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Post by oldnavy on Sept 6, 2008 10:45:11 GMT -5
Getting My Kicks on "Route 66"
Saturday, September 6, 2008
"Get Your Kicks on Route 66," often rendered simply as "Route 66," is a popular song and rhythm and blues standard, composed in 1946 by American songwriter Bobby Troup. It was first recorded in the same year by Nat King Cole, and was subsequently covered by many artists including Chuck Berry in 1961 and The Rolling Stones in 1964. The song's lyrics follow the path of the U.S. Route 66 highway, which used to run a long distance across the US, going from Chicago, Illinois to Los Angeles, California. There was even a popular TV show in the early 60's with the title, "Route 66."
I chose the name of my new Journal because like the song's title, "Route 66," I will be 66 years-old the next time I step onto a bodybuilding stage and I plan to "Get My Kicks" along the way by having a fun time preparing for my next Professional competition.
My final contest of this year was the 2008 NPA Nationals and Masters Universe in Ft. Lee, Virginia.. I won my fifth Best Poser award at the show and placed 2nd in my age group. I had also placed 2nd at the 2008 FAME Masters Pro World Championships in Toronto, Canada two weeks earlier.
While I entered both events in my best-ever condition, in each case I was bested by a man who was less conditioned than me, but was several pounds heavier. Not one to lick my wounds and and cry "foul," I was determined to get to work to bring my own "bigger" package to the stage next time.
I am in my third month of a lean mass gain program designed to add as much muscle as I can while keeping the usual accompanying additional fat in check. I am eating more (clean diet) and am lifting very heavy (for me) in the gym. My weight on June 28 was 140 pounds. My weight this morning is 165 pounds. I will stay around this weight until it's time to cut for my show. I believe I can come in hard and lean at around 150 pounds, 10 pounds more than I did this year.
I was around 6% body fat on stage for my last two shows. I was cut and defined, but, small. I may have to give up a few percentage points in fat in order to "look" bigger at 150 pounds. I'll make that decision when the time comes.
Since February 1st, I have been a full-time Certified Master Fitness Trainer at the Birmingham, Alabama YMCA. I average around 28 hours of personal training sessions each week. Five of my clients are training with me to prepare for their first bodybuilding competition. I have one middle weight and four heavy weights. Their ages range from 24 years-old to 50. I have all of them working the same training plans that I am using for my own training. I always tell my athletes I don't make them do anything I can't do. They are all preparing for a local NGA contest next May in Birmingham. It's possible that I will have all five of my competitors on stage in the Novice Class.
The plan we are currently using was designed by my friend and fellow bodybuilder, Sean "Sully" Sullivan of Cape Cod, Massachusetts. It's called "The Widow Maker" and it's a buster:
The Widow Maker Power Workout - A Four Week Training Plan The purpose of this plan is to grow lean, hard muscle mass by lifting heavy for several sets with little rest in between, using the same weight load and then doing a Widow-Maker set of many reps for the same exercise.
Here is the Plan:
Keep the same weight for all 6 sets, but you may lose a rep or two at the end. For example set 1 - 4 you get the 6 reps, set 5, 5 reps and the last set 4. Pick a good weight and don't lower it even if it means 2-3 reps total on the last set.
On the high rep sets don't just do them light and go through the motions, go heavy and hard. For example on the 50 reps of squats pick a weight you can only get 20-30 reps with and then just take 2-3 deep breaths and bang out 4-6 more reps, breath and do more until you get the reps in. This is the Widow Maker set!
The rest between sets is 60-seconds and do a few warm-up sets before you begin the exercise
Stretch or Pose the working muscle between sets for 20-30 seconds.
Day 1:
Incline Bench Dumbbell Press – 6 x 6, 1 X 20
Flat Bench Dumbbell Press – 6 x 6, 1 X 20
High Pulls (wide grip upright row, but you pull to the forehead) – 4 x 4
Heavy Laterals – 3 x 8
Press Down – 4 x 10
Decline Dumbbell Extensions - 4 X 8
Day 2:
Leg Press – 6 x 6, 1 X 40
Squats – 6 x 6, 1 X 30
Hack Squat – 6 x 6, 1 X 20
Leg Curls– 5 x 8
Leg Extensions – 4 x 10
Day 3:
Reverse Grip Barbell Row – 6 x 6, 1 X 20
Medium Grip Pull Down – 6 x 6, 1 X 20
Dead Lifts – 6 x 6, 1 X 30
Barbell Curls – 4 x 6
Preacher Curls – 4 x 10
Day 4:
Lunges - 6 X 6, 1 X 20
Seated Leg Curls - 6 x 6
Wide stance Squats (feet out wide, toes pointed out) - 6 X 6, 1 X 50
Dumbbell Stiff Leg Dead Lifts - 6 X 6
Step Ups (Step up, one leg at a time, on a high bench or aerobic step) 6 X 6
Calves and Abs work is done twice a week. Pick one exercise and do 5-6 sets of as many reps as you can do for each.
Do Cardio on off days from weights, 20 minutes of HITT or intervals. Do 5 min warm-up and 5 minute cool down so total time is 30 min with 20 being interval or HITT.
Needless to say, we are all walking around sore as hell. This is a great plan.
I hope you follow my progress on "Route 66" and enjoy the ride. Thank you for your interest.
Old Navy
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Post by fit on Sept 6, 2008 11:30:25 GMT -5
Good luck, Scott!
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Post by oldnavy on Sept 19, 2008 20:03:07 GMT -5
Friday, September 19, 2008
Off Season Weight: 165.0
It's been a busy two weeks since my last post in this journal. I continue to work Monday-Friday at the Mountain Brook (Birmingham) YMCA as a Master Fitness Trainer. I have 20 clients who train with me for 30+ hours a week. I also work with my training partner 90-minutes a day starting at 6:30 AM. My last client of the day trains at 5:00 or 5:30, so I'm spending nearly 11 hours a day at the Y. I love every minute of my time there.
Five of my clients are bodybuilders training for their first contests. One is a non-tested middle weight athlete and four are heavyweight natters. I'm having a great time watching their bodies change with the hard training and diet we are using. We are aiming for a show in May or June of 2009. We are all working the Widow Maker plan. It's very hard and very effective. We will probably work this plan for one more week and then switch to Hypertrophy Specific Training (HST) for awhile.
Last Friday, I was featured in Senior Living, a local newspaper for seniors. They did a story on me in the "Seniors Making a Difference" section. Cool. That same day, I was the guest speaker at the Vestavia Hills (Birmingham) Rotary Club luncheon and gave a presentation to 80 members on Life Style and Fitness for the Mature Athlete. It was well received.
My training is going well. I am three months into my year-long hiatus from competing in order to add a little size. Since my last show on June 28, I have gained 25 pounds. I of course don't look cut any longer, but I still have decent vascularity and I do see some increase in size, especially in my legs and chest. Happy Days!
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Post by mrky03 on Sept 19, 2008 22:56:59 GMT -5
Good to hear you are doing well Scott! Wow, that's a lot of work you guys are doing! Widow maker to say the least!
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Post by Neal on Sept 20, 2008 5:56:16 GMT -5
Scott,
I like your new theme.
Neal
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Post by oldnavy on Oct 11, 2008 13:29:38 GMT -5
Saturday, October 11, 2008
I'm proud to announce the birth of my first grandson. Jayden was born Tuesday, September 30 in Newport Beach, California weighing 8.1 pounds. The future bodybuilder and his mom are doing fine. My wife, Vivian was in California for the birth and to help the new mom with her son. She returned home on Wednesday night. We have been blessed with two grandchildren this year. My oldest daughter gave birth to a girl, Gianna Marie in February. Little Gianna is a happy child who is crawling up a storm. We get to see more of our granddaughter as she lives in Birmingham, Alabama, close to Vivian and me.
My off season training continues to go well. I have added 20 pounds of weight and only 1% of body fat. That's cool. I'm training hard and eating clean. I hope to be ten pounds heavier than I was this year when I step on to a stage in mid 2009.
I am personal training more than 30 hours-a-week. Needless to say, I spend a lot of time in the gym. I have my five bodybuilder clients working the Escalation Density Training (EDT) plan, coupled with the Hungarian Oak Legs Blast. My guys are hurting in all the right places.
Old Navy
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Post by oldnavy on Oct 26, 2008 17:01:30 GMT -5
Sunday, October 26, 2008 - N.G.A. Granite State Open, Dover, New Hampshire
On Friday, Michael Jackson, my training partner and I flew from Birmingham, Alabama to Manchester, New Hampshire to help with the 2008 N.G.A.Granite State Open Bodybuilding Championship and Figure Competition held in nearby Dover. The 14th annual contest was held at the Dover High School Auditorium and attracted more than 40 competitors (60+) with crossovers in Women's Figure, Novice Men and Novice Women, Masters Men and Masters Women and Open Men and Open Women. While the Men's Novice Class was the largest (18 competitors), every class except the Novice Women (one) had competition. Nine Figure women competed, up from three just a few years ago.
Laura Tourtellot, affectionately known throughout the fitness world as "Turtle," asked me to be one of her judges. It was the 10th time I have judged a show. Michael Jackson, who is training with me for his first bodybuilding competition next year, worked back stage as a facilitator and tried to soak up first-hand some of the last minute contest prep that goes on before every show.
We arrived in Manchester on Friday evening at 6 PM and drove to Portsmouth, the site of the host hotel and check in. We spent some time with Turtle and then went to dinner.
The next morning, we arrived at Dover High School at 8 AM to help with the set up. Laura has her act together and has a great group of volunteers who make sure everything is done to Ms Turtle's satisfaction and to her exact specs. She calls her show a "Production" and it is. The smallest detail is deftly handled. And, as a result, once again, her show went off without a single hitch.
Prejudging began at 1:30 PM and ended a couple of hours later. The night show kicked off at 6:30 and we were done by 9:30. Many of the show's competitors are repeat athletes. They like doing Turtle's show and so did Michael and I. We finally returned to our hotel at around 1 AM Sunday morning, got up at 3 AM, drove back to Manchester and caught our flight at 5:45. We arrived back in Birmingham in time to go to Church.
A big highlight for Michael was to meet Sean "Sully" Sullivan. Sully was also one of the judges. Michael has "known" Sully for the past year as we have worked through several of the exercise guru's training plans. Many times, Michael has been heard to groan, "darn that Sully," as we completed a hard set of heavy lifting. Sully is a pro competitor, show promoter and fitness expert. I have most of my bodybuilding athletes at the YMCA using his workouts under my supervision. Thanks, Sul. You're the best.
I haven't been to a bodybuilding show since my last competition in June. Seeing this show and catching the scent of posing oil and Pam got me all worked up. I will hit the gym with a little more intensity tomorrow. My next contest is in June, 2009. I wish it were next week.
Old Navy
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Post by oldnavy on Nov 20, 2008 12:58:12 GMT -5
Thursday, November 19, 2008
It's been an interesting few weeks since my last post. I was invited to speak at the US Naval & Marine Corps Center in Bessemer, Alabama during their drill weekend. I spoke for an hour on the subject of wellness, exercise and diet. My talk went over very well. I will speak next at the US Army Center in Birmingham on December 6th on the same subject.
Last Saturday, I was in Coral Springs, Florida for the 2008 NGA Pro Universe, American International and Florida Natural Championships, where I had my first stint as Master of Ceremonies. I had a great time.
I am promoting a show in the summer, the 2009 NGA Alabama Natural Open Bodybuilding and Figure Championships to be held at Hoover High School (the same school whose football team was featured for two seasons on MTV).
I am entered in the 2009 FAME World Championships in Montreal, Canada, where I will compete in the Master Pro Division.
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Post by oldnavy on Dec 20, 2008 11:00:16 GMT -5
December 20, 2008
It's the Saturday before Christmas and I am enjoying having my two daughters with my two grandchildren home for Christmas. My oldest grandchild, Gianna, is 10 months old and my grandson, Jayden, is three months old.
My Personal Training work at the Birmingham, Alabama YMCA is going great. I average 28 hours of training each week. My one female bodybuilder and three male bodybuilders are progressing nicely. They will compete in the 2009 NGA Natural Open Bodybuilding, Figure and Fitness Model Championships on July 11 in Birmingham, the show I am promoting. We hope to have more than 60 competitors at the Pro Qualifier event.
My training is going well in spite of a little setback. I tore some muscle fibers in my right quad a few weeks ago and have to cut back on my leg work until it heals. I decided to take a full week off next week and resume training on December 29th. I have been going at it hot and heavy and I know the rest will do me a lot of good.
I received an email from a casting director in Los Angeles for a photo shoot for Paris Match, a very popular French magazine. They are doing a photo editorial on aging and were looking for an older bodybuilder. I got the job and will be flown to LA at the end of January for a one-day shoot. I am going to have to go on a light contest prep diet to drop a few off-season pounds. I don't mind, because the photographer is well known and it will be a great experience being photographed by such a renown shooter.
I hope all of you have a Blessed Christmas and a Happy New Year.
Old Navy
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Post by mrky03 on Dec 21, 2008 12:24:53 GMT -5
That's great to hear Scott! You're getting to be quiet a celebrity! Merry Chrismas!
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Post by oldnavy on Jan 18, 2009 14:36:03 GMT -5
Sunday, January 18, 2009 - Two Weeks Until My Photo Shoot
Weight: 158.6
I started my "contest diet" for my end-of-the-month photo shoot on January 1, weighing 166.0 pounds. I have slowly lost a little more than seven pounds and will try to come in on January 30 at around 153-154. This is a great experiment for my actual contest prep for the 2009 FAME Master Pro World Championships in Montreal on June 13. I am in my seventh month of my year off from competing to try to add some needed size, especially in my legs. I weighed 140 the last time I was on stage. I plan to compete next time at no less than 150 pounds.
I'm looking forward to this photo shoot. I will represent a senior bodybuilder in excellent health in this photo essay on aging. The French photographer is well know and does a lot of work for Paris Match magazine, the French version of Vanity Fair, that has commissioned the shoot. According to the casting director who "hired" me, we will be on location in Culver City (Los Angeles) for about eight hours on that Friday, Fun Stuff!
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Post by masterschamp on Jan 22, 2009 12:33:08 GMT -5
Hey Scott....that's too cool about the photo shoot! Good luck in your training and competitions this year.
Keith
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Post by GerryT on Jan 22, 2009 12:45:09 GMT -5
That is inspirational, Scott. Also wishing you the best for the year, on and off stage.
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Post by oldnavy on Jan 25, 2009 14:05:55 GMT -5
Thanks, Mr. G and Keith. I appreciate the props. Sunday, January 25, 2009, One Week until My Photo Shoot with Gerard Rancinan for Paris Match Magazine in Los AngelesWeight: 156 pounds Yesterday I started a modified “last week” contest cutting diet for my photo shoot on Friday with French photographer, Gerard Rancinan, shooting for Paris Match magazine. www.rancinan.com/work.php I was selected to be part of a photo essay on aging. I am on a three-day low carb diet and will do a pre-contest (pre-shoot) carb up on Thursday to fill out a bit for my session on Friday. I am also increasing water for the next four days and will drop my water on Thursday evening the way I do before a contest. I have been using an herbal fat burner, green tee caps and an herbal diuretic to drop some water. I was 166 pounds on January 1 when I started prepping for the shoot. Today I’m at 156 and will come in at 153-154. The director asked me to tan, so I am having two professional sprays applied on Tuesday and Wednesday. I will bring a jar of tanning solution if I need to be darker. I was told that I would be wearing running shorts and a head band. On Friday, they emailed me and asked if I would bring some of my posing suits. I said I would. I’m really looking forward to meeting the other “players” chosen for the shoot, a bunch of aging men and women posing for a popular French magazine. Cool!
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Post by mrky03 on Jan 25, 2009 14:57:25 GMT -5
Sounds like fun Scott! I can't wait to see the artical.
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Post by oldnavy on Jan 31, 2009 19:55:31 GMT -5
Saturday, January 31, 2009, Old Navy’s Magazine Photo Shoot Well, that was really fun! I arrived in Los Angeles at 3:40 PM on Thursday and was met at the airport by the casting director for the shoot, Megan Foley. This was our first meeting as Megan and I had communicated earlier by cell phone and email. She drove me to my hotel close to the airport so I could check in and then we continued to a Beverly Hills hotel where I met with the French photographer, Gerard Rancinan and his crew. Gerard had met the other subjects of the shoot earlier in the week and he wanted to meet me before we began the next day. Gerard is a very interesting man, full of energy, imagination and passion. I quickly got caught up in his enthusiasm for the upcoming session. After our meeting, I returned to my hotel, had an early dinner and went to bed. I was picked up in front of the hotel on Friday morning at 7:00 AM so we could be at the studio in Culver City by 8:00, the time we were scheduled to begin. When we arrived the crew was already hard at work constructing the set for the photograph. We were doing a recreation of a 1600’s painting titled “Maids of Honor,” which had a group of men and women in an assortment of costumes representing various modes of vanity. In the original painting the artist included himself in the scene. Gerard would later do the same thing in his photograph. Rancinan’s idea for the reproduction was to focus on how various characters handle aging. Included in the “cast” was a mature woman playing a grotesque Marilyn Monroe, a very tall woman wearing a dress made of newspapers, two enhanced female body builders, a male and female dwarf, a lady playing the Angel of Death, two beautiful young models playing Adam and Eve and me, ten models in all. There was also a pit bull in the shot that gave us a lot of trouble because the dog would not stay still for the shoot. My part was interesting. Originally, I was cast as an old man standing next to the Angel of Death, who was holding an hour glass and was “waiting” for me. After Gerard saw me in person, he changed my character to a man who was defying death. Instead of standing looking distraught, I was to pose and smile, looking defiant, as if to say, “Not me, Angel of Death, not now.” Instead of old man’s clothes, I wore a black posing suit. The set was completed by 11:30 and we are all asked to stand in our places so we could be moved about and have individual lighting checks performed. At 11:45 Gerard began shooting the first of three sessions. It was intense. While others had to stand perfectly still, I had to hold a front double biceps pose. The first session lasted 20 minutes. My arms ached and my hands cramped, but I did it, all the time smiling as directed. After the first session, Gerald and his assistants reviewed the shots on a lap top and then discussed the needed changes for the second session, which started after we had a short break. The second session was longer than the first, because the dog wouldn’t cooperate. We eventually got the dog to settle down enough for the shots and we completed the second session in due time. Again, I was stiff and sore, but happy. Gerald told me I was doing exactly what he needed me to do for the photo. After a lunch of pizza, sushi and salad, we prepared for our final session, which was to begin at 3:30 PM. We were all tired by that time, but we were all so emotionally involved in the action that we sucked it up and did an outstanding job for the final photograph. We ended the session at 4:15 to much applause and cheering from the cast and crew. It was a fabulous shoot and I’m sure the photo, which will appear in Paris Match magazine, a French publication, in a couple of months will be well received. I asked Gerard how much it cost to shoot a photo like this. He said he budgeted $70,000 for one photograph. That included studio rental, studio crew, his staff and the cast. Gerard and his staff flew in from Paris. I flew in from Alabama. The rest of the cast was local talent. Gerard Rancinan is doing a series of ten photos, recreating master works of art. Our shoot was the seventh in the series. After he completes the other three, the entire collection will go on tour in art galleries around the world. His next shoot is in St. Petersburg, Russia. Gerald said he will email each of the cast a copy of the photo in a few weeks. I can’t wait to see the results of our work. After the shoot, Rancinan asked me if I would like him to take a few shots of me. I said I would and I now have a small personal portfolio of Gerard Rancinan photos. After the shoot, we signed a model release form and received our payment in cash. I returned to my hotel and after a quick shower to clean off the Pam spray I had applied (at the photographer’s request), I went to the hotel restaurant for a dinner of salmon and salad. I still have a show to prepare for, so this was just another contest diet dinner. I was as tired after my all day photo session as I am after a contest. That was a surprise. Thinking about all that had occurred this weekend as I flew home on Saturday morning, I had to wonder what other outrageous things will happen to me in the future, just because I am a 65 year-old master professional bodybuilder. Only time will tell, I guess, but I’m looking forward to the next chapter.
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Post by Roger on Feb 1, 2009 7:17:13 GMT -5
That is AWESOME Scott. Sounds like you had a blast.
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Post by oldnavy on Mar 2, 2009 20:22:29 GMT -5
Monday, March 2, 2009 - Training for the FAME Master Pro World Championships, Montreal, Canada, June 13
Weight: 159.0 Pounds
Today I officially began my contest prep for my 28th contest and fifth Pro Show, the 2009 FAME Master Pro World Championships.
After my last show in June 2008, I took the rest of 2008 and the first half of 2009 off from competing in order to add some needed size. I was 138 pounds on stage at my last show and have been sitting at around 160 pounds for the past eight months. My plan is to compete somewhere near 150 pounds, depending upon how I look.
My training off season was designed to add lean mass by lifting heavy and eating clean. I believe I have done OK in this area. My body fat is around 8% (7 skin fold test) and I show a good deal of definition and vascularity.
I will continue to eat clean and lift heavy as I slowly loose a little body fat while trying to preserve as much of my new lean mass as I can.
Today I started Phase IV of a six phase training plan designed by Sean "Sully" Sullivan of Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Sully is a professional bodybuilder, contest promoter and coach. He is also a friend. Here is my workout.
Mass Maker Workout – Phase IV – Three or Four Weeks
Specialization Program for Back
Rest between all sets is 90 seconds unless specified.
Day One – Back Thickness
A. Dead lifts 6 sets 7/5/3/7/5/3 (work up to a 3 rep max, twice)
B. One arm Dumb Bell rows 4 sets of 6-8 reps
C. T-bar rows 4 sets of 4-6 reps
D. Seated cable rows 4 sets of 12-15 reps
Day Two – Legs and Delts
A1. Leg press 3 sets of 10-12 with three drop sets for a total of 25-30 reps a set
A2. Close stance squats 3 sets of 12-15
B1. Lunges 3 sets of 8-10
B2. Leg curls 3 sets of 12-15 with 2 drop sets for a total of 25-30 reps a set
C. Seated calf raise 3 sets 15-20
D1. Dumb Bell shoulder press 3 sets of 8-10 reps
D2. Seated lateral raise 3 sets of 10-12 reps with 2 drop sets for a total of 25-30 reps a set
Day Three – Back Width
A. Chins medium grip to front 6 sets 8, 6, 4, 8, 6, 4
B. Pull down wide to rear 4 sets of 8-10 reps
C. Straight arm pull downs 4 sets of 10-12 reps
D. Rope pull downs 3 sets of 12-15 reps (use the rope and pull the elbows wide at the bottom)
Day Four – Back, Traps, Lower Back and Rear Delts
A. Bar Bell shrugs 6 sets of 4-6 reps
B. Seated Dumb Bell shrugs 4 sets of 6-8 reps
C. Weighted hyperextensions 4 sets of 8-10 reps
D. Seated rope rows to the face 4 sets of 10-12 (use the rope and keep the arms high and elbows wide and pull to the chin)
E. Bent over lateral raise 4 sets of 12-15 reps
Day Five – Chest and Arms
A1. Dumb Bell bench press 3 sets of 8-10
A2. Cable crossover 3 sets of 12-15 reps + 2 drops
B1. Bar Bell curls 3 sets of 10-12 reps
B2. Machine preacher curls 3 sets of 12-15 reps + 2 drops
C1. Close grip Bench Press 3 sets of 10-12
C2. V bar tri press downs 3 sets of 12-15 + 2 drops
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Post by Roger on Mar 7, 2009 6:45:06 GMT -5
Good luck with your plans Scott
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Post by oldnavy on Mar 7, 2009 19:57:24 GMT -5
Thanks Roger. I appreciate your interest in my training.
Saturday, March 7, 2009 - Training for the 2009 FAME Pro World Championships, Montreal, Canada, June 13
Weight - 160 pounds
I am continuing on my slow pre-contest diet. I actually put on two pounds after a re-feed day yesterday. Earlier in the week, while I was on three low-carb days, I dropped to 158. I'm looking OK mostly, except for the small pouch around my mid section that's a little troubling. I still have 15 weeks until the contest and only need to drop no more than 10 pounds. I want to come in at around 148 verses the 138 I came in last June at the FAME Worlds.
One of my novice female bodybuilders and three of my novice males attended their first Posing Clinic at my home studio today. We worked on the symmetry round, relax pose, front double biceps, front lat spread and favorite most muscular. After we practiced these poses for a bit, I video taped them two at a time, putting them through a semi-contest round. After, we reviewed the tape and I offered suggestions on how they might improve. The two-hour session was fun and went well.
I continue to train solo as my training partner is recovering from shoulder surgery. We believe he hurt himself over time while he was spending two years earning his black belt in Karate. His rehab will last several more weeks.
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