Bench press - do you guys count the weight of the bar or not ?
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beep test, don't get me started..!!<br />
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and as for counting the weight of the bar in the title, I read it today, and thought, "Fuck, count the bloody dust particles that settle on it as you are lfiting too"!!<br />
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It is amazing how much weight 2.5kgs is when you are lifting max weights too!! going from 120 to 122.5 is sod all, but blows you away!! All in the head though I reckon, as on the odd occassion I have slipeed an extra 5kg onto the bar for prop Cyril, and he still gets the set out - loverly!! -
Not wrong, that little bit of extra weight can turn the arms to jelly pretty quickly. <br />
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Says in the latest Rugby World that Percy Montgomery can bench 165kg !?!?!?! its not like he busts through tackles and is regarded as a particularly "powerful" type player but if that is accurate then....hats off to the man...would probably only weigh 90 kg at the most too !!! -
[quote name='MN5']<br />
Not wrong, that little bit of extra weight can turn the arms to jelly pretty quickly. <br />
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Says in the latest Rugby World that Percy Montgomery can bench 165kg !?!?!?! its not like he busts through tackles and is regarded as a particularly "powerful" type player but if that is accurate then....hats off to the man...would probably only weigh 90 kg at the most too !!! <br />
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He is light but his physique is very developed.<br />
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To be honest, if you are a pro player, with the back up, time, advice and supplements you should be pushing out some serious weights. -
You gotta remember that this stuff is their frickin job. They have structured weeks where they do weights fresh (not after a day at work) they have exeprt advice during sessions and they have expert nutritionists giving them tej materials they need. Plus Gregan and Percy will now be in their 10th year of professionalism and will have all that time of building their rmuscles to this level of performance. <br />
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Interestingly there was an interview with a St Helens rugbyt league player the other week who was asked what was his best weight pushed on bench press. He said something along the lines of "we don't do much of that to be honest, we generally do a lot of own body weight exercises"<br />
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Interesting i thought. -
[quote name='Fullermorg']<br />
You gotta remember that this stuff is their frickin job. They have structured weeks where they do weights fresh (not after a day at work) they have exeprt advice during sessions and they have expert nutritionists giving them tej materials they need. Plus Gregan and Percy will now be in their 10th year of professionalism and will have all that time of building their rmuscles to this level of performance. <br />
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Interestingly there was an interview with a St Helens rugbyt league player the other week who was asked what was his best weight pushed on bench press. He said something along the lines of "we don't do much of that to be honest, we generally do a lot of own body weight exercises"<br />
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Interesting i thought.<br />
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Sounds a bit like hes pulling our legs, leaguies have been into weights heaps longer than union players ! -
Not really - being overly musclebound in league isn't a lot of help, especially as a forward where you're on the move a fair bit and rarely exceed 100kg. You don't need the sustained anaerobic power that e.g. a prop does in rugby, where you have to push at scrums or rucks or mauls, or lift at lineouts. Its more about impact, twitch muscles, and speed.<br />
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While we think they get a bit more of a rest than our blokes, you need to keep in mind that half the game you're retreating and then advancing 5-10 metres at a time, while trying to smash some bloke in between. Can be quite exhausting, where Union we get to stand right up at the advantage line. -
[quote name='NTA']<br />
Not really - being overly musclebound in league isn't a lot of help, especially as a forward where you're on the move a fair bit and rarely exceed 100kg. You don't need the sustained anaerobic power that e.g. a prop does in rugby, where you have to push at scrums or rucks or mauls, or lift at lineouts. Its more about impact, twitch muscles, and speed.<br />
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While we think they get a bit more of a rest than our blokes, you need to keep in mind that half the game you're retreating and then advancing 5-10 metres at a time, while trying to smash some bloke in between. Can be quite exhausting, where Union we get to stand right up at the advantage line.<br />
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Agree and disagree NTA, I'm sure they do a lot of plyometric training but you can bet there'd be a fair bit of iron pressed as well. Look at guys like Brad Thorn, Ian Roberts, Willie Mason.....certainly no strangers to the weight room ! -
That ten-metre retreat is exhausting; it's one of the reasons we use it - very successfully - as a "Learn to make correct decisions while about to puke your lungs" exercise.<br />
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That said, lifting isn't about grunt, it's about timing. Catch your jumper just right, it's all momentum, and they weigh nothing. John Hayes' party trick is his solo lift of POC. Now, the Bull's Ms. Thomond's second cousin, and a mighty man for one man, but not even he can get the weight of POC up that high on his own on raw strength - it's timing.<br />
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I was over 100kg when weighing in at 93 kgs weight back in April. Then things got busy-busy and haven't been benching since. It's so bad, and I've lost so much muscle, I almost don't want to go back to find out how bad it is... -
Timing is the key, but it helps to have grunt. We lift our flankers because the locks are actually two fat bastards who can't jump (ie. me and another bloke <img src='http://www.daimenhutchison.com/invision/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/wink.png' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':lol:' />). Some teams we've come up against lift their 80kg hooker or midget French openside because its easier than trying to shift their Tongan second row more than 6 inches off the ground.<br />
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[quote name='MN5']<br />
Agree and disagree NTA, I'm sure they do a lot of plyometric training but you can bet there'd be a fair bit of iron pressed as well. Look at guys like Brad Thorn, Ian Roberts, Willie Mason.....certainly no strangers to the weight room !<br />
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Yeah they do weights, but what's the point of lifting 200kg on your pectorals for a game of league? There is no point where you need to engage and try to crush your opponent like in a scrum. If you overdo your weights work, there is no place on the field for you. Cliffy Palu for the Tahs didn't end up getting much time at the Dragons because he was 120kg - too heavy! -
[quote name='NTA']<br />
Timing is the key, but it helps to have grunt. We lift our flankers because the locks are actually two fat bastards who can't jump (ie. me and another bloke <img src='http://www.daimenhutchison.com/invision/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/wink.png' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':lol:' />). Some teams we've come up against lift their 80kg hooker or midget French openside because its easier than trying to shift their Tongan second row more than 6 inches off the ground.<br />
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[quote name='MN5']<br />
Agree and disagree NTA, I'm sure they do a lot of plyometric training but you can bet there'd be a fair bit of iron pressed as well. Look at guys like Brad Thorn, Ian Roberts, Willie Mason.....certainly no strangers to the weight room !<br />
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Yeah they do weights, but what's the point of lifting 200kg on your pectorals for a game of league? There is no point where you need to engage and try to crush your opponent like in a scrum. If you overdo your weights work, there is no place on the field for you. Cliffy Palu for the Tahs didn't end up getting much time at the Dragons because he was 120kg - too heavy!<br />
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Totally agree, too many muscles and you're not mobile and as such no use at all. The trick is to get the balance right !<br />
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Did Palu used to play for St George ? ( sorry don't follow league as much as I should ! ) -
Yeah they signed him because of his physicality, but he could never get his weight down to the level of mobility they wanted.<br />
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[quote name='Thomond78']<br />
Nick, you're a prop - or have been. So - strength and no technique, a la Andrew Sheridan, or technique and less strength - which would you rather have? :coolsmiley: <br />
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Both! :coolsmiley: At my level - if you can pack low and push hard, then that's all the technique you need <img src='http://www.daimenhutchison.com/invision/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/wink.png' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':lol:' /> I was tighthead lock on the weekend, and our THP was getting an absolute mullering from a bloke a bit skinnier than him. As soon as the hooker I told him to get down further, we handed him a complete smashing - oppo hooker's feet were off the deck (though he was a good 6 inches shorter than either prop too :nta).<br />
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To actually answer the question: a balance of both is good. I'd rather be a 1.8m 100kg prop (I'd like to be a 100kg anything!) who could bench his own weight and pack lower, than a 1.9m 130kg prop who could lift a truck but was more bent on the engagement than a Darlinghurst rent boy. -
Richard Loe was a very very powerful man with average technique while Olo Brown was strong (but not massive), but excellent technically. Both were very good props. When propping against a guy physically your equal, better technique, willpower and teamwork will give you the advantage.<br />
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Or as my former Swansea front row mates once told me: "A props first job is to beat his man in the scrum. If you cant beat him in the scrum you have to beat him around the pitch. If you cant beat him around the pitch or the scrum, then you have to beat him up." -
Quality RB! <br />
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Bench press was one of my fav exercises until my training partner dropped out because of injury, now i can't really go heavy on a lift so have almost stopped doing it. Now i am using dumbell press, flys and dips etc... as well as some incline smith work to compensate and i have had bigger gains in that period funnily enough.<br />
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Anyway, last night did the weighted dips, with a 10kg plate. Bastard! reps on sets went from 10 to 4. I was fucked. Gonna stick with it though as it was obviously doing some quality damage to the muscles.