Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Stan Efferding on Speed Training and Lifting Explosively
Episode Date: October 20, 2021In this podcast, I chat with Stan Efferding all about speed training. If you’re not familiar with speed training, it’s based on the concept of lifting lighter weights with maximum velocity in orde...r to increase your speed when using heavier weights. Basically, it boils do to doing lighter work as fast as possible (while still using proper form, of course). Speed training is particularly useful for powerlifters looking to increase their totals. However, it’s also useful for people looking to try new things in the gym or maybe even squeeze out a bit more muscle and strength gain if they’ve already achieved the majority of their natural potential. And because I haven’t done speed training myself, I wanted to get an expert like Stan onto the podcast to help people who are interested in this type of training. In case you’re not familiar with Stan, he’s held two all-time raw world powerlifting records and is colloquially known as the “world’s strongest bodybuilder.” He’s more than just super-strong, though. He also knows how to help other people get results, which is why he’s worked with Hafthor Bjornsson, Ed Coan, Ben Smith, Flex Wheeler, and most recently, Jon Jones, a former UFC champion who holds many UFC records. In our discussion, Stan and I discuss what bar speed can tell you about muscle failure, the biggest things that can help your bar speed, the benefits of bodybuilding-style training and cardio on increasing bar speed, the concept of “overspeed,” and a whole lot more. So if you want to learn all about what bar speed is, why it matters, and practical tips for how you can boost yours, check out this interview! Timestamps: 6:14 - Why is speed training important? What has helped your speed training most? 9:33 - How does bar speed affect muscular failure? 15:59 - How can you increase the reps or sets you can do at a particular speed? 16:55 - What is general physical preparedness? 27:01 - How can you measure your bar speed without buying a bar speed device? 29:25 - At what point does the bar slow down in terms of reps in reserve? 35:31 - How can you incorporate speed training in your training program? Mentioned on the Show: Vertical Diet book: https://www.amazon.com/Vertical-Diet-Stan-Efferding/dp/1628601345/?tag=mflweb-20 Stan Efferding’s Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/stanefferding/ Stan Efferding’s website: https://stanefferding.com/ Stan Efferding’s Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/user/stanefferding Books by Mike Matthews: https://legionathletics.com/products/books/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Well, hello there, and welcome to another episode of Muscle for Life.
I am Mike Matthews.
Thank you for joining me today.
And I have a quick favor to ask.
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in the various charts. And that helps me a lot. Okay. So this interview is a chat I had with my
buddy, Stan Efferding, big, strong, smart guy. And we talk all about speed training, which was
a fun conversation for me because it is something that I haven't spoken or written
much about at all over the years. And in case you are wondering what that is, speed training is
based on the concept of lifting lighter weights with maximum velocity in order to increase your
speed when you are using heavier weights. So you use lower loads and you try to move the bar.
You're usually doing this with barbell exercises. You're trying to move the bar as quickly as you
can. And by training that movement pattern, you can then have it carry over to heavier weights and it can help you lift heavier weights better.
And this type of training is particularly useful for powerlifters. You'll see powerlifters,
at least more advanced powerlifters, include this type of work in their programming
because it helps them increase their totals. But it's also useful for people like us who like to try new things in
the gym and who want to see if we can squeeze out a little bit more muscle and strength gain
and who like to experiment with time proven and science-based techniques for making our training
a little bit more effective or maybe just a little bit more interesting. Sometimes it's
worth incorporating something like speed training into a training block simply because it sounds
like fun. And so that is the topic of today's discussion. And in case you're not familiar with
my guest, Stan, he has two all-time raw world powerlifting records. He is colloquially known as the world's strongest
bodybuilder, big dude, strong dude, and as I mentioned, a smart dude who also has a lot of
experience working with high-level bodybuilders and athletes. He's worked with Hafthor Bjornsson,
Ed Cohn, Ben Smith, Flex Wheeler. Most recently, he has been working with John Jones, the former UFC champion.
And so it's always a pleasure to have Stan on the show to share his wisdom. Also, if you like what
I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my health and fitness books,
including the number one bestselling weightlifting books for
men and women in the world, Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, and Thinner, Leaner, Stronger,
as well as the leading flexible dieting cookbook, The Shredded Chef. Now, these books have sold
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please do consider picking up one of my best-selling books, Bigger Leaner Stronger
for Men, Thinner Leaner Stronger for Women, and, leaner, stronger for women and the shredded chef for my
favorite fitness friendly recipes. Hey, Stan, thanks for taking the time to come and talk to
me again. Thanks for having me, Mike. I appreciate it. Yeah. Yeah. I enjoyed our first discussion.
So I've been looking forward to this. Yeah, this will be great. So we can delve into this time. I'll try not to be too long winded. I have the same problem. I tend to talk a lot and I try to rein that in when I'm
certainly as a host, but even as a guest, if I don't watch it, I'll get asked a question and
I've been talking for 10 minutes straight. You know what I mean? It's hard because there's so much nuance and your
audience has all different needs and you want to address everyone and it's difficult.
Totally. Totally. But what I wanted to talk to you about is speed training. And this is something
that I don't get asked about all that often because a lot of the people in my orbit are relatively new
to proper strength training and proper dieting. But this is something I do get asked about from
people who are more advanced, especially people who have achieved, let's say, most of the muscle
and strength that's genetically available to them. And so they're looking for ways to just try different things to keep their
training interesting and maybe to squeeze out a little bit more muscle and strength gain.
And so that's what I thought that I could bring you on the show to talk about because, you know,
quite frankly, sure, I could talk about it in a way that makes me sound like I know more than I
do because I haven't really done
that firsthand. For example, similar to powerlifting, I've done a little bit of powerlifting,
but not enough to... I'd rather get somebody on who knows more than I do.
Yeah. Well, obviously, speed is important. You've got to break through plateaus or break through
sticking points in your lift. Breaking inertia obviously is critical for when you reach
a full range of motion for the lift as it's required in power
lifting if that's if we're going to be specific, you know,
pausing at the chest or hitting 90 degrees at the bottom of the
squat. But once you're able to break inertia, the sticking
point is slightly above that it kind of varies for different lifters.
You want to develop as much speed as you can.
The tricep lockout is a good example on the bench where a lot of people fail locking the
weight out.
The faster you can get that bar moving, of course, the better opportunity you have to
lock that out.
There's a few good ways to train that.
Obviously, first and foremost, strength is a byproduct of strength. A stronger person is
going to be able to move the weight faster, the same weight faster. But for that stronger person
to lift a heavier weight through the range of motion, they still want to train with some explosive speed it's also a good way to train below your
say your 90 rep max which can be extremely fatiguing but still um be able to judge
kind of whether or not you're in the ballpark for top end strength by measuring you know velocity
and you can use a variety of different mechanisms
for that you know put those measuring devices on the bar and that'll give you you know a good idea
of when you're at 85 or 70 percent of the one rep max load whether or not you're moving it fast
enough so that it will translate relatively into your top lift so i think it's really important to
include some of
that moving the weight fast, mostly for breaking through sticking points. I found the number one
thing that helped me with speed other than getting very strong was using bands. And again, probably
not to exceed 20% of the total load forces you to lift the weight heavy because once you try and lift a band slowly you'll discover how hard it
is but when you move really explosively then all of a sudden that load seems lighter it kind of
trains you to to fire and explode i used to do a touch and go off a box with bands just so i could
learn how to be as explosive as possible. And that really helped.
I think people recognize me as being a very explosive lifter.
A lot of speed out of the hole of a squat and out of a bench press.
And I think that was probably one of the key components was the fact that I did a lot of...
I did a decent amount of band work, but I also moved the bar very quickly in
my hypertrophy training rather than grinding out slow, deliberate repetitions. Uh, I would, uh,
I would even some lifters suggest even bouncing at the bottom of a, of a bench press, just moving
the bar as fast as you can through those repetitions, just get your body used to being explosive. Yeah. There are a couple of things that I want to follow up on there and
get your thoughts on. First is, and is this relationship between bar speed and muscular
failure? And something I've found as I have continued in my weightlifting journey,
I've never gotten nearly as strong as you. I'm closing in on the three, four, five,
three plates on the bench, four on the squat, five on the deadlift. However, I'll say that
anatomically and physiologically, I was not built to be very strong. That's probably an excuse that
has some validity to it. However, what I have noticed is that my perception, even if I question
myself from a reps and reserve standpoint, as I'm getting deeper into a set, how many good reps do I have left? And my instinctive answer
is it has been trained to a certain level of accuracy now. However, I do rep max tests once
every four months. So I load heavyweight on the bar. I mean, it's systematic. It's not random,
just heavyweight, but I'm putting heavyweight on the bar, uh, weight that was, I hopefully it was, it was, it felt heavier at the early, at the beginning of the training block
rather than the end. And then I go for as many reps as I can. And I push to my, my goal is to
get to one rep in reserve and stop there. Like I'm not going to go to, or maybe zero reps,
good reps left, but I'm not going to failure on a deadlift. I think that's
unnecessarily dangerous. I'm not going to go to absolute failure on the squat. But what I've
noticed is that sometimes my perception of how many reps I have left is not entirely accurate.
That I actually, if I had to, I could actually get one or two more
than I think that I could. And, and I just saw that actually, because I just did some rep max
testing. Um, so on the safety bar squat, I look at my training log and a couple of weeks ago,
I had two 55 on the bar for, I was doing sets of two or three and I marked it as like a two or three,
I think reps in reserve, maybe a three or four. I'd have to look at my spreadsheet, but then I
just put 260 on the bar and got eight with what I would say is probably one good rep left. And so
one good rep left. And so if I would have had a device to measure bar speed, that is something that it probably would have been reflected that I had that 255 on the bar. And even though I
thought maybe I had two or three reps left, the bar speed would have indicated, now you probably
have more. It's just hard with those big exercises when you have a lot
of muscle mass that's involved. And then your perception of the effort relating that to what
it is going to take to get a couple of more reps. And so just wanted to comment on that and get your
follow-up thoughts because for people listening who do have a bit of weightlifting experience,
I think it's helpful to think with that, that sometimes, especially with the bigger exercises,
we can actually do a bit more than we think we can if we really have to.
Right. Let me unpack a few things. You mentioned that potentially going to failure would be
dangerous. I think it's unnecessary and not necessarily beneficial.
It's probably not dangerous. I don't think you think on a deadlift with a lot of weight to go
to absolute. I don't know if I've ever done that where I've just maybe I've done it accidentally.
Yeah. Meaning missing the last rep. Yeah. Missing it. Missing it.
As long as you maintain a neutral spine, you're fine I I would just suggest that it wouldn't provide you any
additional benefit uh right you would incur yeah I do like the idea that that you're talking about
every four months I think people try and lift too heavy too often uh even Mikhail cookplay have
seminar he talked about how he really quote unquote maxed out only four times a year and
that was the two qualifiers for worlds and nationals. And that was the two competitions, worlds and nationals.
So, you know, going north of say 90, 95% probably shouldn't occur as an elite lifter. When you get
up to your, you know, reaching pretty close to your potential. Beginners and intermediates,
of course, have a lot more wiggle room.
But I just think people tend to max out too often. And that's why, like you said, a little lighter weight, maybe 85% and using the bar speed to determine what you have in terms of reps and
reserve is a better avenue to pursue. bar speed can tell you you know whether
or not you're dropping off you can use it as an indicator of of when you're kind of almost should
be finished with your workout we use this in speed training for sprinters anything that is less than
90 percent of your max is not for speed and so if say you're deadlifting, you know, 400 pounds and you
deadlift that at a certain velocity, a certain bar speed, when that bar speed drops more than 10%,
you're probably done for the day. That would be a good time to wrap up. But if you can continue
to maintain that bar speed within 10% of your, of your max, uh, velocity, then, but if you can continue to maintain that bar speed within 10% of your max velocity,
then you can put more sets of reps.
And that would be for speed training in particular?
That would be for speed training in particular.
And the idea is to stay fast.
Stay fast, exactly.
And so you can run a 10 second 100 once you're, if you're practicing and, uh, that exceeds 11 seconds or
10% slower than your max, uh, then you're probably done for the day. You can run a bunch of 10,
eights and 10, sevens and 10 nines. And, uh, but then you're, once you get to an 11, two,
you're fatigued and you're, you're probably not actually training speed at that point.
It's more endurance, uh, and not a good place to be. It's a lactate endurance zone. So I don't mean to switch
gears and talk about sprinting, but it's just an example that I think people can relate to in terms
of when your workout's done. Now, how can you increase the number of repetitions or sets that
you can do at a particular bar speed that is going to be your
gpp and this is what is your general physical preparedness and this is what i where i think
a lot of power lifters fall short and don't really understand uh say maybe louis simmons
program at westside barbell i don't think they realize how much uh quote unquote cardio how much
realize how much quote-unquote cardio, how much training, how much volume these folks do outside of their max effort days. And I, of course, benefited, you know, purely by accident from
being both a bodybuilder and a powerlifter from going through extensive bodybuilding preps,
where I did a ton of volume and reps and sets from all different angles, you know, two a day
trainings with short rest periods. So I had an extraordinary amount of, we'll call it cardiovascular
fitness or GPP, general physical preparedness. So when I went in and started powerlifting.
Can you define that term just for people who haven't heard it before? I mean, it's,
you could say the definition is implicit, but sometimes it's a little bit different than what you might think.
Yeah.
It's just the ability to handle work, your general physical preparedness, just your ability to handle a lot of volume and sets and reps and recover and maintain your speed, like we were just talking about, your bar speed, without fatiguing too quickly. And then that foundation, you know, the more work you do,
the more work you're able to do. That foundation, when then directed towards specific physical
preparedness or your actual lifts, your actual power lifts in this case, in any sport, it would
be a foundation of work that allowed you to perform your sport at a greater intensity for
longer periods of time so you become more competitive and so that gpp could include
you know just any lift that supports strength uh cardiovascular fitness um could be things like
sled drags and lat pull downs and farmers walks maybe all kinds of stuff like that. Yeah. Just the ability for you to,
uh, to get your heart rate back down, to recover within a reasonable timeframe to do a next set.
Uh, I use bodybuilding training. Um, I remember, uh, Clocov talked about how, uh, you know, he was
a excellent Olympic lifter. He talked about how his dad always made him do a lot of cardio in the
off season and he hated it because his strength would decline. But when he came back into strength
training to prep for the Olympics, let's say, he would recover so much faster that he could do more
volume and he would catch up much quicker and then surpass those people who didn't have the same
cardiovascular base. And I experienced the same thing when I transitioned from a bodybuilding prep into powerlifting.
I was very weak.
I'd lost well over 100 pounds on each lift.
A lot of that's from the dieting, of course, and being at the low body fat.
But a lot of it is just not lifting heavy for a period of time.
But I had extraordinary level of GPP of cardiovascular fitness from all the volume and sets and reps
and frequency and the variety that allowed me to shore up any weaknesses and then when i went in and i started
specifically doing squat bench and deadlift i could lift i would my weights would would uh
would go up very very quickly and i would recover very fast from those workouts so i could train
with a little more frequency and i've noticed a similar effect in doing cardio more regularly. Before COVID, I was doing
two cardio sessions per week, 30 minutes per session, moderate intensity. Then COVID,
we are not going into the office and I'm working out at home for a bit. I'm like,
I'll say I'm not driving. I'll just hop on the bike and do a bit more cardio. Um, I usually have
work calls I have to make. I'll just do the work calls when I'm on the bike. And, and so I just
made that a thing and I lost, I just kept eating the same way. And I was like, I'll use it as an
excuse to get leaner too. Why not? And, uh, so I lost eight pounds or so and um and then i kept it in and i've kept it in i now do
cardio five to seven days a week it depends like some days if i go out on the golf course and i'm
on the range beating balls and walking around i'm like all right i don't need to do that plus
the cardio but um and then every once in a while I'll take one day off for one reason or another, but I've noticed that just 30 minutes of, again, I'm, uh, I'm keeping it a moderate intensity.
Uh, I can take calls.
I'm a little bit winded.
I tell people if they don't, I'm like, I'm on a, I'm on a upright bike.
Just so you know, that's why I'm rebreathing a little bit.
I wouldn't do a podcast, but I still could have a conversation.
So I'm not, uh, it's not high, high intensity stuff.
And, uh, I've continued though, to increase the resistance, uh, on the bike or just increase
my speed to, to keep it at that level of intensity.
So the, the, the work capacity has gone up and I haven't pushed it.
I've just like, oh, this feels easy.
Now I'm going to make it a little bit harder to keep it at that's that, that four to five
out of 10, maybe.
And what I've noticed is that recovery element
in the gym and in between sets in particular, I recover faster and my heart rate comes down
faster. And I feel like with that two and a half minutes that I get or three and a half minutes
that I get, three, three and a half on the bigger lifts, I'm coming more prepared into each set.
And I've made really good progress for me since incorporating the cardio. That's not the only
thing. That's probably not the only reason, but I would suspect that that's contributing to it in
a significant way. You said a couple of really important things there that I think the audience
should understand. When I talk about cardio, I'm not talking about walking on a treadmill
necessarily. I used to think back when I was trying to gain weight to power lift that you
don't run if you can walk, don't stand if you can sit, and don't stay awake if you can sleep and
stuff. And that was my mantra. But I wasn't terribly fit when I was powerlifting at that time. If not for the bodybuilding periods and alternating back and forth, I would have been in the same situation that I see a lot of powerlifters in that I work with more recently.
They don't have the level of fitness.
And not just for health reasons, but for performance reasons, it doesn't help them long term.
So you said a couple important things that i like to include one is that you use the bike so you could measure the tension and the pace so you could you could progress that over time those
things are important plus it is a concentric movement so you're not loading yourself
is a concentric movement. So you're not loading yourself eccentrically and breaking down muscle tissue. It becomes restorative for both to recover from and prepare for the next workout.
I'll use sleds for the same reason. It's all concentric. I can load them differently,
take them for different distances at different speeds with different rest periods. And so I can
see that progress over time. We like sleds preferentially over pushing prowlers again, because the prowler will have some eccentric
loading. You're going kind of through your upper body. We just find that you can do more of it
more often. It's more restorative. You don't feel tired afterwards. You feel fresh when you're doing
pulling sleds. And then after, even on your max effort day, the days that you're lifting heavy, it really
helps to go in and start doing some volume afterwards to pump a ton of blood into the
area that you just worked.
It's restorative, so you're not aching when you get home.
It adds some volume again, some GPP, gets your heart rate up.
I think it just immediately
starts the recuperatory process by pumping a bunch of blood in there. That's not cardio per se,
but has some resistance component. So it, it, it kind of swings the pendulum towards not a,
you know, what we would call a, you know, a competing interference. Yeah. Yeah. So I'm cautious when I use the word cardio
that people think, I mean, I'm out jogging and that's just not the case. I want it to have some
resistance, be progressible, measurable, um, for all those reasons we just discussed.
Yeah. Yeah. I like the, uh, I mean, I just use an upright bike outside biking. It would be preferable for obvious reasons, but I like the multitasking of I have to do these calls anyway, so I might as well just hop on the bike and do them.
And like you said, I like that it doesn't get in the way of the recovery in my lower body in particular. And there's research that indicates it's probably helping actually with recovery. And it may even be helping a little bit with muscle and strength gain because it kind
of mimics the squat movement a little bit. So biking is my top pick. If I weren't biking,
I probably would get a rowing machine is what I would do.
Rower's great. And alternatively, you could use a treadmill and walk backwards on it.
And now you can adjust the angle and the speed and the time that you're on it and do repetitions
there, you know, sets of 40 seconds or so with a 20 second rest.
You know, those can be adjustable over time.
But we really like walking backwards on the treadmill.
You see us do that a lot with John Jones.
Those are restorative workouts.
And then maybe even just marching on an ATP to really help pump a ton of blood into the
hips and get that kind of decompression effect for the spine because the belt is below your
lumbar.
I'm sorry, ATP?
The acronym is not coming to me.
Oh, Athletic Training Platform is kind of a name that I think Louis Simmons coined for
the belt squat.
Oh, okay, good.
Yeah.
And just hook that belt up, you know, just low on the hips below the lumbar and just
stand there and kind of walk back and forth.
And it really gets the hips moving and pumps a ton of blood in there without much fatigue,
very minimal.
Yeah. The belt squat is a great squat alternative as well for,
for anybody who, if you're having back issues in particular,
a lot of gyms don't have it, but if your gym does have it,
it's I think a worthwhile exercise to include. I mean,
it could even be a follow-up I think too, even if you are barbell
squatting. So like these days I'm alternating between the barbell back squat, the barbell front
squat and the safety bar squat. And so the belt might be something that I would follow up with
instead of a leg press or something, you know? Yeah, a hundred percent.
If you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my health
and fitness books, including the number one bestselling weightlifting books for men and
women in the world, Bigger Leaner Stronger and Thinner Leaner Stronger, as well as the
leading flexible dieting cookbook, The Shredded Chef.
Something else that I wanted to just highlight is, or actually highlight, and I
wanted to ask your thoughts on it. So for people who are thinking about this bar speed, what we
were talking about, how bar speed relates to how close to failure you are, and who are not going to
buy a device to measure the bar speed, They're just not going to do that.
What are your thoughts on this? Something that's been useful for me is to record myself doing an exercise and see how it goes. And I'm always asking myself as I get deeper into a set,
how many good reps do I have left? And then comparing that to what I see on video,
then comparing that to what I see on video, where, again, sometimes I'll think that I was one rep shy of failure or two. And then I look at the bar speed and I was like, you can't know exactly,
but it didn't slow down much. Even that final rep still looked pretty snappy, which can help.
It has helped me just better calibrate my understanding of how close to failure I am on
these bigger exercises. I mean, it's easy on the biceps curl, obviously, but it's a bit harder to
tell when you're squatting deadlifting. Yeah. A hundred percent. Not going to be as accurate,
but it certainly can help you, uh, judge speed or, uh, even better than that is to look and see
whether or not you're coming out of your traditional form, which often happens as the weight gets heavier.
You start to change your form a little bit.
You might start ass squatting and not get your shoulders and hips going at the same rate.
And so that can be one thing. can feel, you know, at least an intermediate lifter can certainly feel the difference between the two repetitions, one at normal speed and the one following that might have slowed down
slightly. That is maximal muscle fiber recruitment with a drop off of fibers because you've pretty
much reached, you know, maximum muscle fiber recruitment. And so I use that as a marker for bar speed on the bench, even for reps in reserve
or just especially with hypertrophy in telling people when you've done enough repetitions.
When that bar speed slows down, you've probably provided adequate stimulus to benefit,
hypertrophy benefit from the training and when in relation to reps
and reserve when do you usually start to see that bar slowing down would you say when you get into
the range of like maybe two good reps uh good reps left three two to three and different people women
of course they they'll they'll do three reps and look like they're at you know a 10 yeah
and then they'll do five more yeah it's crazy their muscular endurance is so much better than
men so and some people have slower twitch or fast twitch uh you know i i tend to peter out pretty
quick i'm kind of a one rep guy and then then, you know, training with Eric Spoto, he could knock out, you know, 30 reps with the 405. So it was crazy to watch him have both that
top end strength and that muscular endurance. Yeah. I, I, uh, a buddy of mine is somebody
who's just been big and strong his entire life. And he's similar in that, that bar moves fast,
fast, fast day. Like it's,
it's interesting to see. Whereas for me, uh, I'm somewhere in between where, you know,
it starts to get a little bit grindy and it's a little bit grindier. Uh, but it is,
it is interesting to see something else that, um, you, you had commented on,
and this is coming back to this speed training is, is that you're training,
you're training specificity here
right so you want to be able to move that bar faster then you train for that specific uh element
of the the exercise or of the strength training and you know it makes me think of in golf
i play a little bit of golf i don't follow it much, but I know there's one golfer in particular named Bryson DeChambeau and he does this speed training. He calls it,
I believe. And he does these sessions where he's swinging as hard as he possibly can.
He does some weightlifting as well. Some goofy stuff. He could do a lot better
there, but he follows some guru who says he has the magic machines and the magic methods and
whatever. Silly. But Bryson does these speed training sessions where he's swinging as hard
as he possibly can to try to push up, try to hit PRs in terms of swing speed. So then his 80%
is just a bit higher than it was. And it's worked really well for him. And some people think
that's mind blowing, but to the point of what you'd mentioned with sprinting and just other
athletic activities that of course that makes sense, right? You're training specifically to
swing faster. Okay. If you can break through and then swing the fastest you've ever swung the club,
you've now unlocked a little bit more potential there. So then when you dial it
back, that's also a bit faster. And so it's a similar kind of principle, but with weights, right?
Yeah. There's a lot of things there. I wouldn't know how to apply that to golf.
Speed is a by-product of strength. If like a baseball player would want to get stronger, particularly rotationally, if they
want to swing that bat harder, that would be obviously getting a lot stronger in the
hips at squats and deadlifts, of course, but then also rotationally, maybe throwing the
medicine ball.
But what you find is that once you've developed the strength, that's the foundation.
find is that once you've developed the strength that's the foundation now over speed becomes the way i think the primary way uh to develop the specific skill set uh the swinging a bat they
used to put a bunch of uh what were those on the bats those big little donuts or what yeah
and they found that that wasn't ideal, that actually slowed down the swing.
And so you would rather use a wiffle bat.
And the idea is then to swing really fast.
Really fast, yeah.
Now, swinging a bat with donuts on it isn't going to make you stronger and swing faster.
Squatting and deadlifting will, and the medicine ball will work.
But actually practicing the overspeed is, you know, for the nervous system,
you'd want to practice overspeed.
That's what we're doing with John on the treadmill as well.
He sprints an overspeed treadmill and it not only helps with top end speed,
but it helps with velocity. It helps with how fast he accelerates.
And so it does translate neurologically into a faster fighter in the ring. Although it's
not specific, we build his strength, we build his speed. And then when he goes into the ring and
starts practicing, we can actually measure his speed and see that it's improved. So for a lifter,
you have to remember that when you're lifting, you know, doing a speed day and lifting very fast,
when you're lifting you know doing a speed day and lifting very fast uh you do want to lift much faster than you would normally deadlift a 95 that's an important point right like don't don't
now constrict yourself to that normal rep tempo that you use yeah train slow you'll always be
slow train fast but when you get up to 95 you%, you're still going to pull slow. Your nervous
system is now educated on how to try to pull as fast as you can. Pulling fast is general,
even though it's the specific movement. Not until you get up north of 85 plus percent are you doing
a specific deadlift, powerlifting specific movement. If you're at 70% doing speed reps, that's general preparedness.
Even though it's the same exact lift, it doesn't teach you to grind through a raw
strength, 95% deadlift, you still have to practice those.
We've seen people make this mistake in the past, and I won't mention their names
because some of them have been injured
as a result, but a lot of people for a while there, you know, 10 years ago or so, we're talking
about never lifting over 70% of your one rep max, but lifting very fast. Then when they loaded 95%
of their one rep max on the bar, their body gave out. Yep. You need both. And it's the same thing
with overspeed treadmills. You still have to get on the track or practice your specific sport to see if that general
preparedness can be specific for you.
And how can people listening incorporate speed training into their training?
So let's assume you're speaking to people who are training probably three to five days
per week, and they are doing a hybrid between strength
training and bodybuilding. So they're going to be doing some squatting and deadlifting and bench
pressing and overhead pressing, as well as some isolation accessory exercises for, um, you know,
a lot of the smaller, more stubborn muscle groups. What, what, what would be an example of a way that you could beneficially include speed training into your kind of basic, again, strength training, bodybuilding, hybrid approach?
If it's for competing in powerlifting, then you're going to want to use the little bit lighter weight and test bar speed and pull the lighter weights faster.
And what if it's just for people who are just, they're just looking to get fitter.
They just, you know,
they're always trying to get a little bit better
in their training.
Yeah.
Now you're talking about maybe adding
some additional exercises.
I love the medicine ball throws.
Those are great.
And plyos.
That's the next, you know,
GPP exercise that I think is very good,
but not just jumping up on the box,
but slowly and gradually developing the strength and the, I guess you would say, the durability.
I think it's the right word.
You don't want to just be jumping down off of a box and bouncing back up in the air if it's not anything you've ever done before.
That's a very dynamic movement that needs progressed over time.
I can remember when I had my son up at the high school here and the coach,
he's 300 pounds and he's a Samoan, his mom's Samoan.
He's 300 pounds. And they had them jumping over,
jumping over little hurdles on concrete and landing on the other side.
And he comes home after the first day of practice is my knees hurt.
I'm like, well, what did you do? And he told me, I'm like, you don't,
you don't have 300 pound kids jumping up and down on concrete.
You know, it's just idiotic.
Plyometrics box jumps,
but jumping down off of the box and then rebounding up onto another box.
That's really what a plyometric is.
Getting that, that stretch reflex
going, very explosive. That kind of thing translates very well to any sport. We do some
of those with John as well. But it's the kind of thing that you have to very gradually build into.
That's an extremely, I think, transferable movement for any sport. Yeah. Yeah. That makes sense.
Something else I just keep in mind. So in my training, a training block starts with sets of
10 on the primary, on the bigger exercises with 70 or 75% in the bar. I don't remember. I'd have
to look at the spreadsheet and then 10 to 12 on accessories. But, uh, I just consciously try to lift quickly,
especially when I'm doing those higher reps on the squat, on the deadlift bench overhead.
And then I'm progressing over the course of four months into heavier. Eventually I'm doing twos,
for example. And, um, I, I probably am not lifting the bar as quickly, but I do try to consciously lift
quickly when the weights are lighter, when I feel like I can, at least for the first
half of the set on something like a deadlift really explode off of the ground, you know?
Yeah.
And that kind of sounded like you were describing a bit of a linear progression.
That's kind of what this career I found.
And, uh, uh, this is kind of the foundation of the Westside program,
is that it helps to cycle some of those exercises rather than sticking with one major lift
through an entire four-month period that you usually top out on those lifts within three to
four weeks. And then you'd want to cycle in a slight variation of that and keep working on your
weaknesses as well because those top end Max effort lifts will start to drain you very quickly
and then you'll just uh you'll just Plateau and maybe even starts to decline in the case of the
deadlift that's generally what happens if you don't start using maybe blocks or maybe some belt squat assisted deadlifts and maybe some chain
good mornings, just a variety. And you do chain good mornings for three plus weeks until you
feel as though your progression is slowed. Then you'd switch to a different accessory
exercise that was very similar to or might assist your deadlift. And if you do that and you go back
and test your deadlift and your deadlift hasn't gone up, then that accessory probably isn't helping you.
And you might want to pick a different one. And that you just keep going back and testing
the lift. Anything you do outside of the competition lift should make that lift stronger.
And if not, pick a different accessory and eventually you'll find one that works for you.
But even then, you're only going to be able to run it for three or four weeks before you have to switch to a different one and come back.
You have to be patient.
Mikhail Kukly, I've talked about a five-year plan that the Russians would go on.
They were very patient.
They would spend years developing weaknesses and strategizing and periodizing their training so that they would have a kind of a long-term benefit rather than trying to, like we do here, I got a competition in four months,
so I'm going to grind. And then you turn around, I got another competition in four months,
so I'm going to grind. Long-term, I think we plateau that way. Not because I'm a genius,
but strictly because I enjoyed both sports. I really benefited from those periods in which
I mentioned that I was
bodybuilding. I think it contributed in so many different ways to my powerlifting success.
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. And if I were training for maximum strength, if I were
competing as a strength athlete of any kind, I almost certainly would be training differently.
I almost certainly would be training differently as I'm not, and I am still able to make progress.
And again, I'm not very strong in the scheme of things. I'm strong-ish relative to my body weight.
But I would say my primary goal is at this point, I understand there's not much muscle
left that I can gain.
And of course, that means there's just not that much strength left that I can gain. If I can't get that much bigger, I'm not going to
get that much stronger. So for my programming, I am trying to change my physique much or my
performance much. But that makes a lot of sense, yes, what you said that you'd be switching those
main exercises out every month or so if you are training for maximum strength on those big lifts.
And if,
if also you're at that point,
you're probably an elite lifter.
Right.
And by,
by any standards,
I'm not an elite lifter for,
for what it's worth.
Yeah.
Well,
even for,
I think for just keeping this,
keeping the workouts fun,
the variety helps in that as well.
I find it fun so long as I can keep progressing. And so I noticed it, for example, in my training
blocks, what I noticed is that my reps and reserve will go up with those. So, so what was,
so, so it's a weekly undulating periodization where, so I'm going to start with tens on week one, and then I'm going to do eights, then I'm going to do sixes,, so I'm going to start with tens on the week one,
and then I'm going to do eights, then I'm going to do sixes, and then I'm going to deload. And
then I'm going to do eight, six, four deload. And so as I, as I go through the, those waves
of loading, I'll find that as I get into a training block, what was once, uh, maybe a one
or two reps in reserve for, for that weight and that many reps is now a three to four and that's progress.
And that to me is fun, you know? So as long as I can make some progress,
I'm having fun.
Yeah. And that's kind of how Dorian went through his career.
He would pick an exercise and he would progress it over the course of a number
of weeks or a couple of months and then pick a different exercise and do the
same thing. So we often do that.
We'll pick a leg press and then we'll pick a hack squat and then we'll pick a, you know, a Smith machine squat
and maybe even a high bar angle plate SSB squat for a while with a vertical torso. And, you know,
obviously what the first couple of weeks is just going to be neural adaptation and coordination
that you, you know, just trying a new exercise and then you settle in and grind and try and see how you can
grow that. Last week, I did eight reps here. This week, I'm going to do 10. Next week, I'm going to
add a quarter or a plate. And once that starts to plateau, which inevitably will, time to pick
another exercise and start over again. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I totally agree. That makes perfect sense.
Well, this was a great discussion.
I know you have to run soon because you're going to be working on your next book, which maybe you
want to let everybody know about as well as anything else that they may be interested in.
Well, we just released this one. The Vertical Diet is now in paperback. It's a beautiful
whole color pictures. It's an awesome book. This is the number one new release
on Amazon for three weeks running now. So I'm excited to see we're up to number 25 on Amazon
in diet books already amongst all the big sellers. So really happy with that release. And I'm working
on a book called Vertical Kids now. It's going to be from conception to college, how to maximize
your kids' genetic potential. And it's going to be kind of to college, how to maximize your kids' genetic
potential. And it's going to be kind of a step-by-step of nutrition and training, a lot of
the stuff that we talked about and much, much, much more. And so my writer is coming by here
shortly and we're going to start to get the table of contents together and get this thing developed
and get it out there. So everything you can find on me is at stanefferting.com. That's my website at stanefferting is my Instagram and stanefferting on YouTube has all of my rhinos rants and other
content that's easy to watch. There's a lot of free information out there. So if you have any
interest in anything that I'm doing, that's how you find me, stanefferting. Awesome. Well,
thanks again, Stan. Congrats on the book launch. That's exciting. I can appreciate that as somebody who's done a few books myself.
And great, great idea with the kids' book as well.
It's something that I get asked about fairly often.
And I've produced a little bit of content specifically for teenagers.
The questions that I most get asked from parents are parents of kids in the range of 12 to 16, and they want to know what's appropriate and what's not. But I don't know of any book out there that is the go-to guide for raising healthy and strong and athletic kids. And so I look forward to checking that out myself.
Great. Thanks, brother. Thanks for having me on again. Good talk.
Yeah. Well, I hope you liked this episode. I hope you found it helpful. And if you did subscribe to the show because it makes sure that you don't miss new episodes. And it also
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