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experiencelifemag.com
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Lift Like an Olympian
Looking for a time-efficient workout that builds muscle power and functional fitness? Then give Olympic-style weightlifting a try.
By Matt Fitzgerald |
July-August 2007 |
Old-School Fitness
Getting Started
Hang Tough
Push Press
Hang Clean
Debunking Olympic-Style
Lifting Myths
Resources
Anyone who's witnessed Olympic weightlifters in action knows that such power
comes only through years of specialized and dedicated training. So it's easy
to write off all Olympic-lifting moves as being far too advanced for most of
us.
Not so fast: While the two official Olympic weightlifting movements –
the snatch and the clean and jerk – are highly
advanced exercises that require proper training, several modified
Olympic lifts (sometimes called Olympic-style lifts) are a bit easier
to grasp, and virtually anyone can do them. If you're looking for a full-body,
time-efficient workout that builds muscle power and functional fitness, then
Olympic-style weightlifting might be worth a try.
Just ask Mary Beth Schlichte, 46, a dental hygienist whose personal trainer
at Excel Sport and Fitness in Waltham, Mass., introduced her to Olympic-style
lifts, including the push press (page 24). "The push press alone gives my shoulders
a better workout than all three of the regular shoulder exercises I was doing
before, while also working my core and legs," she says.
Old-School
Fitness
Modified Olympic lifts have become popular recently, but their roots can be
traced to the snatch and the clean and jerk, Olympic events since 1896. "In
the snatch, the athlete is required to lift the bar from the ground to overhead
in one motion," says John Cissik, author of An
Introduction to Olympic Weightlifting (McGraw-Hill, 1998).
"It's a very fast and technical lift. Done right, it takes about a second or
a second and a half to do. The clean and jerk involves lifting the barbell from
the floor to your shoulders in one movement, and then lifting
it overhead."
"Olympic weightlifters have an ability to express a tremendous amount of strength
very quickly," notes Cissik. In other words, they are very powerful. And yet
even ordinary athletes can develop at least a dose of that power with Olympic-style
lifts. And they can do it in less time than more conventional workouts –
because, as Cissik explains, "Every one of these lifts works almost every major
muscle in your body."
The best part: The power you develop translates to almost any other activity,
including running and jumping sports, says John Sullivan, the USA Weightlifting–certified
club coach who introduced Schlichte to Olympic-style weightlifting. Indeed,
experts contend that muscle power has important benefits beyond simply building
maximum strength or size.
A 2000 study published in the Journals of Gerontology revealed
that loss of muscle power, not muscle strength, is the primary cause of declining
functional capacities (climbing stairs, lifting objects) among elderly women.
And power training is the most effective way to reverse this decline.
Getting
Started
Modified Olympic-style lifts typically mimic parts of traditional Olympic lifts.
For example, instead of lifting a barbell overhead from the ground in one motion,
as in the snatch, you might lift it from the knees to the shoulders, as in the
hang clean (below). While easier to learn and less risky than standard Olympic
lifts, even the modified versions can result in hamstring strains and ruptured
disks if you begin lifting without adequate preparation. So, to get the benefits
while avoiding the risks, follow these rules:
Build balance and strength before lifting heavy.
Don't begin any Olympic-style lifting program without having first done some
extensive strength training, says Paul Chek, founder of the C.H.E.K Institute,
a corrective exercise facility in Vista, Calif. That includes stretching tight
muscles and strengthening important stabilizing muscles, such as those in your
core and shoulders.
"Before you try any kind of power exercise, you first need to balance your muscles,
create stability where you need it and improve your overall strength in whole-body
movements," Chek says.
Learn technique from a qualified trainer.
"Trying to teach yourself how to do Olympic lifts is like trying to teach yourself
how to do karate," says Sullivan. "You could mimic the basic movements, but
there are many nuances of proper technique that you'll never master without
an expert watching you and correcting your mistakes." Look for trainers with
certifications from USA Weightlifting (www.usaweightlifting.org).
Prioritize speed and form over weight.
Technique and speed are more important than the amount of weight you lift. "You
can't let your ego get in the way," notes Sullivan. "Start with a broomstick
if you have to."
As you develop better coordination, gain confidence and increase your power,
you can start lifting heavier weights. But don't attempt to lift more than you
can hoist five or six times with perfect form and without slowing
down.
Why so few reps? "If you start doing 10 and 20 repetitions, your technique breaks
down, and instead of training yourself to be fast and explosive, you train yourself
to be slow and sloppy," says Cissik.
Hang
Tough
You can best integrate Olympic-style lifts into your resistance-training program
by performing one or two exercises at the beginning of your normal gym workout.
"At first, do the lifts as part of your warm-up," advises Sullivan. "Do some
dynamic stretching, and then practice the Olympic lifts with very light weight
before moving on to your regular strength exercises."
Start with the push press and the hang clean, he says. When you've mastered
the movements, you can add weight and separate the lifts from your warm-up.
"But continue doing them first in your workout, when you're fresh."
Push
Press
1. Stand with a wide, overhand grip on a barbell
(weighted or unweighted), your elbows pointed forward, your shoulders supporting
the weight. Draw a deep breath and hold it, while tightening your abs as if
you're about to be punched in the stomach. This will tighten the muscles around
your spine and aid the transfer of forces from your legs to your arms in the
explosive movement that follows.
2. Bend your knees and lower yourself into a
half squat.
3. Immediately reverse this movement, powerfully
straightening your legs and hips.
4. The upward momentum created by straightening
your legs should simultaneously assist your shoulders and arms in pushing the
barbell toward the ceiling. This allows you to lift more weight than you could
with a standard shoulder press. (Remember to keep the weight light until you've
mastered the movement.)
To complete the movement, slowly lower the barbell to your shoulders, bending
your knees slightly to absorb the weight of the bar.
Hang
Clean
1. Stand with a shoulder-width overhand grip on
a barbell and your arms fully extended toward the floor, so the barbell is resting
against your thighs. Draw a deep breath and hold it as you tighten your abs
to stabilize your core. Bend your knees and hips slightly and lower the barbell
to the tops of your knees. (Do not bend too far forward at the waist.)
2. From this position, explosively straighten
your knees and hips and draw your shoulders toward your ears, bending your elbows
and pulling the barbell straight upward.
3. Without trying to "muscle" the bar upward with
your shoulders and back, use a quick shoulder-shrugging action to initiate a
powerful straightening of the hips and knees that, in turn, "floats" the bar
upward toward your shoulders.
4. As the barbell moves upward, bend your knees
and hips once more and swivel your hands under the bar, enabling you to catch
it at shoulder height in a quarter-squat position with your elbows sharply bent
and your palms facing the ceiling.
Pause very briefly in this position and then stand fully upright, rotating your
shoulders and elbows and straightening your arms, so you can lower the barbell
to its original "hang" position.
Matt Fitzgerald is the author of several books, including Triathlete
Magazine's Essential Week-by-Week Training Guide (Warner Wellness,
2006).
Debunking
Olympic-Style Lifting Myths (Back
to Top)
Myth No. 1: It'll make me huge.
Research has shown that all types of power training – Olympic-style lifts
included – tend to increase muscle density more
than muscle size. "Olympic lifts are actually terrible
for increasing muscle mass," says John Cissik, author of An
Introduction to Olympic Weightlifting (McGraw-Hill, 1998).
Myth No. 2: It requires an Olympic bar.
Olympic competitors always lift with an Olympic bar, but you can use dumbbells,
kettlebells or other forms of resistance when performing the modified lifts.
In fact, some trainers hardly ever use a bar. "I don't use Olympic bars with
anyone except Olympic lifters," says Paul Chek, founder of the C.H.E.K Institute
in Vista, Calif. He believes that the independent limb movements demanded by
dumbbells better simulate sports movements and everyday activities.
Myth No. 3: it requires a spotter.
"With Olympic lifts, it's more dangerous to have a spotter than to not have
one," says John Sullivan, a USA Weightlifting–certified club coach and
co-owner of Excel Sport and Fitness in Waltham, Mass. "When you miss an Olympic
lift, the worst thing you can do is to try to catch the bar and fight it, or
for a spotter to try and do the same thing." While most fitness facilities frown
on weight-dropping under normal circumstances, in an emergency situation, that's
still your safest bet.
Resources (Back
to Top)
Web
www.exrx.net– This Web
site offers video and text instructions for a variety of weightlifting exercises,
including the hang
clean and push
press.
DVDs
Properly Executing the Olympic Lifts – This 30-minute
DVD provides detailed tutorials on proper technique for a variety of Olympic-style
lifts using a barbell and dumbbells. Created by renowned strength and conditioning
coach Mike Boyle, the DVD is available at www.performbetter.com.
Books
Explosive
Lifting for Sports by Harvey Newton (Human Kinetics, 2006)
– This book shows athletes in all sports how to develop power for better
performance with Olympic lifts, modified Olympic lifts and other power exercises,
such as plyometrics (jumping exercises).
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Lift Like an Olympian
Looking for a time-efficient workout that builds muscle power and functional fitness? Then give Olympic-style weightlifting a try.
By Matt Fitzgerald | Form & Function Department, July-August 2007 |
Old-School Fitness
Getting Started
Hang Tough
Push Press
Hang Clean
Debunking Olympic-Style
Lifting Myths
Resources
Anyone who's witnessed Olympic weightlifters in action knows that such power
comes only through years of specialized and dedicated training. So it's easy
to write off all Olympic-lifting moves as being far too advanced for most of
us.
Not so fast: While the two official Olympic weightlifting movements –
the snatch and the clean and jerk – are highly
advanced exercises that require proper training, several modified
Olympic lifts (sometimes called Olympic-style lifts) are a bit easier
to grasp, and virtually anyone can do them. If you're looking for a full-body,
time-efficient workout that builds muscle power and functional fitness, then
Olympic-style weightlifting might be worth a try.
Just ask Mary Beth Schlichte, 46, a dental hygienist whose personal trainer
at Excel Sport and Fitness in Waltham, Mass., introduced her to Olympic-style
lifts, including the push press (page 24). "The push press alone gives my shoulders
a better workout than all three of the regular shoulder exercises I was doing
before, while also working my core and legs," she says.
Old-School
Fitness (Back to Top)
Modified Olympic lifts have become popular recently, but their roots can be
traced to the snatch and the clean and jerk, Olympic events since 1896. "In
the snatch, the athlete is required to lift the bar from the ground to overhead
in one motion," says John Cissik, author of An
Introduction to Olympic Weightlifting (McGraw-Hill, 1998).
"It's a very fast and technical lift. Done right, it takes about a second or
a second and a half to do. The clean and jerk involves lifting the barbell from
the floor to your shoulders in one movement, and then lifting
it overhead."
"Olympic weightlifters have an ability to express a tremendous amount of strength
very quickly," notes Cissik. In other words, they are very powerful. And yet
even ordinary athletes can develop at least a dose of that power with Olympic-style
lifts. And they can do it in less time than more conventional workouts –
because, as Cissik explains, "Every one of these lifts works almost every major
muscle in your body."
The best part: The power you develop translates to almost any other activity,
including running and jumping sports, says John Sullivan, the USA Weightlifting–certified
club coach who introduced Schlichte to Olympic-style weightlifting. Indeed,
experts contend that muscle power has important benefits beyond simply building
maximum strength or size.
A 2000 study published in the Journals of Gerontology revealed
that loss of muscle power, not muscle strength, is the primary cause of declining
functional capacities (climbing stairs, lifting objects) among elderly women.
And power training is the most effective way to reverse this decline.
Getting
Started (Back to Top)
Modified Olympic-style lifts typically mimic parts of traditional Olympic lifts.
For example, instead of lifting a barbell overhead from the ground in one motion,
as in the snatch, you might lift it from the knees to the shoulders, as in the
hang clean (below). While easier to learn and less risky than standard Olympic
lifts, even the modified versions can result in hamstring strains and ruptured
disks if you begin lifting without adequate preparation. So, to get the benefits
while avoiding the risks, follow these rules:
Build balance and strength before lifting heavy.
Don't begin any Olympic-style lifting program without having first done some
extensive strength training, says Paul Chek, founder of the C.H.E.K Institute,
a corrective exercise facility in Vista, Calif. That includes stretching tight
muscles and strengthening important stabilizing muscles, such as those in your
core and shoulders.
"Before you try any kind of power exercise, you first need to balance your muscles,
create stability where you need it and improve your overall strength in whole-body
movements," Chek says.
Learn technique from a qualified trainer.
"Trying to teach yourself how to do Olympic lifts is like trying to teach yourself
how to do karate," says Sullivan. "You could mimic the basic movements, but
there are many nuances of proper technique that you'll never master without
an expert watching you and correcting your mistakes." Look for trainers with
certifications from USA Weightlifting (www.usaweightlifting.org).
Prioritize speed and form over weight.
Technique and speed are more important than the amount of weight you lift. "You
can't let your ego get in the way," notes Sullivan. "Start with a broomstick
if you have to."
As you develop better coordination, gain confidence and increase your power,
you can start lifting heavier weights. But don't attempt to lift more than you
can hoist five or six times with perfect form and without slowing
down.
Why so few reps? "If you start doing 10 and 20 repetitions, your technique breaks
down, and instead of training yourself to be fast and explosive, you train yourself
to be slow and sloppy," says Cissik.
Hang
Tough (Back to Top)
You can best integrate Olympic-style lifts into your resistance-training program
by performing one or two exercises at the beginning of your normal gym workout.
"At first, do the lifts as part of your warm-up," advises Sullivan. "Do some
dynamic stretching, and then practice the Olympic lifts with very light weight
before moving on to your regular strength exercises."
Start with the push press and the hang clean, he says. When you've mastered
the movements, you can add weight and separate the lifts from your warm-up.
"But continue doing them first in your workout, when you're fresh."
Push
Press (Back to Top)
1. Stand with a wide, overhand grip on a barbell
(weighted or unweighted), your elbows pointed forward, your shoulders supporting
the weight. Draw a deep breath and hold it, while tightening your abs as if
you're about to be punched in the stomach. This will tighten the muscles around
your spine and aid the transfer of forces from your legs to your arms in the
explosive movement that follows.
2. Bend your knees and lower yourself into a
half squat.
3. Immediately reverse this movement, powerfully
straightening your legs and hips.
4. The upward momentum created by straightening
your legs should simultaneously assist your shoulders and arms in pushing the
barbell toward the ceiling. This allows you to lift more weight than you could
with a standard shoulder press. (Remember to keep the weight light until you've
mastered the movement.)
To complete the movement, slowly lower the barbell to your shoulders, bending
your knees slightly to absorb the weight of the bar.
Hang
Clean (Back to Top)
1. Stand with a shoulder-width overhand grip on
a barbell and your arms fully extended toward the floor, so the barbell is resting
against your thighs. Draw a deep breath and hold it as you tighten your abs
to stabilize your core. Bend your knees and hips slightly and lower the barbell
to the tops of your knees. (Do not bend too far forward at the waist.)
2. From this position, explosively straighten
your knees and hips and draw your shoulders toward your ears, bending your elbows
and pulling the barbell straight upward.
3. Without trying to "muscle" the bar upward with
your shoulders and back, use a quick shoulder-shrugging action to initiate a
powerful straightening of the hips and knees that, in turn, "floats" the bar
upward toward your shoulders.
4. As the barbell moves upward, bend your knees
and hips once more and swivel your hands under the bar, enabling you to catch
it at shoulder height in a quarter-squat position with your elbows sharply bent
and your palms facing the ceiling.
Pause very briefly in this position and then stand fully upright, rotating your
shoulders and elbows and straightening your arms, so you can lower the barbell
to its original "hang" position.
Matt Fitzgerald is the author of several books, including Triathlete
Magazine's Essential Week-by-Week Training Guide (Warner Wellness,
2006).
Debunking
Olympic-Style Lifting Myths (Back
to Top)
Myth No. 1: It'll make me huge.
Research has shown that all types of power training – Olympic-style lifts
included – tend to increase muscle density more
than muscle size. "Olympic lifts are actually terrible
for increasing muscle mass," says John Cissik, author of An
Introduction to Olympic Weightlifting (McGraw-Hill, 1998).
Myth No. 2: It requires an Olympic bar.
Olympic competitors always lift with an Olympic bar, but you can use dumbbells,
kettlebells or other forms of resistance when performing the modified lifts.
In fact, some trainers hardly ever use a bar. "I don't use Olympic bars with
anyone except Olympic lifters," says Paul Chek, founder of the C.H.E.K Institute
in Vista, Calif. He believes that the independent limb movements demanded by
dumbbells better simulate sports movements and everyday activities.
Myth No. 3: it requires a spotter.
"With Olympic lifts, it's more dangerous to have a spotter than to not have
one," says John Sullivan, a USA Weightlifting–certified club coach and
co-owner of Excel Sport and Fitness in Waltham, Mass. "When you miss an Olympic
lift, the worst thing you can do is to try to catch the bar and fight it, or
for a spotter to try and do the same thing." While most fitness facilities frown
on weight-dropping under normal circumstances, in an emergency situation, that's
still your safest bet.
Resources (Back
to Top)
Web
www.exrx.net– This Web
site offers video and text instructions for a variety of weightlifting exercises,
including the hang
clean and push
press.
DVDs
Properly Executing the Olympic Lifts – This 30-minute
DVD provides detailed tutorials on proper technique for a variety of Olympic-style
lifts using a barbell and dumbbells. Created by renowned strength and conditioning
coach Mike Boyle, the DVD is available at www.performbetter.com.
Books
Explosive
Lifting for Sports by Harvey Newton (Human Kinetics, 2006)
– This book shows athletes in all sports how to develop power for better
performance with Olympic lifts, modified Olympic lifts and other power exercises,
such as plyometrics (jumping exercises).
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