What type of training method is this??
emmab0902
Posts: 2,338 Member
Hi everyone
I am a swimmer with a new coach who has started me on dryland training. His method is different from what I've seen before and wondered if anyone is familiar with it.
Basically it involves one set of nine different exercises, broken down as follows:
3 reps
4 reps
5 reps
6 reps
7 reps
With a 5 second pause between each step if that makes sense. So it's almost doing 25 straight reps but with some brief pauses so you can use heavier weights.
I have to do this for an eight week cycle - it's my first one as only started with him a week ago, but am interested to see how it goes and what comes next!
I am a swimmer with a new coach who has started me on dryland training. His method is different from what I've seen before and wondered if anyone is familiar with it.
Basically it involves one set of nine different exercises, broken down as follows:
3 reps
4 reps
5 reps
6 reps
7 reps
With a 5 second pause between each step if that makes sense. So it's almost doing 25 straight reps but with some brief pauses so you can use heavier weights.
I have to do this for an eight week cycle - it's my first one as only started with him a week ago, but am interested to see how it goes and what comes next!
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Replies
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So wait is the top your starting reps then the bottom your finishing? And you said that you increase the wait for each following set with greater rep counts and minimal rest?
The only thing I could see that being is an attempt at getting stronger while also working on endurance. It's almost like a reverse drop set.0 -
Though I am not a swimmer, so I could be completely wrong. That's just my own opinion.0
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Hi everyone
I am a swimmer with a new coach who has started me on dryland training. His method is different from what I've seen before and wondered if anyone is familiar with it.
Basically it involves one set of nine different exercises, broken down as follows:
3 reps
4 reps
5 reps
6 reps
7 reps
With a 5 second pause between each step if that makes sense. So it's almost doing 25 straight reps but with some brief pauses so you can use heavier weights.
I have to do this for an eight week cycle - it's my first one as only started with him a week ago, but am interested to see how it goes and what comes next!
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
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Exercises are
Pullups
Dips
Bench press
Bench pull
Squats
Power clean
Pushups
Standing pushdown
Seated Triceps pushdown
The first two I do assisted at this stage
You do 3 reps, rest 5 seconds, then 4 reps, rest 5 seconds etc.0 -
Protocols like that are variously called "rest-pause sets" or "cluster sets" - basically a time-efficient way to get more strength adaptations than you'd get with the lighter loads you'd be forced to use in a vanilla 1 x 25 "endurance" set, but with such short rests that you still also get significant endurance/work capacity stress as well. That's a thinking coach - he's not just having you do some generic 3x10 program, but trying to use limited time for the dryland stuff to make you faster on that oh-so-fun last length or two, when you are running on fumes and the water is getting thicker and thicker. ;-)3
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That's a pretty good circuit1
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cutbackcoach wrote: »That's a thinking coach - he's not just having you do some generic 3x10 program, but trying to use limited time for the dryland stuff to make you faster on that oh-so-fun last length or two, when you are running on fumes and the water is getting thicker and thicker. ;-)
@cutbackcoach thanks for the great reply.
He's one of the 3 New Zealand olympic team coaches and also does a small amount of remote coaching.
Yes it seems term efficient - all done in 25 minutes and I'm definitely sore today lol!
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Exercises are
Pullups
Dips
Bench press
Bench pull
Squats
Power clean
Pushups
Standing pushdown
Seated Triceps pushdown
The first two I do assisted at this stage
You do 3 reps, rest 5 seconds, then 4 reps, rest 5 seconds etc.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
1 -
It's a deviation of ascending pyramid training. I use a reverse pyramid for deadlifts. It's designed to fatigue the muscle for faster growth and strength. It's very common with body builders0
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socalrunner59 wrote: »It's a deviation of ascending pyramid training. I use a reverse pyramid for deadlifts. It's designed to fatigue the muscle for faster growth and strength. It's very common with body builders
Oh. I thought that pyramid training involved changing the resistance with the different reps?0
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