They might. Start conservatively with maybe 8 reps at first and see what happens
Hello Andy,
You gave the following guideline for rotating volume/intensity for press movements in HLM
In addition, to the above, I found it to be helpful to add one set of 10 reps at the end, as a finisher (based on your press article recommendation). Thanks to your advice, my press movements are back on track again.5RM + 3x5@ 5-10% reduction
3RM + 3x3 @ 5-10% reduction
1RM + 2x2 @ 5-10% reduction
Would similar rotation work for squats too? Do, squats respond similar to the last set of 10 reps on the heavy squat day?
What is the context where it says Presses are "better for 3s"?? I don't remember writing that as a blanket / general statement. If I did it needs to be revised/updated. There has to be a context to that statement.
I'm racking my brain to remember where in the books I read it. It was along the lines of "5s work better with squats and deadlifts, and 3s for upper body lifts". It was a general context. You can find similar statement here but I'm not using it as a reference to support what I said. Hopefully, other posters remember it better and help me out.
I think he's talking about where it says that typically switching presses to 3's and using the back off sets of 5 for squats usually works best for the advanced novice. Not that 3's are better for presses in general. Recently read the book and that's the only place I can think of it.
Yes, context is everything here. This is just a short-term programming trick to milk a few more pounds of LP out of the bar when the standard 3x5 runs it's course. It's meant to be used for a few weeks at most and then volume will need to be raised again when you start Intermediate programming.