Big Time Bench: Want To Turn Every Head In Your Gym? Give Us 12 Weeks
Every major muscle group in your body plays a role in proper bench-pressing, especially when you start adding serious weight to the bar. And the fact is you can move major poundage whether you're naturally barrel-chested or shallow, long-limbed or short, so long as you make the effort to develop all the supporting muscles that are recruited during a big bench. Once you create this synergistic framework, though, you'll be able to handle much heavier loads than ever before, which in turn will allow you to develop your chest muscles faster.
We'll explain the role each of these supporting muscle groups plays and provide the optimal strategy for bringing them all together to turn you into one big, bad benching machine.
Your Start
To develop that initial shove off your chest, you'll need to train your legs and train them hard. It may sound a little counterintuitive, but the lower body serves as the foundation for bench-pressing power. At the bottom of a properly executed press, your body is like a coiled spring, with all that potential energy stored in your legs. Fail to train your lower body to uncoil explosively and you're sacrificing significant poundage.To being building this base you'll want to dedicate one training day entirely to developing your lower body. You'll squat, deadlift, and get your entire posterior chain ready to both drive and support heavy bench pressing. These lifts will strengthen your legs, of course, but they'll also recruit your core and lower and upper back.
Conversely, if your shoulders aren't strong enough to keep heavy weights stable when you're benching, they are left vulnerable to myriad injuries.
In this program, you'll perform just one move to strengthen your shoulders, but it's the most effective and efficient one ever invented: the standing barbell military press. We know it's a fitness cliché, but when it comes to overall shoulder size and strength, this move will give you more bang for your buck than any other shoulder exercise.
Maintain proper form — which includes finishing with the bar above and slightly behind your head — and you'll watch your bench numbers skyrocket within a few weeks.
The Finish
At about the halfway point in your bench-press stroke, your triceps start getting involved in a major way. They're the muscles that push the bar through to lockout position at the top, so triceps strength — especially in the long head — is an absolute necessity for big benching.When you work the long head of your triceps, you'll feel the strain closer to your elbows. In this program you'll be attacking this crucial region with plenty of close-grip bench presses and barbell extensions, a.k.a. skull crushers. Feel free to aesthetically balance out this muscle group by adding some overhead triceps extensions, but it's your long head that will provide you with the power to lock out big weights.
The Big-A$$ Bench Plan
Your first step involves finding your 1-rep max (1RM). If you train by yourself and don't feel safe doing this, you can use the following formula to calculate your estimated 1RM:The Workout
Day 1: Heavy Bench
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Bench Press
3 warm-up sets of 10, 5 and 3 reps, for working sets refer to the Big-A$$ Bench Plan -
Close-Grip Bench Press
3 sets of 10 reps -
Chest-Supported Row
5 sets of 5-10 reps -
Barbell Extension
3 sets of 10 reps -
Face Pull
3 sets of 15-20 reps -
Barbell Curl
3-5 sets of 10-12 reps -
Ab Wheel Rollout
3-5 sets of 10 reps
Day 2: Lower Body
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Back Squat
5 sets of 5 reps -
Deadlift
5 sets of 5 reps -
Leg Press
3 sets of 10 reps -
Back Extension
3 sets of 10 reps -
Weighted Sit-Up
3-5 sets of 10-12 reps
Day 3: Bench Assistance
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Military Press
5 sets of 10 reps -
Pull-Up
As many sets as necessary to reach 50 total reps (free or assisted) -
Close-Grip Incline Bench Press (shown with medium grip)
3 sets of 10 reps -
T-Bar Row
5 sets of 10 reps -
Elbows-Out Dumbbell Extension
3 sets of 10 reps -
Barbell Curl
3-5 sets of 10-12 reps -
Hanging Leg Raise
3-5 sets of 10 reps
Illustration by Oliver Burston
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