How To Improve Your Bench Press In Three Simple Moves

By Howe Russ


Learning how to improve your bench press is a tricky and often over complicated affair for most gym members. Many of them spend time focusing on endless sets of cable crossovers and other assistance exercises in a bid to pack on more poundage when they hit the bench but, as you will discover in today's article, the answers to getting bigger compound lifts are actually quite simple.

While having a big bench press or squat is not inherently important to the overall results you can achieve with your physique in the gym, it remains a hotly discussed topic in most gyms and is used by most men as a barometer of how well their training is going.

Believe it or not, you can easily increase your compound lifts by as much as 40 pounds if you apply a few simple strategies to your training program, including:

1. Focus on bettering your grip strength.

2. Reverse warm-up sets are a fantastic technique when used correctly

3. Put more focus on the negative portion of the move.

Not many people understand the true importance of grip strength when it comes to your big lifts. But make no mistake about it, a good grip makes for a more impressive move. In fact, you are generally doing something wrong if you don't feel your forearms giving way before you legs and back on an exercise such as the deadlift. Given that it is a significantly smaller and less powerful muscle than the others which are involved in the exercise, it is easy to understand why it is usually the first one to go.

Despite the confusion on most guys faces when you ask them what their favorite forearm exercise is, there are a number of exercises which you can do for this relatively small muscle group. Favorites include reverse barbell curls, timed hangs and plate grips.

Of course, your grip also plays a hugely underestimated role on exercises like chest press. Learn how to focus on 'pulling the bar apart' as you do the exercise and you will begin to notice how much more you can derive from every repetition.

A Hulk warm-up, or reverse warm-up as it is also known, is a great technique which you rarely see in commercial gyms. That's largely due to the fact that it often requires a spotter, but there is nothing stopping you from using this technique if you have a regular training partner who shares the same goals as you. It gets it's name from bodybuilder Lour Ferrigno, who used this technique during the 1970's and went on to play the Hulk in the TV series. It consists of using a slightly heavier weight for your final warm-up set than you plan to use in your working sets. So, if your goal is to squat with 120 kg today, get yourself warmed up and then perform a set with, for example, 140 kg for a few reps with the aid of a spotter. Your body will recruit much more fibers in the muscle due to the unexpected load, suddenly making your upcoming 120 kg lift feel somewhat light.

Providing you use it safely and sparingly, you can increase any big compound lift using this technique.

The final technique for increasing your compound lifts in the gym comes in the form of negative repetitions. The negative section of a repetition is the portion where your muscle isn't working, i.e. the phase of a bench press where you are lowering the bar towards your chest. Believe it or not, that is the phase which most people have the greatest difficulty with, not the lifting phase. It is also the phase where most people go wrong, lowering the bar too quickly. At least 50% of the benefits to a compound move can be found in correctly performing the negative phase of the move, so stop dropping down so fast on your squats and deadlifts.

Again, as with Hulk warm-ups, try to go heavier than you usually would because this only involves you working solo during the lowering phase.

While there is certainly no 'quick fix' in the gym, utilizing time tested techniques such as the three you have picked up today is a sure-fire way to boost any flagging compound lifts in the gym. Learning how to improve your bench press or squat is often a case of learning how to strengthen your brute strength rather than spending hours blasting the muscle in the hope of spurring new growth.




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