Barbell Life

The Barbell Life

Coach Travis Mash talks with industry experts about all things concerning strength - from coaching to programming to technique... from weightlifting to powerlifting to athletic performance.

  1. 11월 3일

    Progressive Overload; What the Latest Research Really Says

    Progressive overload isn’t just “add weight every week.” It’s the systematic increase of training stress across multiple levers—load, reps, sets (weekly volume), range of motion, frequency, and even targeted fatigue—so tissues keep adapting without tipping into non-functional fatigue. 1) You can “overload” by load or reps—and both work A controlled trial comparing two strategies—adding load vs. adding reps on leg extensions—found similar increases in 1RM strength and muscle size after 10 weeks. Translation: if bar speed or recovery limits heavier loading, progressing reps at a given load can still drive gains. 2) Volume is powerful, but has diminishing returns Meta-analytic modelling shows a clear dose–response between weekly training volume and hypertrophy and strength, but with diminishing returns at higher volumes (i.e., more isn’t endlessly better). Use volume as a primary overload lever, then taper increases once progress slows. 3) Velocity loss as a smart fatigue “dial” In velocity-based training, the velocity-loss (VL) threshold within a set acts like a fatigue governor. Higher VLs (e.g., 20–40% drop in rep speed) tend to produce more hypertrophy but accumulate more fatigue, while lower VLs preserve readiness and strength expression. Choose VL to match the phase: higher for growth blocks, lower for strength/peaking. 4) Autoregulation helps match today’s capacity—just don’t expect magic RPE/RIR or APRE can effectively align daily stress with readiness, but recent work suggests no consistent advantage over well-designed fixed-load prescriptions when intensity/volume are equated. Use autoregulation to avoid bad days becoming bad blocks, not as a guaranteed accelerator. 5) Deloads: useful tool, not a law of nature A recent supervised study found a one-week mid-block deload minimally affected hypertrophy and may reduce strength versus continuous training. Practical read: schedule deloads based on performance and readiness trends (e.g., HRV, bar speed, reps at a target load), not the calendar alone.  6) ROM and long-length work are underrated overload vectors Expanding range of motion, especially emphasizing long muscle lengths, can meaningfully raise mechanical tension and growth stimulus—another way to overload without chasing heavier loads every session. 7)Power, Acceleration, & RFD- use Velocity at Percentage of Bodyweight or Load at Specific Velocities. Consider looking at time to Peak Velocity. Putting it together: a modern overload playbook Pick 1–2 primary levers per block.  • Hypertrophy block: progress weekly sets and/or reps, use VL 20–30%, and widen ROM. • Strength block: progress load week to week, keep VL 10–15%, and hold volume steady. Track two simple KPIs: • Reps @ 75–80% 1RM (or weight at a fixed RPE/RIR) • Best rep velocity on your main lift warm-ups If both stall for 2–3 exposures, add a small dose of volume (e.g., +2–4 weekly sets for that muscle) or reduce VL/fatigue and push load. Autoregulate with guardrails: • Target 1–3 RIR on most working sets. • If warm-up bar speed is ↓ and RIR feels tighter, keep load but shave a set (maintain quality). • If bar speed is ↑ and RIR feels easier, add a small top-set or back-off set. Deload only when the data say so: • Use a low-VL week and cut volume by ~30–40% when readiness, bar speed, and pump/DOMS pattern indicate accumulating fatigue—not simply because “week 4.” This is what we use at www.RiseIndoorSports.com. https://www.mashelite.com/product-category/gymaware/ for your Velocity needs. New EBook "Mash Explosion" https://www.mashelite.com/product/mash-explosion-power-training-plyometrics/ "Mash Explosion" EBook and New Program at:  https://www.bridgeathletic.com/product/mashexplosionebookandprogramforimprovedjumpssprintaccelerationathleticpower-1633531

    16분
  2. 10월 16일

    Power or Explosive Strength; Which is the Better Term

    "Strong isn’t enough — here’s how to turn strength into POWER." Coach Travis Mash dives into the Power-3 Framework: Jumping, Acceleration, Change of Direction, and Rotation.    What Physiological components help to improve each?    How to test and monitor?    Learn how Verkhoshansky’s principles, Physiological Components like Reactive Properties (Titin protein filament, muscle spindles, etc), and the Strength Deficit explain why some athletes are explosive — and others aren’t.   Includes: ✅ Speed Strength vs Strength Speed ✅ Titin & Elastic Energy ✅ The Role of Rate of Force Development ✅ How to Test RSI & DSI, Force Velocity Profile ✅ Training Methods: AEL, Plyometrics, Isometrics, Olympic Lifts  My new EBook, "Mash Explosion" is dropping any moment on www.mashelite.com. It's all about improving: jumping, acceleration, change of direction, and rotations. I break down the components of each movment, how to test, and how to improve.  ==> https://www.mashelite.com/product/mash-explosion-power-training-plyometrics/   $39 but 40% off during the first two weeks, so only $24 and there's a new coach guided workout as well.   New Coach guided program:  'Mash Maximize Power, Vertical Leap and Explosion''   $35/mth but we’re running a special for the first two weeks at Only $20/mth and a discount on the first month below:   https://www.bridgeathletic.com/product/mashmaximizepowerverticalleapandexplosion-1632361   Get 30% Off 1st Month- Use Code: ‘MASSIVEHOPSANDPOWER30’   www.mashelite.com www.riseindoorsports.com Thank you to all of our partners:  www.GymAware.com www.ancoretraining.com/MASH www.sorinex.com www.maxeffortmuscle.com

    34분
  3. 8월 19일

    Episode 1 What's Missing from Athletic Performance Programs

    Introduction: Today’s topic: What’s missing from athletic performance programs across the country (high school, private sector, and college).Goal: Build a systematic approach to help athletes maximize performance beyond just lifting weights.Reminder: Champions are made by mastering the little things — not just training hard.The 7-Part Framework:SleepIdeal sleep environment: 68°F, dark room, no screens before bedNutrition & RecoveryMacro minimums:Protein: 1 g per lb body weightCarbs: 3–12 g per lb body weight (depending on sport/intensity)Fat: 20–35% of total caloriesSupplements & recovery tools: breath work, cool downs, PT, chiropractic, sauna, ice baths, hyperbaric chambersTesting & KPIs (Key Performance Indicators)Rotational Strength, Speed, & PowerLateral Strength, Speed, & PowerGoal Setting & HabitsEliminating Organized ChaosRecovery & Monitoring Fatigue:Use jump testing / velocity tracking to monitor fatigueIf below norm → reduce training volume/intensity by 25%If above norm → consider lighter bodybuilding day or active recoveryEnd outdated “grind culture” of beating athletes down with unnecessary early workoutsTools for Accountability:Wearables like Oura Ring or WhoopHelp track sleep, HRV, recoveryEnable team accountability featuresKey Takeaways:Athletic success = Mastery of the mundaneSleep, nutrition, recovery, and monitoring are just as important as lifting and conditioningPrograms need curriculum + accountability for long-term resultsEach future episode will dive deeper into one of the seven key areas Get a Free E-Book with Tips for the Big 6: Big Six Free Download - Mash Elite Performance Visit: https://www.mashelite.com for our EBooks and Programming. Sign up for the newsletter To Join the Online Team: https://www.bridgeathletic.com/store/thenewteammasheliteperformance-1629 Please support our sponsors: GymAware The Gold Standard in VBT https://www.riseindoorsports.com/ https://www.swiftperformance.com/ https://www.shredmill.com/ https://www.sorinex.com/ Ancore Training Systems Go-Exxentric Flywheel Max Effort Muscle and Mash Elite

    18분
  4. 2024. 12. 04.

    Barbell Life 413 Dr. Mike Lane "Long Term Athletic Development"

    Today on The Barbell Life Podcast, we were joined by, Dr. Mike Lane, Associate Professor in the Department of Exercise and Sport Science at Eastern Kentucky University. He can also deadlift 751 pounds, so he's not just smart.  Today we discussed long term athletic development. We discussed the best way to set expectations:What's your goal?Where are you currently in relation to where you need to be?Train for a few months and see how much progress you make as well as get an idea of what to expect.At that point you will have the information to decide if you're working with a genetically gifted athlete, fast responder, hard gainer, or a combination. The athlete will have time to see what the training is going to be like, and then they can decide if they're willing to put in the work required to get where they want to be.  Mike also discussed a brilliant idea of helping an athlete that isn't cut out for a particular sport in finding something that they could excel in. I think we need more of this in America.We discussed how we both fit into the long term development plan in our original decisions to powerlift. We were in two different sectors and yet both of us became elite.  Mike believes: Here's what gets you 80% of the way:ConsistencyTraining hardAfter that, you will need solid individualized programming to get you as far as you are genetically capable.Our Black Friday Specials are closing out on Sunday, so don't miss out:60% Off Mash EBook Bundleshttps://www.mashelite.com/product-category/bundles/40% Off Mash Online Coachinghttps://www.bridgeathletic.com/store/blackfridayspecialsforteammasheliteperformance-162935% Mash Courses Bundle on Stronger Expertshttps://www.strongerexperts.com/offers/4fEXiLmN/checkout?coupon_code=MASHCYBERMONDAY

    1시간 16분
  5. 2024. 11. 24.

    412 - Is Weightlifting beneficial for Athletic Performance?

    In this episode of The Barbell Life Podcast, we look to determine if the movements found within Olympic weightlifting are beneficial for improving athletic performance.   To start with, we take a closer look at power explaining that power is the combination of speed and strength. We answer the question regarding "Is the expression of power, found when one performs a power clean, going to actually improve power production?"  Take a deep dive into power and how to improve: Improving Power Production in Athletes https://gymaware.com/improving-power-production-in-athletes/ We also discuss tests for athletes that help determine how much time an athlete should spend expressing power, using speed strength, and/or getting stronger. We also look at the monitoring of these ongoing tests to ensure athletes are trending properly.  We discuss the following tests: Dynamic Strength Index and you can take a deep dive at GymAware here: https://gymaware.com/practical-uses-for-the-dynamic-strength-index/ We discuss the different types of weightlifting exercises and their derivatives to improve specific athletic qualities like starting strength, RFD, acceleration, and reactive ability.   Is Olympic weightlifting and the derivatives good for cognitive performance?     We look at different ways of measuring the Olympic weightlifting movements and derivatives other than just maximum increases.   We intended for this podcast to give you tools to apply to your current programs to stimulate specific adaptations to maximize the human performance of all of your athletes.   Visit: https://www.mashelite.com Sign up for the newsletter     If you are local to the Triad Region of North Carolina, check out our home where Coach Mash is Head of Sports Science: https://www.riseindoorsports.com/   or email him Travis@RiseIndoorSports.com Please support our sponsors:   https://www.swiftperformance.com/   https://www.shredmill.com/  https://gymaware.com/

    27분
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Coach Travis Mash talks with industry experts about all things concerning strength - from coaching to programming to technique... from weightlifting to powerlifting to athletic performance.

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