 |
Death to the Conjugate Method?By Jason Ferruggia For T-Nation.com
Over the last few years, it seems that just about every “in the
know” performance coach has discussed the conjugate method and
why they find it to be the most effective way to train an athlete. By
now I think we all know the definition of conjugate or concurrent
periodization and how it involves simultaneously trying to raise
multiple qualities. Pretty much all of my highly respected colleagues
use or have used the conjugate method. I know I have. And without
hesitation I will tell you that in a limited time situation, such as a
summer’s worth of training for an off season football player, it
is the best way to train.
The results you can achieve in three months of training with the
conjugate method are outstanding. You can get significantly bigger,
stronger and faster in only twelve weeks. A large percentage of
competitive athletes only have 12-16 weeks of uninterrupted training
time per year. The rest of the year, they are usually playing one or
more sports and have very little time to train. Most of my high school
athletes play more than one sport and even college football players
play from August until sometimes January. After that they have a short
break before spring ball starts and then they finally get 8-12 weeks
off in which they have nothing to do but train. In those 12
weeks
there is a lot to accomplish. The muscle mass that was lost during the
season must be regained and new muscle mass must usually be built. We
also have to rehab any injuries and work on preventing new ones.
Lastly, but most importantly, we need to get stronger and faster.
With only 12 weeks to do all of this, there is definitely not enough
time to do any of it in separate phases. The only plausible approach to
take in this situation is to just jump into a well rounded conjugate
training template and improve all of these qualities simultaneously.
That is what many successful coaches do in this situation and to be
honest, I don’t think you can beat the results. Every summer, my
football players go back to camp with several pounds of new muscle, a
better forty time and are significantly stronger than the previous
year. In fact, this summer, with a few minor changes to the lower body
training protocol, the average improvement on the squat was just over
80 pounds with one guy actually adding 110 pounds in 16 weeks. It
should be noted that these were experienced and strong guys who had
trained with me for at least three years each. With results like these
it’s hard argue. Conjugate periodization is the best system there
is for training athletes.
Unless, that is, you have more than 12-16 weeks to train. In this case,
the conjugate method may actually be the worst option to choose.
Now before you lose your mind and offer your life savings to anyone who
will whack me within the next 48 hours, let me explain.
Even though many athletes end up training for no more than 12-16 weeks
per year there are plenty of other athletes who have a significantly
longer amount of time to train. A high school or professional football
player is an example of this. College football players do not fall into
this category since they have to participate in spring ball. Therefore
we can not count that as uninterrupted training time. An NFL player, on
the other hand, has from January until August to train. With seven
months to go before camp, using the conjugate method would be a huge
mistake for this athlete. During the beginning of the off season, there
is absolutely no need to jump straight into heavy max effort type
training. Nor is there a need to do any form of speed work such as
plyos, dynamic box squats, throws or anything of the sort. After the
previous five months of pounding, the last thing this guy needs to be
or feels like doing is depth jumps and heavy deadlifts.
In this situation the best model of periodization to follow
is…dare I say it? How will people react to this seemingly
blasphemous statement? Oh, what the fuck, here goes…
Classic old school, Western periodization…
There I said it and I’m standing by it.
At the onset of a long off season the main concern should be rest and
recovery. Therefore our hypothetical seven month off season should
really be more like six or even five and a half months. Immediately
after the season, guys should just take off for a month or so. If
playing the game of football is like being in dozens of car wrecks each
week, I certainly think that a month off is more than needed. Upon
returning to training the first thing that should be addressed is any
kind of injuries or imbalances that occurred during the season. Since
the athlete has just taken four to eight weeks completely off of any
training at all we also just need to reestablish a basic base level of
fitness. Therefore this first block of training would be a GPP/Rehab
type phase. During this time there will be no loading of the spine and
no heavy bars in the hands. Almost everything will be done unilaterally
and with dumbbells or just bodyweight. Rebuilding lost muscle mass will
also be stressed during this phase but if hypertrophy is a very big
priority for this particular athlete, the next phase will basically be
a hypertrophy only phase. Each of these phases will last about a month.
After completing those two phases the athlete can then begin to move
into more of a strength phase. We will assume that he took all of
February off and began training in March. So after the first two
phases, we will begin the heavy strength work in May. There is just no
reason whatsoever to expose this athletes body to the stress of
extremely heavy weights any sooner than this. Not only is it
detrimental to his joints, spine and CNS but it is also not possible to
make significant strength gains for much more than twelve weeks
straight.
Think about this for a second; I have athletes adding 100 pounds to
their squats in twelve weeks of the summer. Several of my colleagues
have achieved the same results in this time frame. Now if the athlete
trained for 52 weeks versus 12, how much greater do you think their
improvement would be? An extra 20 pounds maybe? What does that tell us?
That right there proves that conjugate periodization is not the most
effective method for those with extended periods of time to train.
Maybe taking significant periods of time away from heavy training is a
very good thing. In fact I know it is. How else can the gains that most
athletes make during 12-16 weeks of off season training be explained.
The abuse the body takes from heavy squatting, benching and deadlifting
is immeasurable. There is no way that this can be good for anyone to do
year round. The body needs a chance to repair and recover, and that is
where old school western periodization comes in.
Ok, with that rant out of the way let’s get back to our
hypothetical NFL player and his off season training. After the
GPP/Rehab phase and the hypertrophy phase we then move into the maximal
strength phase. During this phase we will also introduce some dynamic
effort training as well but no extreme training methods like depth
jumps will be needed yet. Since you can only make gains from extreme
shock training methods like depth jumps for a very limited time and the
gains are only truly realized after cessation of the stimulus it is
better to save this type of training for the following month, if you
even want to use these methods at all. Doing depth jumps for the month
of June followed by eliminating them in July will allow the athlete to
realize the delayed transformation effect in August when they enter
camp.
Depending on the particular athlete and his individual needs there are
a few ways we can approach the final few months of off season training.
We could focus on maximal strength in May and early June and then
switch over to a conversion to power type phase from late June to
August in which we focus more on speed training methods with only a
maintenance level of maximal strength work. Another option would be to
alternate back and forth with three week blocks of each method, i.e.
speed and maximal strength. Finally we could opt to go with the
conjugate method for the last one to two months. Whatever method is
employed, there must be some maintenance hypertrophy work included
throughout and calories must remain high. If the athlete really needs
to gain size above all else, we would be better off lowering or
eliminating most of the speed work and instead focusing only on
strength and hypertrophy. As you can see there are many ways to skin a
cat and they all result in you having a bloody pile of fur in your
hands and a screaming feline trying to rip your eyes out.
Wait…wrong cliché. I never understood that one anyway.
The point is that if you look beyond conjugate periodization you will
find many other options that will help you achieve your goals; many
times more efficiently.
The average reader of this site is probably not some one who competes
in bodybuilding or powerlifting but rather some one who trains twelve
months a year in an effort to get bigger, stronger, leaner and more
athletic. If that describes you then a form of Western or alternating
periodization is probably a better choice than the conjugate method. As
I pointed out earlier it is difficult to significantly increase any one
quality for much longer than 12 weeks. So why pound yourself into the
ground 52 weeks a year with heavy weights or end up frustrating
yourself to the point of insanity when your mass building cycle stops
working? Instead, we could all benefit from picking one of these
qualities and focusing on it for a given time frame. Just like it is
never recommended to attempt to simultaneously lose fat and gain
muscle, it is not the best choice to try to improve speed, strength,
size and conditioning all at the same time either. Therefore, for the
average lifter I would suggest the following periodization plan:
1) GPP/Conditioning/
Unilateral Phase
2) Hypertrophy Phase
3) Maximal Strength
Phase
4) Speed/ Power Phase
The length of these phases is really up to you. Phase 1 could be done
only once or twice a year if you wanted. Phases 2 and 3 could be
alternated for most of the year (this is also known as intensification
and accumulation) in one month blocks or for longer periods of up to
twelve weeks. From what I have seen with my off season athletes I might
tend to lean toward longer phases of each. I think it takes a bit
longer than a month to get your strength levels up significantly and I
think the longer break from heavy training could do a body a world of
good. The conversion to power phase might not be necessary for all
athletes and probably isn’t needed for most recreational lifters.
However I do recommend that you at least include some speed work in the
maximal strength phase.
Now just in case you all thought I forgot the number one argument
against Western or linear periodization I will present it right now.
“When you go longer than two to three weeks without training any one
particular quality you lose it.”
This is supposedly why it is necessary to always use conjugate
periodization and nothing but. This is complete bullshit.
While it may be true that you might regress slightly, let me ask you
what happens when you take a layoff from training. I’ll tell you
what happens in nearly every single case; you come back and within no
time you are stronger than ever. That is why this is the most idiotic
argument ever. The people who make this argument will also tell you
about muscle memory and how when you come back from training your gains
in size and strength will be rapid. Then what the fuck am I missing
here? Who cares if you detrain slightly if you will gain it back and
then some within two weeks of training that quality again?
Now that we have addressed the issue of periodization there are a few
other issues I have with the conjugate method that need to be looked
at. When a coach says that he uses a form of conjugate training that
usually means he is incorporating some of the Westside techniques.
Before I get to that I must point out that I don’t train
powerlifters, nor have I ever been a powerlifter myself. I
wouldn’t know the difference between a squat suit and a wetsuit.
Although I have been in a wetsuit several times, and according to
female eyewitnesses, my ass looks pretty good in one. But I digress.
The fact is that I know next to nothing about powerlifting and would
never claim to; it’s just not my world. When it comes to
powerlifting, Louie Simmons is the master and has produced more
champions than just about anyone on the planet. I have learned an
infinite amount from Louie and would never challenge anything he had to
say about training for powerlifting.
But like I said, this has nothing to do with powerlifting and
powerlifters.
While there is much to be learned from the Westside methods you can not
blindly take a system designed for powerlifters and use it to train
athletes. There are too many differences between the two groups for
this to be a good idea. While I have learned an infinite amount from
Louie and the Westside methods I still modify much of the information
based on the needs of my athletes.
The first mistake many coaches make usually begins with the speed work.
Powerlifters usually use a day of dynamic effort benching and a day of
dynamic effort box squats with 50-60% of 1RM. With all of the
athletes I have ever worked with, those percentages are usually too
high. I have worked with hundreds of athletes and have
consulted
with many colleagues who have done the same and we all came to that
same conclusion. As an athlete, if you are going to include speed work
in your training, it had better be fast. That is the name of the game,
my friends. I have rarely seen anyone that is fast with 60%. Sure there
are exceptions to every rule but this is usually the case. Lower the
percentages and move faster even if that means 40%. For most athletes,
speed work at 60% is about the equivalent of doing cardio at the
typical 70% of max heart rate for fat loss. Why waste your time and
risk muscle loss when intervals will get the job done much faster and
more efficiently? Secondly, this choice of exercises is actually far
from the best for many athletes. Light speed work with a bar actually
teaches deceleration, the opposite of what an athlete wants to do. You
do not want to explosively hit your opponent and then immediately upon
contact, decelerate. Quite the contrary, you want to accelerate all the
way through and try to blast him across the field. The reason speed
work like this teaches deceleration is because the weight will always
be too light at the top. While you can add bands and chains to correct
this problem, I would have to argue that for athletes, jump squats are
superior to box squats and heavy explosive medicine ball throws or plyo
pushups are far superior to dynamic bench presses.
Some of the “Westside or die” strength coaches out there
denounce the value of Olympic lifting and state that any lift can be
done explosively and that box squats are the dominant lower body speed
exercise. Yes, if you are a powerlifter, Olympic lifts suck. But one of
the most important things to realize when training an athlete such as a
football player or wrestler is that it is of the utmost importance that
they can not only produce force but ABSORB it. You might be able to
dish it out, but can you take it? For this reason the full catch
variations of the Olympic lifts are of the utmost benefit to these
athletes. Along with drop and catch type exercises such as depth jumps
or depth pushups, the Olympic lifts teach the body to absorb force.
This effect can not be achieved with a box squat.
As far as producing force goes, the argument by the anti Olympic
lifting/ pro box squatting group is the following:
“Let’s assume you can squat 500 pounds and power clean 350
pounds. Well 60% of 500 is 300 pounds and 60% of 350 is only 210 so
therefore the box squat is obviously more effective for power
development. After all who is going to be able to produce more force,
the athlete who trains all off season with 300 pounds or the athlete
who trains all off season with 210 pounds?”
Great point. Hard to argue with that.
Except for just one thing there sweetie pie; the power clean and all
Olympic lifts are explosive lifts by nature so you would never use 60%.
In fact when you use 100% you are moving explosively, you simply have
no choice. There is no such thing as a slow power clean. A power clean
at 100% is probably more explosive than most box squats at 60%. So in
actuality the question should really be this:
Who do you think is going to be able to produce more force, the athlete
who trains all off season using 300 pounds or the athlete who trains
all off season with 350 pounds?
Iiiiiig-zactly.
Granted the athlete will not always be working at 100% but even if he
goes down to 300 pounds it is still just as effective as the box squat
at improving force production with the added benefit being that it
actually teaches the athlete the all important aspect of absorbing
force as well. On top of that, there is no deceleration component to
the power clean like there is with the box squat.
So much for that argument.
What about the argument that Olympic lifts are dangerous? Maybe, but so
is having a barbell of any weight at all on your spine, and I’m
guessing that running full speed into Warren Sapp and having him plant
you on the back of your neck is probably not the safest thing in the
world either. There are risks in everything an athlete does, deal with
it.
The next problem associated with using a powerlifting system to train
athletes is the over use of max effort training. Working up to a one or
three rep max is a lot more dangerous than doing five singles at 90% or
three triples at a slightly lower percentage. This is a risk that
athletes simply can not afford to take on a weekly basis. On top of
this, working up to a true max is quite taxing to the central nervous
system and may actually delay your recovery and thus your rate of
progress. Most athletes need to include speed work such as sprints and
plyos in their programs along with the heavy lifting. All of these are
CNS intensive and too much of any of these stressors can quickly lead
to overtraining. Not only this, but true max attempts are stressful on
the entire body and most athletes are beat up enough. For this reason
it is probably better to limit true all out, max effort attempts to no
more than one per month.
On the opposite end of the spectrum from max effort training lays the
repetition method. It was once written about how several lifters at
Westside Barbell Club did three sets of twenty plus reps on a stability
ball dumbbell press one particular workout day. This one story some how
led to the new definition of the repetition method in many peoples
minds.
Several coaches, including myself, do not find a need for a dynamic
upper body day with many athletes. For this reason the dynamic effort
bench press has been dropped by many coaches, although I think there is
some benefit to some of the catch and release type exercises I detailed
earlier. Replacing an upper body speed day with good old fashion
repetition work in the range of six to ten reps is a great idea for a
lot of athletes. Going higher than this and trying to use the
“what they did one day at Westside” definition of
repetition work, is not a good idea at all.
It is well known and well documented that conditioning/ endurance work
has a negative effect on power. Pull out any of the old Eastern
European training books or manuals and you will find this information
everywhere. Simultaneously trying to improve endurance and power
significantly reduces the effectiveness of your power training. Yet
that is what some coaches are advocating by utilizing extremely high
reps on a repetition day. For those that don’t know, there is
some question as to weather any sets at all above six reps,
that’s right SIX reps, will negatively affect an athletes power
output. Let me state that again and in a different way so that you can
fully appreciate what I am saying. Doing any set above six reps could
actually be making you slower and less explosive! The proper
hypertrophy range for athletes and the effect that it has on muscle
fibers is another article in itself but for now let’s just
address the problems associated with super high reps.
The advocates of high rep training state that this method builds
muscle. No it doesn’t. Unless I missed the scene in Pumping Iron
where Arnold did 30 rep sets on the bench press or missed a chapter in
Blood and Guts by Dorian Yates, I can pretty safely say that no one has
ever successfully built an ample amount of muscle with high rep
training. Beyond your first year as a beginner, high reps are largely
useless for building muscle.
High reps are for endurance training, nothing more and nothing less.
Endurance training makes your fast twitch fibers take on the
characteristics of slow twitch fibers or more simply put, it makes you
slow and weak. Not only that, but I think endurance training in the
weight room is a waste of time. If you need to bring up your
conditioning, do it on the field, the ice, the mat or the court, not in
the weight room; that’s where you get big and strong. There is
really not much more to say about that as I think that the well known
fact that endurance training causes losses in strength, speed and size
makes for a pretty good argument against super high rep training.
Although I have successfully used the conjugate method with countless
athletes and will continue to do so with many more in the future I hope
I have opened your eyes to some other methods available and why nothing
is the be all and end all of training. If you have more than 12-16
weeks a year to train, I highly recommend that you give Western
periodization a second look or opt for some sort of alternating
periodization model. I don’t think you will be disappointed.
|
|