Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - The “Best” Workout Split for Gaining Muscle
Episode Date: September 20, 2021This podcast is going to be about workout splits. I’m often asked “what’s the best workout split to follow?” Is there really a “best” workout split for maximizing muscle growth? Many peopl...e swear by the body part split, while others say it’s a waste of time. Still others say you should organize your split around movement patterns instead. Unfortunately, many of these opinions miss the forest for the trees. There’s no scientifically optimal workout split for everyone in all circumstances. Which split is best for you will depend on your goals, your circumstances, and your preferences. While I’ve written about the best workout split a fair amount, I like to address it regularly as my thinking and recommendations change. For example, the first edition of Bigger Leaner Stronger features a routine that looks a bit different than the one in the fourth edition I’m writing now. In the case of Beyond Bigger Leaner Stronger, the current programming in the second edition likewise looks a bit different than that of the first edition. I hear every day from people following my programs, and I’m always taking notes on the suggestions they make and the obstacles they run into so that I can continue to improve my body of work. So, as I continue to learn and hear from readers, these are my current thoughts on the best split for gaining muscle. Timestamps: 7:52 - What is a workout split? 10:22 - Is there a "best" workout split for everyone? 12:29 - How do your goals affect the split you should follow? 18:02 - How many muscle groups should you focus on at once? 22:17 - What are the requirements of a good workout split? 22:57 - What are the cons of a body part split? Mentioned on the Show: Shop Legion Supplements Here: https://buylegion.com/mike Bigger Leaner Stronger: https://legionathletics.com/products/books/bigger-leaner-stronger/ Beyond Bigger Leaner Stronger: https://legionathletics.com/products/books/beyond-bigger-leaner-stronger/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, hello, and welcome to another episode of Muscle for Life. I'm your host, Mike Matthews.
Thank you for joining me today. And if you're liking the podcast, if you have listened to at
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Okay, so this episode is going to be on workout splits
and what is the quote-unquote best workout split to follow.
This is something I have written and spoken about many times over the years,
but it's something that I am always asked about.
And it is something I like to publicly address every so often as my thinking changes and as my
recommendations change. For example, back when I published the first edition of Bigger, Leaner,
Stronger in 2012, the programming was a push-pull legs with an arms day and a shoulders
day basically so it was a hybrid between a push-pull legs and a body part split and if you
fast forward to today it's similar but now it's more like push-pull legs with an upper lower
component so if you mashed up push-pull legs and an upper-lower component. So if you mashed up push-pull legs
and an upper-lower split, that is more in line with Bigger Leaner Stronger today. And I am in
the middle of wrapping up what will be a fourth edition of Bigger Leaner Stronger, and then I'm
going to do the same thing for Thinner Leaner Stronger. And the workout programming is going
to stay essentially the same. I am going to change a couple of exercises
that I think will just fit the template better. And I'm going to be tweaking the rep ranges on
some of the exercises. A lot of the work is still going to be four to six, but there is going to be
a little bit more six to eight in the case of bigger leaner,er, Stronger. And in Thinner, Leaner, Stronger, there is going to be
six to eight and eight to 10. And anyway, just a heads up that that is coming. And if you have
bought Bigger, Leaner, Stronger or Thinner, Leaner, Stronger as an ebook, or if you have bought one or
both of the audio books, you are going to get the new fourth editions for free. You just will update your content
in whatever platform you are reading on or listening on,
and that's it, you don't have to pay.
And in the case of Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger,
years ago, I published the first edition
and it was very similar to Bigger, Leaner, Stronger.
It just had a bit more volume
and it had a different type of periodization.
There was some heavier weightlifting. So you're doing twos, you were doing some ones now and then,
as well as some higher reps. You were doing some eight to 10 in beyond bigger, leaner,
stronger, which of course was different than bigger, leaner, stronger. Now about a year or
so ago, I published the second edition of beyond bigger, leaner, stronger. Now about a year or so ago, I published the second edition of beyond
bigger, leaner, stronger, and the workout split changed a little bit. So instead of the push,
pull legs plus body part mashup that it was previously, it is now more like bigger,
leaner, stronger. It is push, pull legs plus upper, lower, and the periodization changed quite
a bit. Now the primary exercises are linearly periodized.
So you're starting a training block doing tens on your big exercises, for example,
and you are ending a training block doing fours and twos and even AMRAPs, as many reps as possible
with heavy weight. And so my point with saying all that is as I continue to learn and as I continue to hear
from readers, I hear every day from people who are following my programs, sharing results,
sharing obstacles, asking questions, making suggestions.
I am always taking notes about how I can improve my body of work, so to speak. And then when my lists get long enough, I go into my books
and I rejigger them. And in some cases, I start over from scratch. I basically reorganize and
rewrite everything, which is what I did in the third edition. And then again, in the fourth
edition, without changing the fundamentals, of course. The fundamentals have been solid from the beginning, but how those fundamentals are communicated,
how they are organized,
and all of the supporting material
that allows you to get the most from those fundamentals
has continued to change over the years,
and I have continued to refine the whole package,
I guess you could say.
And so in this episode,
I want to share some of my current thoughts on the best split for gaining muscle, because
many people say that the body part split is terrible and they will beat the drum for something
like a full body split or an upper lower split and then others will disagree with that and they say you should organize your training around a movement pattern for example
that seems to be kind of trendy these days or some other feature or factor of training and it can be
hard to separate the sheep from the goats because you can find sciencey explanations for many
different positions the problem however is that many of these opinions
focus on the brush strokes instead of the big picture. There is no best or perfect or
scientifically optimal workout split for everyone, for all people and all circumstances. There are many workable and worthwhile options
to choose from and which split is best for you
will depend on you.
It will depend on your circumstances,
your preferences and your goals.
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can keep doing what i love like producing more podcasts like this okay so let's start this
discussion with a quick definition of terms what is a workout split well this just refers to how
you organize your workouts in terms of which exercises you do and which muscle groups you
train in each workout in each training session. For example, in the intro, I mentioned push-pull
legs. Now that is a workout split that divides your training into workouts that train your push
muscles. So that could be a vertical, like an overhead push, which would be primarily your
shoulders, or it could be a horizontal push, primarily your pecs, your chest muscles, or a pull workout. Of course, that's your back,
that's your biceps. And you may also be deadlifting, which trains basically all of
the muscles on the backside of your body, as well as your legs, right? The push pull legs.
So your lower body muscles. You also have the full body workout split that is popular these days. A
lot of people are hyping this up as the best way to train for everybody. And in this split, you
train many different muscle groups at once. Although you don't usually train all of the
major muscle groups in your body sometimes, but usually it is skewed. Each full body workout is skewed
toward the upper or lower body. So you may do primarily upper body work with a little bit of
lower body or vice versa in full body workouts. And if you look at many power lifting workouts,
strength training workouts, like proper strength training, they are organized around exercises.
So you're working your squat, you're working your bench press, you're working your deadlift, you arelifting is to get as strong as you can on those few exercises that equal your total and that you are judged on.
And of course, there are many different ways to combine all of these workout splits and others that are out there, like the upper-lower split, which is another one that I mentioned in the intro.
And some people say that is okay.
Purists say it is unnecessary. You're just making things more complicated than they need to be.
And you should just stick with one clear cut workout split. Now, my problem with that position,
with the position that it's very important to clearly delineate the workout split that you
are following. And my problem with the position that
there is a best workout split for everyone, one true workout split is our muscles don't care
what workout split we are following. Our biceps don't care if they get trained in an arms day,
a pole day, an upper body day, a full body day with an upper body focus.
Our muscles will grow when we do the right amount of the right exercises with the right
amount of weight and with enough post-workout rest and recovery.
Our workout split is just a tool that helps us accomplish those ends.
workout split is just a tool that helps us accomplish those ends. And those are the key goals, the right exercises, the ones that stimulate the muscles correctly, that train the muscles
correctly through a full range of motion, the right amount of volume. So doing the right amount
of work with those exercises, the right amount of weight. So that's intensity. How hard do our muscles have to work in each rep
and each set and particularly in each set? So how close to muscular failure are we going and how
much weight are we using in relation to how strong we are and also giving our muscles enough rest,
making sure that we are not pushing, not to the point of overtraining because that's
very hard to do, but overreaching. Again, where our performance is stagnating or declining because
we are not recovering enough. The workout split is subservient to all of that, not the other way
around. You can't unlock gains by just following the right split. You have to pay attention to the
details, especially if you are an intermediate or an advanced weightlifter. If you're new,
you actually don't have to worry too much about the details. You just have to have a
halfway well-designed workout split and you are going to make great progress. But eventually,
it gets a lot harder to keep progressing and you do have to drill down into these details. So let's talk about goals, right? So let's say your goal is to
maximize the development of your upper body muscles. Let's say you're a guy and you are happy
with your lower body, but you are not happy with your upper body. And particularly you are not happy with your chest
and your biceps and your shoulders. And you want to focus on those muscle groups. Those are the
ones that you want to develop the most without of course, falling behind in your lower body.
Maybe you want to continue developing your lower body and you also do want to continue developing
the rest of the major muscle groups in your body, but you are willing to sacrifice progress in those areas to maximize progress in your chest, biceps, and
shoulders. Well, if that's the case, then the best workout split for you is going to look very
different than if you are, let's say a woman who wants to maximize the development of her lower body,
you are looking for more muscle and more definition in your legs and your glutes,
and you are pretty happy with your upper body, or you are at least willing to put your upper
body muscles on the back burner so you can dedicate more of your time and your effort
to your lower body.
Now, if you're wondering why you can't have
it all, why can't you just maximize the development of all the muscle groups in your body, maybe with
a full body workout split, for example? Well, there are some constraints. Take time. Do you
have two to three hours per day, five days per week, maybe even six days per week to be in the
gym? Can you do two a days? Because if you are an
intermediate or an advanced weightlifter, that's what it would take to maximize training stimulus
for all major muscle groups, because you're going to have to do probably 15 to 20 hard sets per
major muscle group per week. And if that doesn't sound like that much to you,
muscle group per week. And if that doesn't sound like that much to you, pause the podcast,
open up Excel and start to build that workout program out. And I'll even let you count indirect volume. So one set of bench press is one set of direct volume for your chest and one set of
indirect volume for your triceps. And let's say your front deltoids, for example. And if you do
that and you start building out that program to get to 15 to 20 hard sets per major muscle group
per week, then you will see just how much training that is. And let's say you have the time and you
have the inclination to spend your time like that. There is the effort. Are you willing to put in that much
effort? Because that is hard. And I've done it before in the past when I was younger and
invincible, the old three hours of training per day. Some people don't want to work that hard,
but let's say you do. You're like, yep, I will work that hard. Okay. Now we have recovery. Can you recover from that much training?
Most people can't. For example, one of the guys who works with me a couple of years ago,
he was in his early twenties. So physiologically invincible, basically on natural steroids,
essentially. And he also already had several years of effective training under his belt.
already had several years of effective training under his belt. He had already squatted 405 for one or two, for example, and he weighed, I don't know, 150, 160, something like that.
And his upper body strength wasn't as impressive, but he had made pretty good progress on his upper
body as well. He was not a novice, not at all. He was a solid intermediate, maybe even at the beginning of an advanced phase in his training. And so he
wanted to see if he could recover from 15 to 20. I think in a couple of cases in the lower body,
he may have gotten up to 25 hard sets per week. And so this required two a day. He was training two and a half, three hours per
day, five days per week. I don't think there may have been a sixth day, actually not two workouts
on the sixth day, but there may have been one workout on the sixth day. I don't remember a lot
of training though, 15 to 25 hard sets per major muscle group per week. And he was eating 5,000 calories per day. He was eating 1,000 grams
of carbs per day and keeping his fat under 80 grams per day, which is a feat unto itself. I
mean, he was eating a loaf of bread per day, for example, and he would eat, you know, a big bowl
of pasta at dinner with low fat, gross sauce sauce just right out of the can, ragu,
heat it up, and just pour it on. He was committed to it. Of course, he was eating a lot of protein
as well. He lasted about six weeks. He wanted to go eight weeks, but by the sixth week,
everything hurt too much. All of his joints, he just did not feel good. Now he made
good progress. It's hard to say exactly how much muscle he gained because of course he gained a
lot of weight, not that much fat, but he gained a lot of weight. I mean that many carbs to go from
300 ish grams of carbs per day to 1000 grams of carbs per day. You're now holding a lot more water
and glycogen. But we did the math after his post crazy experiment weight settled into its normal
range. And it appeared he gained a solid three to five pounds of lean mass in those six weeks.
And my point with sharing that anecdote though, is young dude in his hormonal prime
experienced weightlifter. He could only do about six weeks of that very high volume maximize
growth in all muscle groups type of training. And so what those of us who are not on a lot of drugs generally have to do is we have to
focus on one or two, maybe three muscle groups in a training block. And three would be smaller
muscle groups like, okay, our shoulders, our biceps and our chest. That's a good example.
You can probably get away with that, but you could not get away with, all right, I want to focus on
my chest and my back and my legs. You're probably going to have to focus on just your legs, for example, and get in
the 15 to 20 hard sets per week on your legs or your lower body. We could throw in the glutes as
well. We could throw in calves if you want to train those directly. And then you are going to
have to probably use a more of a maintenance level volume on the rest of your muscle groups, something around 10 to 12 hard sets per week, which is generally not enough to progress if you are an intermediate or an advanced weightlifter.
But it's certainly enough to maintain everything you have.
So then maybe in your next training block, you want to focus maybe on your
pressing muscles. And so this is the mindset that you have to adopt as you become an intermediate
and an advanced weightlifter. When you were a newbie, you could maximize the development of
everything because it didn't require as much volume. All you need to do was 10 to 12 hard
sets per major muscle group per week and everything grew basically as fast as it possibly could. And if you play around with your workout builder with those parameters, you see, oh, I can do that with five 45 to 60 minute workouts per week. I can hit 10 to 12 hard sets per major muscle group per week. And if I only have four
days, I can still do it. I just have to extend those workouts. Maybe now it's in the range of
60 to 75 minutes. And if you only have three days per week to train, if you can be in the gym for
maybe 90 ish minutes, you can also accomplish the same thing. And if you look at my beyond
bigger, leaner, stronger program, for example, which is for intermediate and advanced weightlifters, obviously the book is written to men, but the principles apply just as much to women as men.
And I do plan on making a female version of that book because there are certain things that should be changed to specifically fit women's needs and particularly in the workout programming.
But if you are a woman and you are well past your newbie gains, I do recommend you read that book
and you will learn everything you need to tweak the workout program to fit your needs. And if
you are struggling with that, you can just shoot me an email, mikeatmuscleforlife.com, and I can help you out. But regardless, if you look at the program
in that book, it is emphasizing the upper body over the lower body, not neglecting the lower
body. There's plenty of lower body volume there. You will make progress, but it does reflect the
needs of most of the men that I interact with. Most of the male intermediate
and advanced weightlifters tell me that their lower body development is pretty good. They're
pretty happy with their lower body. It continues to make progress, but they are most unhappy with
their upper body development. They still want more chest. They want more shoulders. They want more
back, maybe specifically lats, or they
want more thickness in their back or their biceps. And so the Beyond Bigger Leaner Stronger program
reflects that. We are sacrificing some of the potential lower body gains to maximize the
potential upper body gains because we have to, we can't have it all. And in the women's program, it's going to be the
other way around because that reflects the needs of most of the women who reach out to me. So
anyway, coming back to workout splits, just know that you don't have to follow one particular split,
but you do have to follow a few non-negotiable training tenets. You have to implement progressive
overload in your program. You have to use the right amount of volume tenets. You have to implement progressive overload in your program.
You have to use the right amount of volume and intensity. You have to include the right amount
of rest and recovery in your program. You have to do a lot of the right types of exercises. You're
going to have to do a lot of compound exercises. You're going to have to do ones that are safe and
effective and isolation exercises are great as well. And some are better
than others. And many workout splits can do the trick, but some do make all of that easier than
others for some people. So for example, body part splits often make it difficult to train a muscle
group more than once per week, which is a good idea if you're trying to maximize the growth of that muscle group, particularly if you are an intermediate or an
advanced weightlifter who has to do 15 to 20 hard sets per week for that muscle group to maximize
its development. It would be a mistake to do all of those sets in one session because research shows
that beyond about 10 sets for an individual muscle group in an individual session, you are now in the realm of diminishing returns that the next five sets. So let's say you go from 10 to 15. Those additional five sets are going to be less effective as a training stimulus than ending that workout at 10 or doing something else, stopping at 10, and then doing
those additional five on another day. I wouldn't do them the following day. If I did 10 sets,
I would give at least one day of rest before and maybe two days. Like if it's lower body,
I'm probably going to rest two days before I do those additional five sets, but splitting up the
volume that way is going to be more effective. So when you need to
do that, a body part split can make it difficult unless you are going to do two legs days per week
or two arms days per week or chest days per week or whatever, which you can do. You just have to
know what you're doing. If you are going to use that split as your starting point. Now, many full body workout splits suffer from
the opposite issue. They tend to overdevelop some muscle groups and underdevelop others.
Many full body splits that I've seen are very lower body centric, which is fine if that's what
you want to do, or are very squat, bench, and deadlift centric, which is again, fine. If that's your
goal, if your goal is to get as strong as possible on those exercises, that's great.
But that may mean that some of the smaller muscle groups are not going to develop the way that you
may want them to. Your shoulders may not develop the way that you want them to. Your triceps may
not develop as quickly as you'd like. Your back and your lats in particular may not develop the way that you want them to. Your triceps may not develop as quickly as you'd like.
Your back and your lats in particular may not develop as quickly as you'd like.
So while I understand the allure of choosing a workout split because somebody who sounds
smart and science-based said it is the best.
And so then you go, hey, if it's that simple,
I'm just going to do that. I get that. But that is kind of like deciding what kind of work you
want to do or what kind of job you want to pursue based simply on the amount of prestige that is
associated with the title, or maybe even the amount of money that is associated with that job.
the amount of money that is associated with that job. For example, being a sales rep at a company may be a much better fit for you than being the CEO. If you were to think about exactly what you
want and why, it may make a lot more sense for you to be a good sales rep than try to be a good CEO.
be a good sales rep than try to be a good CEO. So when you are contemplating your training programming and what split or splits you should or shouldn't be following, don't think in a rigid,
mutually exclusive manner. To use the terms of Jim Collins, who wrote Good to Great and Built
to Last and other business books, don't submit to the tyranny of the or. You can have this or that, but you can't have both. You
can have an upper-lower split or a push-pull legs or a full body. Instead, embrace the genius of the
and, as Collins says. So you could have the push-p legs, maybe as a base and an upper body day in there,
because that makes sense. Or maybe it's lower body because that makes sense for you.
And if it fit your goals, you could throw in an arms day. So there is a little bro split action
and then maybe a full body workout too, just to deliver a little bit more volume, a little bit more training stimulus to several
muscle groups that you want to make sure are developing as quickly as possible,
or you want to make sure are not backsliding.
Well, I hope you liked this episode. I hope you found it helpful. And if you did,
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