For the first 6 months or so of this year I was doing a very (very) basic weight workout — but one that produced some good strength results.
It was a variation of a workout that Tim Ferriss referenced on his blog in January. (By the way, Tim, where do you stand on that 500 lb. dead lift goal for this year?)
Here’s the deal: Squats on Mondays…Bench Press on Wednesdays…and Dead Lifts on Fridays. Five sets by five reps of each…and that’s it.
The idea is that you increase the weight of each exercise by 10 pounds each week, while still doing the same 5×5. If for some reason you can’t complete a full set of 5 reps in a particular set…you repeat the same weight the next week…and the next, until you can do the full 5×5.
This workout is decidedly simple, and it produced some great strength gains. I went from barely being able to complete a 5×5 of deadlifts at 225 lbs., to completing the 5×5 at 320 (don’t know what my 1 rep max was.) But this workout is also more physically taxing than it appears, and produces more than a few aches and pains.
I eventually flattened out on gains and was just not looking forward to the workouts any longer. Experiment: done.
It’s not a long term workout solution, in my opinion.
Maybe if you’re a Russian powerlifter it is — but I’m not that. (too fragile, apparently)
First, if all you’re doing is the same 3 exercises week in and week out, you’ll eventually plateau, regardless of how hard you work. Next, by only working the muscles in these three exercise a strength imbalance results — and the possibility of injury is great.
In March I apparently damaged something in my shoulder while benching through a 5×5 at 185. It kept plaguing me for weeks and I had to put the kibosh on the bench for literally 2 months altogether — though it didn’t affect any other exercise, oddly. Eventually I was able to work back into flat bench dumbbell presses, but this was when the grand 5×5 experiment was nearing its end.
The Solution: Variation, of course…plus “percentage” work.
I’ve been getting more and more into variations of the Westside Barbell conjugate method. You work on percentages of a max lift, and incorporate specialty/assistance exercises to increase max lift in the bench, squat, and dead. So, while you’re not shooting for new PR’s every workout, you’re effectively training the supporting structure that allows for eventual new PR’s.
Example: To strengthen my triceps, which will support my bench press, I may do 5 sets of 3 reps of skullcrushers. These would be done at 80 percent of my 1 rep skullcrusher max.
It’s still a work in progress, but I’ll report back when I settle in on a routine and can report some results.
Later…
-Mike
Photo: ericmcgregor





