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Jacked! Learn how MF's "Hard-Gainer" columnist Jason Ferruggia earned his muscle
By Sean Hyson
AND YOU THOUGHT YOU HAD TROUBLE PUTTING ON muscle: As a high school
freshman, Jason Ferruggia was the embodiment of the 97-pound weakling,
boasting a max bench press of only 75 pounds! Today, he's a 230-pound
powerhouse and renowned strength coach who literally wrote the book on
how to "get jacked." Now, tell us again why you "can't" get big?
In the fall of 1988, Ferruggia, of Watchung, NJ., entered high school
feeling like the scrawniest, sorriest kid around. Low on confidence, he
desperately wanted to bulk up. "My cousin was dating a man who was a
semi-pro football player and pro wrestler," says Ferruggia, "and he
became like a big brother to me. He was the most jacked dude I ever
saw, and I started lifting to be like him." At 13 years old, Ferruggia
began following workouts the wrestler recommended to him, but his frail
body couldn't handle the intensity. "The stuff that had worked for him
worked terribly for me--like 20 sets for arms. I couldn't straighten my
elbows for a month."
Overtraining and underfeeding frustrated Ferruggia, and for the next
three years, his training was sporadic at best. "I was told I was too
small to play on the football team," he says. "I played basketball, but
a college recruiter said I would have to hit the weights hard or I
would never make it." Though consistent training his senior year
allowed him to bulk up to 145 pounds (at a height of 6'0"), it was too
little, too late--his chance at being a star athlete had passed.
But while Ferruggia's athletic aspirations fell flat, his love of
lifting only intensified. After graduation, he worked to earn a
personal-training certification. Then, in the fall of 1994, he enrolled
at Arizona State University as an exercise science major. Landing a job
in the college weight room, Ferruggia got hands-on experience working
with athletes, which helped him discover how to move his own training
forward. He cut down the number of sets he was doing and varied his rep
ranges. "I also started a see-food diet" he jokes. "I'd eat everything
in sight. Entire packages of bacon, a box of doughnuts, and then some
pancakes--just for breakfast." Though admittedly not healthy, the
6,000-plus-calorie diet was a brutally effective bulking
plan--Ferruggia gained 20 pounds in six weeks.
However, his years of hard work were threatened when, upon returning to
Arizona State his junior year, he contracted tuberculosis (thought to
be brought into his dorm by a foreign student who hadn't been
inoculated). Bedridden for a month and unable to train for six months
due to a weakened immune system, Ferruggia lost 45 pounds.
Though devastating at first, the illness almost turned out to be a
blessing. Unable to go to classes or spend rime out of the house,
Ferruggia immersed himself in fitness texts, reading every fitness book
or journal he could get his hands on and becoming a smarter trainer in
the process. Needless to say, he also enjoyed gaining the weight back.
"I don't care what anyone says--if you're a skinny hard-gainer like I
was, you have to pound junk food sometimes. You can't eat chicken,
rice, and broccoli all day and get big" (Nevertheless, Ferruggia
generally recommends eating plenty of fruits and vegetables.)
At the age of 21 and between years of college, Ferruggia rented a space
in Warren, N.J., where he opened his own hardcore gym. When word of his
awesome transformational abilities got around, his business took off at
an alarming rate. Work was going so well that he opted to finish his
degree at home, rather than return to Arizona and risk losing momentum.
"I never got the chance to be a great athlete, but I was glad I could
help others get there."
Now 31, with a 405-pound best bench press and 565-pound deadliff,
Ferruggia is not only jacked--he's one of the best in his field. In
addition to writing MF's monthly "Hard-Gainer" column, as well as this
month's summer-fitness guide (see "The T-shirt Body Workout" on page
117), he's also published an e-book, How to Get Jacked (available at
j1strength.com). "I can outrun and outlift many of the pro athletes I
train," he says. "I will also put my training methods and my results up
against anyone else's in the field--anytime, anywhere."
MF columnist Jason Ferruggia reveals the top three time-wasters for anybody fighting to put on muscle
HIGH-REP TRAINING
"You've gotta go heavy," says Ferruggia. Performing sets with a weight
that lets you get only six or fewer reps should always be a part of
your program. Heavy, low-rep work builds greater strength and more
muscle.
LOW-CARB DIETS
While cutting carbs is an effective fat-loss strategy, carbs are
crucial for the hard-gainer. "You need carbs for recovery," he says,
"and you won't eat enough calories without them."
BICEPS CURLS
Make them only a small part of your training, no matter what your goal.
The same goes for other isolation moves such as lateral raises or
pushdowns. You'll work more overall muscle by doing compound exercises
like squats, bench presses, and deadlifts. Instead of making an "arm
day," hit your back with chinups and rows--your biceps will grow even
faster.
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