Blending Size & Strength Full Workout

Here’s the most popular training program I’ve ever published… the feedback has been incredible.  Try my Blending Size & Strength program for yourself and see how you like it!

Do you want to gain some lean muscle mass or do you want to get stronger? Typically you have to choose between these two goals when deciding how to train – not any more! I’ve designed a program specifically for those us who want to get both bigger and stronger at the same time.

The Size and Strength Conundrum

Conventional training wisdom tells us that training for size and training for

strength are two very separate entities. Heavy weight and lower reps (1-5) is unanimously king for producing maximal strength gains. The key here is high tension placed on the muscle. Getting experts to agree upon what, exactly, is best for inducing hypertrophy (growth) is a bit more elusive. However, it’s fairly well accepted that somewhere between 10 and 20 reps is best for inducing skin stretching gains in size. The cornerstone of hypertrophy training is to put the muscles through a high volume of training.

Typically, most well-designed routines will have some degree of periodization to them. For example, remember my Big and Strong in ’04 article? I had you train with heavy weight and low reps for a few weeks followed by lighter weight and more reps for a few weeks. Though there’s certainly nothing inherently wrong with this, I have found that (though the end result is satisfactory) size doesn’t improve very fast when training for strength; and strength doesn’t improve when training for size, in fact it sometimes goes down a bit.

Call me impatient, but I want to improve both at the same time. To appease my impatience I brainstormed a bit to come up with a workout that implements high tension to optimize strength and high volume to maximize size gains – all within the same week. The program is elegantly simple, but don’t let that fool you. The results you will achieve will be astonishing.

Heavy Day, Light Day

To get your strength on its’ way up, you’re going to train each body part with one heavy day per week. To fill out your shirts better you’re going to train each body part with one high rep day per week. That’s right; you are going to train each body part twice per week. I know this flyes in the face of the popular “train each body part once per week” dogma that currently prevails, but oh well.

Without further ado, let’s get right to the program.

Monday: Heavy Upper Body

1a) Barbell Bench Press 6 x 3 (6 sets of 3 reps)

1b) T-bar Row 6 x 3

2a) Standing Barbell Shoulder Press 5 x 5

2b) Pull-ups 5 x 5 (you may use an assisted pull-up machine or do pull-downs if you’re not yet strong enough to do pull-ups with your bodyweight)

3a) Skull Crushers 3 x 5

3b) Barbell Curls 3 x 5

Tuesday: Light Lower Body and Abs

1) Unilateral Leg Press 3 x 15-20

2) Lying Leg Curls 3 x 15-20

3) Dumbbell Walking Lunges 2 x 30

4) Seated Calf Raises 3 x 20

5) Crunches 3 x Failure

Wednesday: Off

Thursday: Light Upper Body

1a) Inclined Barbell Press 3 x 15

1b) DB Rows 3 x 15

2a) DB Lateral Raise 3 x 15

2b) Pull-downs to the front 3 x 15

3a) Preacher Curls 2 x 15

3b) OH DB extensions 2 x 15

Friday: Heavy Lower Body and Abs

1) Barbell Squats 6 x 4

2) Rack Deadlifts 1 x 8, 1 x 6, 1 x 4, 1 x 2

3) Dumbbell Stiff-legged Deadlifts 3 x 6

4) Standing Calf Raises 5 x 5

5) Hanging Leg Raises 3 x 8

Saturday: Off

Sunday: Off

Tying it all Together

The prescribed number of sets does not include warm-up sets. Make sure to warm up properly, but avoid needlessly fatiguing yourself prior to your upcoming work sets. Usually one or two light sets does the trick.

Exercises that are labeled A & B are to be done one after the other. For example, do a set of barbell bench presses, wait about one minute, then do a set of T-bar rows, wait another minute, then do another set of bench presses and so on.

In order to reduce the risk of overtraining, I’ve made it such that you’ll only train four day per week. To further reduce the risk of overdoing it, make sure to not do any forced repetitions (reps that a spotter helps you complete). On the heavy day, you should be able to complete your last repetition with good form. On the light day, stop a rep or two short of failure. Holding back from going absolutely all out is something that’s tough for me to do, and it may be for you, too. But I assure you, your patience will pay off in the way of steady muscle gains.

One of the most important, yet simple, ways to ensure your steady progress is to keep a training log. Keeping meticulous records allows you to intelligently plan the progression in your workout. As a general rule of thumb, try to improve (either five more pounds or one more rep) every other workout for a particular exercise. Trying to improve every workout would soon lead to stagnation and even regression, both of which you want to avoid like a Brittany Spears new TV show!

Doing this routine for 12 weeks is sure to give you newfound size and strength. After adhering to the program for three months, take a week off. Then you could repeat the program but with the incorporation of different exercises.

Feel free to contact me at http://www.DrClay.com to let me know how the program works for you. I would love to hear your success stories.

Till next time – Dr Clay

Comments

  1. Barry Charewicz says:

    As I get older (50) I have noticed an increasing inverse relationship between my ability to recover and the intensity and frequency of my workouts. I feel this is natural and may be connected to decteased testosterone levels. I would like to know if you have any thoughts on the matter and any suggestions for those of us still training in our later years.

    Thank you in advance.

  2. DrClay says:

    Barry, you are certainly on to something, so rest assured it’s not just your imagination.

    Like you, I suspect that decreased testosterone does play a role in the age-related decrease in recuperative ability that we tend to see. I also suspect that growth hormone plays a role as well.

    I think I will write a full article on this topic in the near future — so thanks for the idea.

    But let me leave you with the two overall options that you have. 1) see a hormone specialist about hormone replacement therapy 2) train smarter — avoid training to failure on each and every set, get soft tissue work, etc.

    Stay tuned for an article on this topic in which I will give much more information on how to avoid the age related decrease in recuperative ability.

    Best,

    Dr Clay

  3. Randy says:

    Dr. Clay,
    Any suggestions for substitute exercises for leg press or leg curls? I work out at home and don’t have a leg press or leg curl machine.
    Randy

  4. DrClay says:

    Randy, try Bulgarian Split Squats as opposed to leg press and dumbbell leg curls as opposed to the machine leg curls and you’ll be fine.

    Train hard!

    Dr Clay

  5. Wasim says:

    Hi Dr. Clay,

    I have been very fascinated by your methods and workouts. I have just begun this one I am on my second week. At the moment I am gaining wait as well as strength. Not sure as to say whether it is muscle or fat lol because i am eating anything at the moment. But i try to keep my calories, carbs, proteins to a limit (i.e. done alittle research on how much i am suppose to eat).

    Just wanted to know one thing. That if i missed out a day for some reason. What do u recommend me to do? Move onto the next workout or do the workout that i missed.

    e.g. Tuesday missed…so did it on wednesday and then continued through to thursday and friday and took the weekend off.

    Thanks!

  6. Wasim says:

    oh and also um somtimes i am not able to do the workouts…

    e.g. move back and forth between sets of different work outs

    because gym is busy…so what do i do then? can i just do one workout and finish the sets and then move onto the other?

  7. DrClay says:

    First of all, try to not miss any workouts. :) Ok that’s part joke…but part true. What I mean is analyze why you missed the workout and see what could’ve been done to avoid that.

    You have one day leeway with this program, so if you missed tues workout, do it on wed, the thurs workout on thurs, take friday off (cause you need it off since you hit the same body parts on wed), then do fri workout on sat. So, regarding this particular workout, if you can make it up without training 3 days in a row, do it. Otherwise count your losses and move on.

  8. DrClay says:

    If you can’t superset the exercises (do them back-to-back) as listed, then just do straight sets (no supersetting) on each. That’s not a big deal at all.

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