evolve their thinking as new data comes out. And that's what I've been doing even
with this. I mean, like I said, when Brad and I published our study, you know, we replicated the
results of radially. At the time I thought, well, maybe I published our study, we replicated the results of Radieli.
At the time, I thought, well, maybe the upper limit is higher than we thought.
But then I saw this research by D'Souza and stuff.
But then the study by Brigato, in my thinking, I'm like, well, why are some studies showing
the higher gains all the way up to the really high volumes?
And why are some studies not?
And to me, the one common factor was the rest intervals.
And when you start looking at the research on rest intervals, it just makes sense. And so that's how my thinking continues
to evolve. And it may evolve even more. We may get more research out that causes my thinking to
evolve even more on this, but that's kind of where my thinking is right now is there's a definite
interaction between the rest intervals you use and the number of sets you need to do to maximize hypertrophy.
That makes sense. Out of curiosity, the studies that showed commensurate or approximately equal
growth with the lower volumes, were those with experienced weightlifters, resistance?
Yeah, yeah, they were. So like the new study by D'Souza that's going to be out very soon,
they were actually fairly
well-trained lifters.
They could squat quite a bit.
I don't remember the exact amount, but these were pretty strong lifters.
I've been training for a while.
That's good to know.
It's practical.
So yeah.
Now I will say again, though, as I mentioned earlier, though, but also what D'Souza found
in that study is that the lifters that got the best gains were the ones who did increase
their volume relative to what they were doing before. So that's a good segue into one of the other
questions that I had for you is, and you had commented on this earlier is you only can take
this so far. You know, there is a point where, and we've been talking about why that is,
it's not practical to try to do 30 hard sets per major muscle group per week with, let's say, two to
three minutes of rest, probably closer to three, depending on the exercise. So one solution is
specialization. But is there a point where, and this might just be something that you're saying,
hey, based on all the data and all the research that I've gone through. Here's my opinion. But is there a point where volume no longer becomes much of a stimulus anymore? It would seem there would be some point.
And then is there anything else? This would be more for the advanced weightlifters,
but I'm just curious. So I do think there's an upper limit.
Like some people say, sorry to interject, but this is something that I would like to hear
your comments on is some people say, oh, well, maybe you could cycle your volume. So you get up to a point, you know what I mean? So, and then,
oh, maybe you can kind of desensitize while maintaining, then you can kind of renew your,
your gains. Yeah. So I do think there's an upper limit in terms of the amount of
effective volume you can do in a single training session. So, you know, in my volume Bible,
I ran this big meta analysisanalysis on all the studies
and I kind of fit this curve to the data.
And it seemed to suggest that anywhere from around six to eight sets in a single session
was about where gain seemed to peak.
So doing anything more in a single session.
For an individual muscle group, right?
Yeah, for an individual muscle group probably isn't effective. And that's actually supported
by some recent protein synthesis data. It was actually out of, I think Stu Phillips,
I think was in on this study, but they looked at muscle protein synthesis comparing eight sets to
12 sets in a session. And 12 sets didn't really bump muscle protein synthesis up any higher than eight sets did.
So I'd say that, yeah, probably, you know, that six to eight sets in a session,
and then you can use frequency to kind of modulate your weekly volume. So
eight sets in a session, that's 16 sets a week. If you're doing twice a week, that's 24 sets a week.
If you're doing three times a week, but then you reach a point where you can't just keep adding
more days of frequency or adding
more sets in the session. It's not going to work anymore. So what do you do? I think there are some
theoretical benefits to possibly volume cycling. It's purely, I would say, hypothetical at this
point. In my volume Bible, I do discuss some research that I would say it's highly speculative
at this point. And so the way that you would
volume cycle is basically once you're up to that six to eight set per muscle group per session,
and you finally hit a plateau and you're just not getting anywhere. And let's say you're already
doing each muscle group, let's say three days a week, and you're just like, I can't just add
any more volume anymore. What am I going to do, I'm not getting anywhere. Then the idea is to basically
bring your volume back down to a maintenance level. So cut it way back down, you know,
maybe two to three sets per muscle group per session that will maintain your gains.
And then theoretically, at least possibly, you know, resensitize your muscle to a new volume
stimulus for the future. So how long would you stay at that maintenance
volume? You know, this is purely just guesswork on my part speculation. So if you were to do it
yourself though, yeah, I'd want to say at least four to six weeks, maybe longer. And then what
you can do is then you start to solely ramp volume back up, you know? So again, that's all speculative.
It would only be really applicable, right? To the advanced weightlifter who has gotten
to that point where they're like, I'm working my ass off and nothing's happening. Yeah. And again,
it's very speculative. There's very limited data to say, ah, yeah, it might work, but no one's
actually researched it. So who knows if it, I know Mike Israel is a big fan of that type of volume
cycling. You know, the guys at RP have gotten great results with some, you know, their clients and stuff using those methods. So, man, I know Mike does it
himself for his own training. You know, it's something worth trying if you're an advanced
trainee and you've just kind of hit a plateau and you're just not even sure what else to do.
You can give it a try and see if it works for you, you know?
Makes sense. Now, we may have already covered this. I mean, it may not be anything else to say on it, but for people wondering what's the best way to go about increasing volumes, we have this, okay,
this is where you're at and you haven't maxed out. You haven't got to that point where it is now just
completely impractical to try to do more. I just, I can hear some people thinking,
so should I just like jump straight to max volume? I'm doing nine hard sets per week right now. Should I just like jump up to 20 or should I go to the midpoint
and then stay there for a while and then wait until that doesn't work anymore and then go up?
What are your thoughts? Yeah. Usually I favor either a more gradual increase in volume. So
yeah, you wouldn't go from nine up to 20 right away. Yeah. Maybe go to the midpoint or even... And why?
Number one, because when you do a really big jump in volume, initially what's going to happen is
you're going to cause a bunch of... Because it's such a novel stimulus, you're going to get a
bunch of soreness and muscle damage. And there's some thought right now, it's hard to say whether
this is really true or not, but there's some thought that what happens is that your body puts its resources just into repairing that muscle damage rather
than actually growing the muscle.
I'm actually developing more and more of the opinion that probably best to kind of try
to limit muscle damage.
You want all your muscle protein synthesis going into actually growing the muscle and
not necessarily causing a bunch of muscle damage.
And so that's why I favor more gradual increases in
volume. And certainly if you look at the scientific data, the limited data that does exist, I know
there's one study and I don't remember what called the details off my head, but they had two groups
of people. One group just started at like this certain level of volume and then the other group
worked up to it. And the group that just started a certain level of volume, they started off,
they had a bunch of soreness, blah, blah, blah.
Eventually it got better and went away.
The other group worked up to it.
They didn't have really any soreness, anything like that.
Both groups got the same amount of gain.
So it's not like there's any advantage
to immediately jumping up to a bigger volume.
It's certainly not gonna help you.
And if anything, it's just gonna make you
maybe feel sore and stuff.
And it's certainly not gonna enhance hypertrophy.
So that's why I just favor a more gradual approach in volume. And plus it's probably just better for your joints and stuff anyway, you know, just allowing your
body to more adapt to the volume level. Yeah, that makes sense. Make your workouts more enjoyable.
And there's probably something to be said for point of diminishing returns. You're going to go,
as opposed to looking at it of a, what's a minimal effective dose or even very effective dose of volume. Like we were talking about earlier. Okay. Beginners,
you can get away with nine ish per week, and then you got to move into the teens.
And then eventually that doesn't work. You got to move probably up toward 20 low twenties.
If you're at nine, it sounds like you probably wouldn't, let's say for the next six months of
training, you're going to increase your volume. You wouldn't expect to do better going from straight from nine to 20, then maybe nine to 15 or 14 or something like that.
Yeah, there is definitely a point of diminishing returns.
Like you're going to get much better gains going from the single weekly digits up to the teens versus going from the teens to the even higher volumes.
And you won't feel like you're about to break.
Yeah. So I have felt that I think the best bang for your buck, so in terms of the gains you get
versus the amount of time investment is probably going to be in those teens. I think for most
people that... Now that's not to say you're not going to get more gains by doing more,
but it's just like I said, you're going to be in more, I would say the sweet spot of the curve in terms of the time investment
versus what you're getting out of it. So it just makes me think of the volume
adage, I guess you said it's been kicking around for a while is 10 to 20, maybe 25 hard sets per
major muscle group per week. Like that's the rule of thumb. If you're new, you're on the low end.
If you're advanced, you're on the high end. If you're advanced, you're on the high end.
And trying to go beyond that, even though theoretically it might be better, it becomes
very hard to do physically and logistically.
So it's just inapplicable to most people.
For most people, it's 10 to 20, maybe 25.
And then you have to work the rest of your programming around that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Your thoughts on direct versus indirect volume.
So just for people wondering, so there's obviously an overlap in muscle groups.
If you're doing barbell rows, right?
How should you think about that in terms of, okay, sure, it's volume for your back muscles,
but what about your biceps?
Yeah.
So there's a lot of debate about that, you know, how it should be counted because yeah,
if you're doing any type of back work, your biceps are generally involved. Any type of pressing movements, your triceps are involved. Your shoulders as well.
Yeah. For me personally, I tend to just count it one-to-one. You know, I know in my volume Bible
with all the meta-analysis stuff I did, that's how I counted it. So when I do say, let's say 18
weekly sets on triceps, that would actually include your pressing movement.
So that's interesting. So on the deadlift, for example, how do you,
it depends on the exercise. Now, if there's a particular muscle group that isn't necessarily,
it may be involved, but it's not like really a main mover,
like the lats on the bench press. You're not counting that.
Yeah. Yeah. Not counting lats on bench press, you know, for example, on a bench press,
count that for anterior shoulders, but not necessarily medial or rear deltoids, of course.
I mean, for bench press, basically, I count that towards pecs and triceps, basically,
and anterior shoulders. Those are really, really active muscle groups in that type of exercise.
Deadlifts are kind of interesting, like a regular dead deadlift even though your quads are active in a
regular deadlift they're not going through a big range of motion I mean it's really a deadlift it's
really mainly your spinal erectors are really the big thing so would you count a traditional
deadlift toward the hamstrings probably not a traditional deadlift because the hamstrings
really don't because you're flexing the leg at the bottom
of the movement quite a bit, the hamstrings never really get to any, there's really no big stretch
component, unlike a Romanian deadlift or something like that. So I probably would not count a
deadlift towards hamstrings. Does that feel wrong though to say the deadlift, you get zero sets for
your lower body?
I know it does sound kind of wrong, but really when you think about it, I mean- Like go do a set of eight to 10 reps, hard deadlifts. My quads are on fire at the end of
those sets. I'm not saying you shouldn't count. I mean, I don't want to say you shouldn't count it.
It's just- No, I mean, I understand what you're saying. It's just funny. It's counterintuitive
because when you do it, it definitely like my legs are definitely working.
There's stuff going on down there.
I mean, another perfect example is like the hip thrust, right?
The hip thrust works your quads.
I mean, we know that it works the quads,
but typically, at least personally,
I usually won't count a hip thrust towards quad sets.
That makes sense.
So in the case of the deadlift,
you're treating it as a back exercise first and foremost.
Especially particularly, it's like, yeah, a back exercise or, I mean,
spinal erectors are really the big thing on the deadlift. Obviously it affects every muscle. It
hits all your muscle groups, but the spinal erector is the ones that really bear the biggest
brunt of the load, you know? So. Yeah. And the lats take quite a bit too,
if you use them right. Am I right there? I'm not a biomechanics expert, so I don't know. I'd have to go back and look at the literature. No worries. I was just curious.
Yeah. You know, actually one guy recommend Chris Beardsley. He writes some really good stuff on
training various muscle groups and how different exercises might impact those muscle groups based
on the biomechanics and EMG and all that other stuff, you know, so. Cool. Okay, good. So those
are all the questions I had.
This was a great overview of the topic.
And again, anybody who is still listening
and is interested in learning more,
definitely check out James's volume Bible.
A lot of work went into that
and it's a very good review of the research
and kind of an even deeper dive
into all the stuff that we've been discussing here.
But I think James did a great job
breaking it down into simple practical guidelines that people can use to better program their training and
particularly breakthrough plateaus. For anybody who feels stuck right now, maybe listen to this
again because one of the most effective things you can do to get unstuck is just to work harder
in the gym,
just to do more sets. And that's assuming again, that you're doing the other important things
mostly right. But if you are, and I know I've been there where you are doing all the important
things, right. You're just stuck. Do more. You know, even if it's just an increase of three
max five hard sets per major muscle group per week. And maybe it's not even for all of the
muscle. Maybe it's just for on your big lifts, for example, and you say, all right, I'm going to
squat and bench press and deadlift a bit more. That alone can be enough to unstick you. So,
well, let's wrap up James with where people can find you and your work and your research review
in particular, which is great. One of the few out there that I wholeheartedly endorse.
I really like the work that you do.
Yours, the guys at Mass,
those are really the two main ones that I follow.
I know there are a number of other ones out there,
but, and if there's anything else new and exciting
that you want people to know about.
Yeah, people can go to my site, weightology.net.
Yeah, you can check out the volume Bible there.
You know, my research review,
basically I cover eight studies per month.
A lot of body composition stuff, a lot of fat loss stuff.
Yeah, yeah.
So basically anything related to muscle gain or fat loss,
that's mainly what I focus on.
So it'll be, you know,
definitely usually a range of training studies
and nutrition studies usually.
So yeah, people can check out my site. All my social media accounts are there. People want to check those out.
Some unrelated stuff coming out this year. I'm working with Chad Landers on a project where,
you know, a lot of personal trainers out there sometimes kind of struggle with their finances.
So that's another thing people maybe want to be on the lookout for. It's going to be called
FitPro Financial. So be on the lookout for that for people that are interested in that type of stuff when it comes
to like retirement investing. And you know, that's different from physiology, but that's another,
another thing that's going to be coming out for me this year. So.
You could also call it unfuck your financial fitness. That'd be a trendy title these days.
Well, all right, man, I really appreciate you taking the time. I always enjoy talking to you
and getting your take on body composition things. And I look forward to the next one.
Yeah, man. Thanks for having me.
All right. Well, that's it for this episode. I hope you enjoyed it and found it interesting
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