
Originally Posted by
Tom Narvaez
I think it all depends where you're at in training advancement when it comes to the 5x5/3x5 thing. The 5x5 ramped stuff worked the best for me right when I switched to it. At that point, I was probably overreaching a bit and it allowed me to continue to practice at heavy weights while that dissipated. Realistically, if I was doing 365x5x3, I probably could have done 375/380x5 at any time. By taking a full week and a half to get there, my recovery was on point and I was able to display strength better. I was also strong enough, and adapted enough, that I was produced a good amount of tonnage. If I tried doing this at, oh, ~250ish, I don't think it would have worked as well.
Then again, I had a buddy who got to around 230-240x5x3 for bench (I can't remember exactly)and after he switched to 5x5 ramped, he was able to get to 270 by 5s. He switched to 531 instead of trying to microload (which I advised against), and his bench hasn't made a ton of progress since that point, but 531 is a slow-grind type of deal and everyone knows how that goes.
You just have to think of these things in terms of tonnage. 5x5 keeps intensity high, higher in fact, but it reduces the average weight and thus the overall tonnage. For some, this results in too little tonnage to drive adaptation. For others, it seems to be a welcome respite from TOO much tonnage.
For the deadlift, in terms of people I've trained, my problem is not entirely unique, which makes it difficult to gauge the programming. With the bench and press, I've clearly seen better results with MORE volume. I don't know if that is a trend, but some claim that it is. I'll find out more and more as I train more and more people. When it comes to squats, I've got it down to a science.
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