Muscle
Growth: Use this Muscle Building Routine for a Better V-Shape
By: Scott Abbett
Some guys possess really cool structural
genetics for bodybuilding. They seem to have these shoulder clavicles that jut
outward a foot on each side and a waistline that can shrink down to 28 inches on
a simple diet. All they have to do are some military presses, some sloppy lat
pull-downs, and get their body fat below ten percent and they've got a killer
V-shape. Huh – must be nice.
As you might have guessed, I'm not one of those guys. My shoulders started out
with average width and my waist-level internal organs seem to be of the
extra-large variety. I know – that's a little more information than you needed.
"Why is he talking about his internal organs?" you might be asking. What I'm
trying to say is that even when my body fat is well below ten percent, I still
don't possess a super-small waistline. It's a genetic thing.
This means I've had a particularly challenging time creating a V-shape on my
body. With a genetically large waistline even while holding a body fat level low
enough to show abdominals, I have to work extra hard at widening my shoulders
and lats to create a ‘V' illusion. But I'm getting more V-like all the time. And
I attribute this progress to some simple techniques that you can add to your
shoulder and lat routines for the same effect. If you happen to be blessed with
a waistline that would make a female supermodel green with envy and shoulder
clavicles as wide as a door, then following these tips will enhance the gifts
your genes have provided you.
I've actually been complimented many times for my lats. They're well developed,
even if they don't appear so at first glance because of my strangely
"un-shrinkable" waist area. I attribute much of my nice lat development to
advice from an article I read way back in 1988 by the legendary bodybuilder,
Rich Gaspari. I perused that article several times, really taking to heart the
seemingly unorthodox tips that he dispensed.
What were the tips? Here's the gist of it since I have to paraphrase in the
absence of that old Muscle and Fitness magazine article. Mr. Gaspari said that
when you perform lat exercises, imagine your arms are only an extension of the
bar you're holding. In other words, quit using momentum and stop using your
biceps to pull the weight down or toward you. A real lat workout requires slow
and concentrated movement. If you think of your arms only as pieces of equipment
that are attaching your lats to the weight stack, you will pull slowly from your
back. If you then squeeze your shoulder blades together at the peak of the
movement, you just might feel your lat muscles really working for the first
time.
Using the technique described above, it's imperative that you perform just
enough exercise to stimulate upper back growth and don't over train. Personally,
I only do four exercises for my lats. Let me tell you; they've been growing like
crazy from those four movements. I've found that if the lats are worked with
intense concentration from each major angle, exercise redundancy usually results
in over training and lack of progress. So here are the four lat exercises:
1. Close-Grip Pull-downs
2. Seated Pulley Rows
3. Wide-Grip Pull-downs (top half)
4. Wide-Grip Pull-downs (bottom half)
I'm sure you've noticed the "top half/bottom half" designations on lat
pull-downs and are wondering what I mean by that. I've found that splitting this
particular exercise in half provides better results. On the top half exercise, I
pull the bar until my upper arms are only about parallel with the floor. In
other words; I just do the first half of a lat pull-down. Obviously, on exercise
number four, I pull from the midway point to having the bar all the way to the
top of my chest. If you split the movement into two exercises like this, you
might find (as I do) that you can use a lot more weight for the "top half" pull
downs that the "bottom half" ones.
Close-grip pull-downs are also performed in a very specific manner. Contrary to
how most people perform these, with their body upright through the entire
motion, you should move your torso to a forty-five degree angle from the
vertical position as you slowly bring the weight to your chest. Begin pulling
the close-grip bar downward with a yanking motion that comes very deliberately
from those huge muscles below your shoulder blades. As you bring the bar toward
your sternum, keep thinking of your arms as merely extensions of the bar and
pull strictly from your back. Imagine you could touch your shoulder blades
together behind you as you lean back to a forty-five degree angle while bringing
the bar to your chest. Moving the upper body backward to forty-five degrees
during the movement like this will make the exercise into both a lat widening
and thickening movement.
Seated pulley rows should likewise be done very slowly and strictly. They should
be done without using momentum and by squeezing the shoulder blades together
after focusing on pulling slowly from the back – leaving the arms only as
"attaching devices".
Here's all I've been doing to turn my shoulders into cannonballs:
1. Shoulder Presses
2. Cable Front Raises
3. Side Lateral Raises (machine)
4. Rear Lateral Raises (machine)
I've actually been doing every one of these exercises on machines and getting
terrific results. Sometimes I switch to free weights, but I've found that I can
really plow forward with the heaviest weights possible for six reps using the
safety element of Cybex machines. This has been especially so with the shoulder
presses.
Doing front raises with a cable and single-hand bar puts continuous tension on
the front deltoids – as opposed to dumbells which decrease the tension as the
weight is brought to shoulder level. Remember – never go above shoulder level on
front or side lateral movements.
On side laterals, I've been getting the best results from reducing my range of
motion to about half of what it used to be. I raise the weight until the handles
are shoulder level, then I lower my arms until they're still about twelve inches
from being at my sides. This turns the movement into "partial repetitions", but
it puts incredible continuous tension on those middle delts where there's a lot
of potential for building width.
My suggestion is to perform no more than six reps per set and do four to six
sets per exercise. Push for higher volumes during each workout and don't work a
body part more than once a week.
Following this basic routine and advice, you can get that coveted "V-shape",
even if, like me, you aren't working with the most ideal foundation for creating
it.
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