|
Basic Weight Lifting for
Martial Arts and Grappling
Contributed by:
www.grapplearts.com
In the not-so-distant past weight training was
discouraged for martial artists. "It will make you
slow", "it will make you muscle-bound", and "all you
need is technique" were common opinions from the
'experts'.
Times have changed! Athletes in almost every sport lift
weights now. Coaches and trainers recognize that it will
make their athletes stronger, faster, and more resilient
to injury. It is now understood that weight training
complements and improves good technique.
Below I have listed some important tips, tricks and
guidelines for those grapplers and martial artists
thinking about adding weight lifting to their training.
These are BASIC tips, geared towards a BEGINNING
weightlifter. These are not geared towards powerlifters,
Olympic lifters, bodybuilders, etc., all of whom require
specialized training.
-
Warm up for 10 to 15 minutes on the treadmill,
stairmaster, etc. Heading straight for the weights
without warming up is a good way to get injured,
ESPECIALLY in cold climates. If your main goal is
strength development then only go hard enough to break
a light sweat. If your main goal is to build strength
and endurance then go as hard as you can.
-
Exercise selection: push something off your body (e.g.
bench press), pull something towards your body (e.g.
pull-ups), bend your arms (e.g. dumbbell curls),
straighten your arms (e.g. dips), push something away
with your legs (e.g. squat), bend your legs (e.g.
hamstring curl), work your calves (e.g. calf raises),
bend your body forward (crunches), bend your body
backwards (e.g. hyperextensions). You DON"T need to do
three different exercises for your biceps when
starting out.
-
Do at least one 'warmup' set for each exercise,
followed by two to three 'working' sets.
-
Do your heaviest, hardest exercises early in the
workout. Do squats before leg curls, do pull-ups
before bicep curls.
-
The squat is one of the most important exercises for
overall strength development, but make sure that your
form is good. Don't let the knees wobble, don't let
the ass come up before the head, make sure that you
can go down with your knees somewhere between 90
degrees bent and thighs parallel (even if you have to
go lighter).
-
Work with 8 to 12 repetitions per set. Stay at a given
weight until you can do more than 12 repetitions, then
increase the weight so that you can do only 8. Now
stay at this weight until you can do 12 repetitions
with it
-
Unless you are injured use free weights instead of
machines. You won't be able to use as much weight in a
free squat as you will using a smith machine or leg
press machine, but you will build functional strength
faster
-
Stay well hydrated before, during and after your
workout by drinking water or sports drinks to avoid
cramping and muscle tears
-
Eat a small snack containing some carbs before you go
workout to keep your energy levels up.
-
Make sure you eat some carbs and protein within an
hour of finishing your workout - this will help you
recover faster
-
Limit your workouts to one hour or less - workouts
longer than one hour tend to break you down rather
than build you up
-
Lifting weights once a week is good for maintaining
strength; lift two or three times a week to make
advances
-
Be wary of the training routines in the bodybuilding
magazines. They reflect the workouts of bodybuilders
who are soaked in steroids and have been lifting for
decades. They do not apply to the beginning
weightlifter.
-
Be wary of supplement advice you receive from the
bodybuilding magazines and supplement stores. These
businesses exist to sell gullible people the latest,
greatest supplement. Protein powder works. Creatine
works. Not much else works
-
To get strong you have to train hard, but also eat
well and rest well. If you neglect one of these
aspects you will either stall in your training or get
injured.
-
Weightlifting does not mean becoming inflexible - you
will maintain your flexibility if you continue to
stretch.
-
Expect rapid strength gains initially. Most people
will become up to 40% stronger initially as their
nervous system adapts to the stress of lifting. After
this your progress will slow down a bit and most
strength gains will result from actual growth of
muscle.
-
If you strain the same muscle or body part day after
day it will get weaker, not stronger, and eventually
get injured. Don't work a body part until it is no
longer sore from your last workout.
-
If you are new to lifting weights stick with slow,
controlled movements. Plyometrics, Olympic lifts and
other rapid movements are appropriate only once your
strength base is established.
|