Originally Posted by
Maybach
It's not that the words you're saying don't make sense, stlnl. I can see how you are evoking ideas that are appealing to mechanics of the mind. But they differ wildly from what exists in reality. What is a "stronger base"? Do you mean that an increase in lighter weight volume should make the 5RM easier than it is at lower volume? The only way it could would be by making him stronger. And if it makes him stronger than a 5 pound increase, well, then you're saying you think it would make him stronger faster, and that 5RM should be heavier than it ends up being. You're using a lot of slippery qualifiers, which appear to be based on how you feel, and how it looks. Those are not relevant data.
The Texas method isn't a different model of training. It doesn't apply stress in a fundamentally different way. It doesn't produce a different kind of trainee, it doesn't produce significantly different adaptations, it doesn't drive strength increases with a "stronger base." It drives increases the same way the NLP does: with increasing weight on the bar.
Calm down your anxiety about this: you're not going to overtrain this kid, and provided you're even halfway competently coaching him you're certainly not going to injure or otherwise adversely affect his health. And certainly not with too many 5RMs. Maybe your experience is different, but in my experience the 5RM is the EASY part of the Texas method. It's too small a volume to really do damage. If I could swap out my volume day for a topset 5RM with two backoffs I would do it without thinking twice. Don't take that away from the poor kid until you have to.