Strength Standards for the general population
ForecasterJason
Posts: 2,577 Member
I think every strength standard chart I've seen is relative to the population that lifts weights or at least does some training on the exercises. While I am no expert on this subject, I decided to create a percentile chart to approximate how much weight the general population under age 40 can bench press. I took into account several variables.
As a guide, I used the strength standards for adults under age 40 here as a guide, knowing that (from what I've read) most men can't bench press their own bodyweight. I also know there are major differences in strength between a completely untrained individual and one that has trained for several years, and most people on this forum are much stronger than the average person. And from what I've read, most people don't even lift weights on a consistent basis. I also factored in anecdotal accounts I've read as well as examples from myself and people I know in real life. I suspect the higher percentiles are more subject to larger error, as much of the examples I used from what most people I know most likely bench were based on those who are untrained.
Thoughts on whether this may have any real accuracy, or am I way off?
As a guide, I used the strength standards for adults under age 40 here as a guide, knowing that (from what I've read) most men can't bench press their own bodyweight. I also know there are major differences in strength between a completely untrained individual and one that has trained for several years, and most people on this forum are much stronger than the average person. And from what I've read, most people don't even lift weights on a consistent basis. I also factored in anecdotal accounts I've read as well as examples from myself and people I know in real life. I suspect the higher percentiles are more subject to larger error, as much of the examples I used from what most people I know most likely bench were based on those who are untrained.
Thoughts on whether this may have any real accuracy, or am I way off?
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Replies
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women's standards suck- and the 15 weight class jump is annoying (IMHO)0
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(Yes, I'm about to "go there"--apologies in advance to the purists). I think at least for women, the CrossFit guidelines are a bit more realistic for the masses. Especially when it comes to bench press. A lot of women can't even do a full push-up, remember. I *can*--in fact, I can crank them out pretty nicely--and it still took me a couple months of dumbbell press to build up to benching the bar alone.
Additionally, I don't think you can track categories like untrained, novice, advanced etc into percentiles. That assumes that all people lift, and progress evenly. The vast, vast majority of (e.g.) women, even women who work out, are not Stronglifting or Wendlering or whatever.0 -
cheshirecatastrophe wrote: »(Yes, I'm about to "go there"--apologies in advance to the purists). I think at least for women, the CrossFit guidelines are a bit more realistic for the masses. Especially when it comes to bench press. A lot of women can't even do a full push-up, remember. I *can*--in fact, I can crank them out pretty nicely--and it still took me a couple months of dumbbell press to build up to benching the bar alone.
Additionally, I don't think you can track categories like untrained, novice, advanced etc into percentiles. That assumes that all people lift, and progress evenly. The vast, vast majority of (e.g.) women, even women who work out, are not Stronglifting or Wendlering or whatever.
no- it's true- and something to keep in mind.
I personally tend to lose track of what a woman who doesn't do ANY working out - is NOT currently capable of- I grew up throwing heavy things around- i have always been able to pick up and push things- so I know for me- my perception of what someone who isn't trained can do- is... off. I remember I got my *kitten* HANDED to me for saying bench at 135 was warm up weight- I was genuinely confused why people were so annoyed with me but- because for me- it has been for many years. And apparently- I also live in a bubble. It's definitely a valid point- and I think to some extent- we here are a little bit in a bubble- and in any fitness forum. Our standards for ourselves are ALWAYS higher than we they really are- and are substantially higher than what an untrained counterpart would be.0 -
Where are squats and deadlifts?0
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Where are squats and deadlifts?
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The numbers seem like ballpark at a glance, but what's the point if I may ask? If 90% of the population doesn't work out at all then why does it matter what they can bench press? That's why I'm generally curious where I stand among the population of lifters, not random people who've never seen the inside of a gym.0
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The numbers seem like ballpark at a glance, but what's the point if I may ask? If 90% of the population doesn't work out at all then why does it matter what they can bench press? That's why I'm generally curious where I stand among the population of lifters, not random people who've never seen the inside of a gym.
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cheshirecatastrophe wrote: »(Yes, I'm about to "go there"--apologies in advance to the purists). I think at least for women, the CrossFit guidelines are a bit more realistic for the masses. Especially when it comes to bench press. A lot of women can't even do a full push-up, remember. I *can*--in fact, I can crank them out pretty nicely--and it still took me a couple months of dumbbell press to build up to benching the bar alone.
Additionally, I don't think you can track categories like untrained, novice, advanced etc into percentiles. That assumes that all people lift, and progress evenly. The vast, vast majority of (e.g.) women, even women who work out, are not Stronglifting or Wendlering or whatever.
Were those front or back squats, do you know?
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cheshirecatastrophe wrote: »
Good point.0 -
Your percentiles do not translate. Somewhere around 80% of Americans fall into the 5th percentile, which means they are untrained and would perform at the untrained number. Only 1% of Americans are at the Advanced level (or your 75th percentile).0
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is this on a bowflex or barbell0
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LolBroScience wrote: »is this on a bowflex or barbell
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cheshirecatastrophe wrote: »I think at least for women, the CrossFit guidelines are a bit more realistic for the masses. Especially when it comes to bench press.
Yes, this seems more realistic.0 -
LolBroScience wrote: »is this on a bowflex or barbell
Neither......... Smith Machine...........0 -
Bret Contreras has a chart based on women who he has trained. His article, which includes a reminder about how many people don't lift at all, explains it a bit:
http://bretcontreras.com/female-strength-levels/0 -
Cheshirecatastrophe wrote:Additionally, I don't think you can track categories like untrained, novice, advanced etc into percentiles. That assumes that all people lift, and progress evenly.Your percentiles do not translate. Somewhere around 80% of Americans fall into the 5th percentile, which means they are untrained and would perform at the untrained number. Only 1% of Americans are at the Advanced level (or your 75th percentile).
I think there may be some confusion here. I wasn't trying to have the percentiles match the untrained, novice, intermediate, advanced, and elite standards. This is why the 50th percentile numbers are actually still in the untrained category, and the 5th percentile numbers are lower than any numbers you would see on any other chart. Likewise, what I have as the 95th percentile is around the intermediate level on other strength standards charts. I'm sure there may still be some overestimation though.0 -
ForecasterJason wrote: »The numbers seem like ballpark at a glance, but what's the point if I may ask? If 90% of the population doesn't work out at all then why does it matter what they can bench press? That's why I'm generally curious where I stand among the population of lifters, not random people who've never seen the inside of a gym.
Newbies shouldn't be doing 1-rep max tests, due to the high risk involved.
Besides, newbies shouldn't worry about how they compare with other newbies - they should just follow a good strength program.
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Cherimoose wrote: »ForecasterJason wrote: »The numbers seem like ballpark at a glance, but what's the point if I may ask? If 90% of the population doesn't work out at all then why does it matter what they can bench press? That's why I'm generally curious where I stand among the population of lifters, not random people who've never seen the inside of a gym.
Newbies shouldn't be doing 1-rep max tests, due to the high risk involved.
Besides, newbies shouldn't worry about how they compare with other newbies - they should just follow a good strength program.
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Cherimoose wrote: »ForecasterJason wrote: »The numbers seem like ballpark at a glance, but what's the point if I may ask? If 90% of the population doesn't work out at all then why does it matter what they can bench press? That's why I'm generally curious where I stand among the population of lifters, not random people who've never seen the inside of a gym.
Newbies shouldn't be doing 1-rep max tests, due to the high risk involved.
Besides, newbies shouldn't worry about how they compare with other newbies - they should just follow a good strength program.
Most people unless competing probably should not be doing 1 rep max due to the injury thing.0
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