Thanks BI I will dig them up. We have a couple oly coaches at my gym I can ask too. I am only even considering this now that I am lighter and more mobile.
Yeah we have all the Oly shizzle. Koklov visited and gifted us a bunch of bumper plates recently too.
I am not sure if from the floor is a great idea for me. I would mostly work off blocks. I pull sumo because I have a back injury (from snatch grip pulls btw) so conventional pulling hurts like hell. I am more interested in hip power anyway
From the blocks is great b/c it takes the first pull out of the lift so you start with the second pull and therefore it's 0 to explode in less than a sec. Personally, I'll just put clean pulls and snatch pulls from blocks and from the hang in my training.
I'd also recommend keeping the reps low.... ie. 1 to 3 reps. This is all about form so you have to be mentally sharp as well as physically sharp with each and every rep.
I cant hold a clean grip at the top. Am I gonna destroy my shoulders and elbows? I just can't rack the bar. I tried a while back and it's not muscle tightness. It's the angle of my elbows to wrists.
Oly lifts are great......... for oly lifters.
I do train them a little bit in my off season, but only with very light weights. Same for most top lifters - although most never do them. They're crap for athletes too. Fun to do but a waste of time.
It's true that learning the oly lifts makes for faster and stronger athletes, but there's a HUGE learning curve to get them down properly. It's not worth the time when you can teach the same things through more accessible modalities.
I spend a lot of time performing similar movements with kettlebells - per the advice of Donnie Thmpson - but they are way easier and much less technical.
Honestly though, it's besides the point in this thread. The 3 movements for powerlifters are pretty well known. 80% of your training should be spent doing a variation of one of these three..... maybe even more. Hell, I got my first pro total training two days a week and doing ONLY the big 3 and abs. That's it. I'd program them to work weak points but it'd always be some simple variation of the big 3. Not even a specialty bar. No chains..... heck, it took us 2 years to convince Ernie Frantz to let us keep bench press boards in the gym.
All of this stuff is great but it's not worth arguing over. It's accessory work. Find out your weak points and run accessory work to address them. It's that simple.
I think something should be cleared up... the classical lifts are ie. snatch, clean & jerk are extremely difficult to perform and take many years to perfect. On the other hand the assisting lifts are much easier to learn as well as place less stress on certain joints of the lifter. I'm not sure where you come up with the... they're crap for athletes too comment. They're far from crap... just b/c you don't like them doesn't mean they don't have a great deal of carryover and help athletes. If you've tried to teach yourself that may be why you have the view you do.
As for PLers not performing them... well, I disagree with that. Front Squats are an Oly assisting lift and just about ALL Plers are jumping on the let's do them bandwagon b/c they realize they'll help with their big 3. I also read about many PLers performing high bar, narrow stance Oly style back squats ... b/c they have quite a bit of carryover when it comes to increasing the big 3.
I agree that if you're not an Oly lifter you really shouldn't perform snatches or C&J's, but I don't believe that holds true for Oly assisting lifts.
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