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RENEGADE

STRONG

ALL
N E W FOR
2015!

6-W eeks to a
B adass P hysique

B y J ason F erruggia

i s c l a i m e r

You must get your physicians approval before beginning this exercise program. These recommendations are not
medical guidelines but are for educational purposes only. You must consult your physician prior to starting this program or if you have any medical condition or injury that contraindicates physical activity. This program is designed
for healthy individuals 18 years and older only.
The information in this report is not meant to supplement, nor replace, proper exercise training. All forms of exercise
pose some inherent risks. The editors and publishers advise readers to take full responsibility for their safety and
know their limits. Before practicing the exercises in this book, be sure that your equipment is well-maintained, and
do not take risks beyond your level of experience, aptitude, training and fitness. The exercises and dietary programs
in this book are not intended as a substitute for any exercise routine or treatment or dietary regimen that may have
been prescribed by your physician.
Dont lift heavy weights if you are alone, inexperienced, injured, or fatigued. Always ask for instruction and assistance when lifting. Dont perform any exercise without proper instruction. See your physician before starting any
exercise or nutrition program. If you are taking any medications, you must talk to your physician before starting any
exercise program, including Renegade Strong. If you experience any lightheadedness, dizziness, or shortness of
breath while exercising, stop the movement and consult a physician.
You must have a complete physical examination if you are sedentary, if you have high cholesterol, high blood pressure, or diabetes, if you are overweight, or if you are over 30 years old. Please discuss all nutritional changes with
your physician or a registered dietician. This publication is intended for informational use only. Jason Ferruggia and
renegadestrengthclub.com will not assume any liability or be held responsible for any form of injury, personal loss or
illness caused by the utilization of this information.

PROGRAM
OVERVIEW

he Renegade Strong program will get you big, strong, and jacked. It will help you defy skinny-fat genetics and turn you into a badass mofo. Thats about all the intro we need. Theres
no time for talking. You need to get to the gym and start growing. So lets get right into it...

This program follows an upper/lower split, with each day having a different focus.

On Day 1 the focus is upper body pushing. You will perform a variety of compound pressing exercises for the chest, shoulders and triceps. You will use moderate to heavy weights. You will start
with a dumbbell press for moderate to high reps. After this, you will do a heavy, explosive barbell
press. Youll ramp up to a top end weight then stick with it for the prescribed number of sets. Next
up will be a shoulder press, followed by a triceps exercise. Upper body pulling will have a secondary
emphasis on this day. You will use lighter weights and the goal will be to just engorge the muscle
with blood and get a good pump.
On Day 2 the focus is compound lower body movements. You will start with a jump to fire up the
CNS and activate the fast twitch muscle fibers. After the jumps youll pump up the hamstrings and
glutes with a moderate to high rep movement. Next will be the big compound squatting movement.
You will work up to heavy weights that let you maintain some explosiveness. No slow grinders. Next
up will be a single leg squatting movement for mobility and hypertrophy. Finally, you will finish with
one movement to stretch the hamstrings. This will always be a dumbbell Romanian deadlift.
The focus of Day 3 is upper body pulling. You will begin with a row variation and work up to heavy
weights done for moderate to high reps. After the row, you will move on to chin-ups. This is where
you will try to set rep PRs. The third movement will be the explosive exercise. After you finish up the
pulling, you move on to lighter, pump-focused exercises. These will blast your chest, shoulders and
triceps and shouldnt stress the joints at all.
Always do at least one warm up set for every exercise in the program. The exception would be the
inverted row on Day 1. The first

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exercise will always require at least 2-3 warm up sets of roughly


50, 70 and 90% of your starting weight. Depending on how
strong you are and how much weight youll be using,
you may need a couple warm-up sets on exercises
later in the workout. The further into the workout you get, the less need there will be for warm
up sets.
Day 4 is a lower body day, focused on
more joint friendly exercises, with an
emphasis on conditioning. You will do
most exercises on this day in circuit
fashion. Always go through each exercise in the circuit and perform one or
two warm up sets before starting your
work sets.
You hit every upper body muscle,
except for biceps, on Days 1 & 3. Biceps
get trained on Days 2 and 4. This allows
you to hit them directly twice per week
and indirectly twice per week.

This split has you hitting


each body part twice
per weekOnce with hard
and heavy exercises and
a second time with less
stressful ones.

The big exercises will be second on Day 1,


third on Day 2 and first on Day 3. Those are the
ones you want to push. As always, you have to listen
to your body and know that you cant set PRs at every
workout. But you want to keep the concept of progressive
overload in the back of your mind and strive to get better over
time.

Size and strength without


the aches and pains.

There are two different training weeks- A and B. You rotate


through these for a total of 6 weeks, doing each training week
4 times. So youll start with training week A then do training week B the following week. The next
week will start back with training week A and so on.
This split has you training the big body parts hard once per week. Compound exercises, heavier
weights and more volume make up the first day for the upper and lower body. Then you hit them a
second time with less stressful exercises, lighter weights and less volume.
The first week of both training Week A and training B begin with lower volume (fewer sets). The
volume increases slightly on the second and third run through each training week.

R e n e g a d e M u sc l e R e n e g a d e S t r e n g t h C l u b . c o m

PRE WORKOUT
WARM UPS

lways start with 2-3 minutes (longer if necessary/ youre over 40) of jumping jacks,
jump rope, bike riding or incline treadmill walking. This serves to elevate your heart
rate and body temperature before jumping into the pre workout warm up.

Before the lower body warm ups spend 2-5 minutes working on ankle mobility. Also, roll a golf
ball or lacrosse ball on the bottom of each foot for 60 seconds, then stretch your calves
for 30 seconds each.

Upper Body Warm Up


1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
6)
7)
8)
9)
10)

Shoulder Dislocation with Band or Broomstick- 1 x 20


YTWL- 1 x 5 in each direction
Scapular Wall Slide- 1 x 15
Cat/Camel- 1 x 10
Upper Body Clam Shell- 1 x 15 per side
Bird/Dog- 1 x 6 per side
Band Pull Apart- 1 x 20
Supinated/Curl Grip External Rotation w/ Band- 1 x 15
Pushup Plus- 1 x 15
Slow Crawl- 1 x 60 sec.*
*Crawl forwards, backwards, side to side, etc.

Lower Body Warm Up


1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
6)
7)
8)
9)
10)

Thai Sit- 1 x 15 per side


Half Clam- 1 x 15 per side
Cat/Camel- 1 x 10
Slow Curl Up- 1 x 5 per side
Side Plank- 1 x 30 sec per side
Bird/Dog- 1 x 6 per side
Glute Bridge- 1 x 20
Slow Lunge- 1 x 10
Dynamic Hip Flexion- 1 x 20
Overhead Squat w/ Band or Broomstick- 1 x 20

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WORK OUT

Workout Week A - Week 1


Day 1
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) 45 Degree Incline DB Press

8-12

90

2) 10 Degree Incline Barbell Press w/ Chains*

60

3) Dumbbell Military Press

8-12

90

4) Parallel Bar Dip

10-15

90

5) Pronated Pulldown

8-12

60

6) Neutral Grip Inverted Row

12-15

60

*Use a Swiss or angled grip bar if you have one

Day 2
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) Box Jump

60

2) Glute Ham Raise or Leg Curl Variation

10-15

60

3) Front or Back Squat w/ Chains

90

4) Rear Foot Elevated Split Squat

10-15

45*

5) DB Romanian Deadlift

15-20

45

6) Hammer Curl

10-12

45

7) Modified Dragon Flag

6-10

60

*Use a Swiss or angled grip bar if you have one

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Workout Week A - Week 1


Day 3
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) 1 Arm DB Row

10-15

45*

2) Neutral Grip Ring Chin Up

AMAP

90

3) Snatch Grip High Pull**

60

4) Ring Pushup

12-15

90

5) DB Lateral Raise

12-15

45

6) Rope Pushdown

12-15

45

*Rest between arms

**If you cant do high pulls do snatch grip shrugs for 3 sets of 12

Day 4
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) Kettlebell Curl

12-15

60

2a) Forward Sled Push

60s

30-60

2b) Farmers Walk

60s

30-60

2c) Sledgehammer Swing or Medicine Ball Slam

60s

30-60

2d) Kettlebell Swing or Reverse Hyper

60s

60-120

*Rest as little as needed to get through each exercise in the circuit, then take 1-2 minutes at the end of the circuit before starting it over.

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Workout Week B - Week 1


Day 1
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) 10 Degree Incline DB Press

8-12

90

2) 30 Degree Incline Barbell Press*

60

3) Barbell Military Press

8-10

90

4) Close Grip Floor Press or DB Floor Press

10-15

90

5) Supinated/Curl Grip Pulldown

8-12

60

6) Pronated Inverted Row

12-15

60

*Use a Swiss or angled grip bar if you have one

Day 2
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) Hurdle Jump

60

2) Barbell Hip Thrust or Glute Bridge

10-15

60

3) Trap Bar Deadlift

90

4) Walking Goblet Lunge

10-15

90

5) Dumbbell Romanian Deadlift

15-20

60

6) EZ Bar Curl

10-12

45

7) Pulldown Abs

10-15

45

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Workout Week B - Week 1


Day 3
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) 1 Arm Landmine Barbell Row

10-15

45*

2) Ring Pull Up

AMAP

90

3) Snatch Grip High Pull or Log Clean**

60

4) Feet in Straps Incline Pushup

12-15

90

5) 75 Degree Incline DB Lateral Raise

12-15

45

6) Angled Bar Pushdown

12-15

45

*Rest between arms

**If you cant do high pulls do snatch grip shrugs for 3 sets of 12

Day 4
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) Kettlebell Rope/Towel Curl

12-15

60

2a) Forward Sled Drag

60s

30-60

2b) Slow Motion Farmers Walk

60s

30-60

2c) Battling Rope Slam or Medicine Ball Slam

60s

30-60

2d) Kettlebell Swing or Reverse Hyper

60s

60-120

*Rest as little as needed to get through each exercise in the circuit, then take 1-2 minutes at the end of the circuit before starting it over.

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Workout Week A - Week 2


Day 1
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) 45 Degree Incline DB Press

8-12

90

2) 10 Degree Incline Barbell Press w/ Chains*

60

3) Dumbbell Military Press

8-12

90

4) Parallel Bar Dip

10-15

90

5) Pronated Pulldown

8-12

60

6) Neutral Grip Inverted Row

12-15

60

*Use a Swiss or angled grip bar if you have one

Day 2
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) Box Jump

60

2) Glute Ham Raise or Leg Curl Variation

10-15

60

3) Front or Back Squat w/ Chains

90

4) Rear Foot Elevated Split Squat

10-15

45*

5) DB Romanian Deadlift

15-20

45

6) Hammer Curl

10-12

45

7) Modified Dragon Flag

6-10

60

*Rest between legs

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Workout Week A - Week 2


Day 3
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) 1 Arm DB Row

10-15

45*

2) Neutral Grip Ring Chin Up

AMAP

90

3) Snatch Grip High Pull**

60

4) Ring Pushup

12-15

90

5) DB Lateral Raise

12-15

45

6) Rope Pushdown

12-15

45

*Rest between arms

**If you cant do high pulls do snatch grip shrugs for 3 sets of 12

Day 4
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) Kettlebell Curl

12-15

60

2a) Forward Sled Push

60s

30-60

2b) Farmers Walk

60s

30-60

2c) Sledgehammer Swing or Medicine Ball Slam

60s

30-60

2d) Kettlebell Swing or Reverse Hyper

60s

60-120

*Rest as little as needed to get through each exercise in the circuit, then take 1-2 minutes at the end of the circuit before starting it over.

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Workout Week B - Week 2


Day 1
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) 10 Degree Incline DB Press

8-12

90

2) 30 Degree Incline Barbell Press*

60

3) Barbell Military Press

8-12

90

4) Close Grip Floor Press or DB Floor Press

10-15

90

5) Supinated/Curl Grip Pulldown

8-12

60

6) Pronated Inverted Row

12-15

60

*Use a Swiss or angled grip bar if you have one

Day 2
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) Hurdle Jump

60

2) Barbell Hip Thrust or Glute Bridge

10-15

60

3) Trap Bar Deadlift

90

4) Walking Goblet Lunge

10-15

90

5) Dumbbell Romanian Deadlift

15-20

60

6) EZ Bar Curl

10-12

45

7) Pulldown Abs

10-15

45

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Workout Week B - Week 2


Day 3
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) 1 Arm Landmine Barbell Row

10-15

45*

2) Ring Pull Up

AMAP

90

3) Snatch Grip High Pull or Log Clean**

60

4) Feet in Straps Incline Pushup

12-15

90

5) 75 Degree Incline DB Lateral Raise

12-15

45

6) Angled Bar Pushdown

12-15

45

*Rest between arms

**If you cant do high pulls do snatch grip shrugs for 3 sets of 12

Day 4
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) Kettlebell Rope/Towel Curl

12-15

60

2a) Forward Sled Drag

60s

30-60

2b) Slow Motion Farmers Walk

60s

30-60

2c) Battling Rope Slam or Medicine Ball Slam

60s 30-60

2d) Kettlebell Swing or Reverse Hyper

60s

60-120

*Rest as little as needed to get through each exercise in the circuit, then take 1-2 minutes at the end of the circuit before starting it over.

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Workout Week A - Week 3


Day 1
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) 45 Degree Incline DB Press

8-12

90

2) 10 Degree Incline Barbell Press w/ Chains*

60

3) Dumbbell Military Press

8-12

90

4) Parallel Bar Dip

10-15

90

5) Pronated Pulldown

8-12

60

6) Neutral Grip Inverted Row

12-15

60

*Use a Swiss or angled grip bar if you have one

Day 2
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) Box Jump

60

2) Glute Ham Raise or Leg Curl Variation

10-15

60

3) Front or Back Squat w/ Chains

90

4) Rear Foot Elevated Split Squat

10-15

45*

5) DB Romanian Deadlift

15-20

45

6) Hammer Curl

10-12

45

7) Modified Dragon Flag

6-10

60

*Rest between legs

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Workout Week A - Week 3


Day 3
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) 1 Arm DB Row

10-15

45*

2) Neutral Grip Ring Chin Up

AMAP

90

3) Snatch Grip High Pull**

60

4) Ring Pushup

12-15

90

5) DB Lateral Raise

12-15

45

6) Rope Pushdown

12-15

45

*Rest between arms

**If you cant do high pulls do snatch grip shrugs for 3 sets of 12

Day 4
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) Kettlebell Curl

12-15

60

2a) Forward Sled Push

60s

30-60

2b) Farmers Walk

60s

30-60

2c) Sledgehammer Swing or Medicine Ball Slam

60s

30-60

2d) Kettlebell Swing or Reverse Hyper

60s

60-120

*Rest as little as needed to get through each exercise in the circuit, then take 1-2 minutes at the end of the circuit before starting it over.

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Workout Week B - Week 3


Day 1
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) 10 Degree Incline DB Press

8-12

90

2) 30 Degree Incline Barbell Press*

60

3) Barbell Military Press

8-12

90

4) Close Grip Floor Press or DB Floor Press

10-15

90

5) Supinated/Curl Grip Pulldown

8-12

60

6) Pronated Inverted Row

12-15

60

*Use a Swiss or angled grip bar if you have one

Day 2
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) Hurdle Jump

60

2) Barbell Hip Thrust or Glute Bridge

10-15

60

3) Trap Bar Deadlift

90

4) Walking Goblet Lunge

10-15

90

5) Dumbbell Romanian Deadlift

15-20

60

6) EZ Bar Curl

10-12

45

7) Pulldown Abs

10-15

45

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Workout Week B - Week 3


Day 3
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) 1 Arm Landmine Barbell Row

10-15

45*

2) Ring Pull Up

AMAP

90

3) Snatch Grip High Pull or Log Clean**

60

4) Feet in Straps Incline Pushup

12-15

90

5) 75 Degree Incline DB Lateral Raise

12-15

45

6) Angled Bar Pushdown

12-15

45

*Rest between arms

**If you cant do high pulls do snatch grip shrugs for 3 sets of 12

Day 4
EXERCISE

SETS REPS/TIME REST

1) Kettlebell Rope/Towel Curl

12-15

60

2a) Forward Sled Drag

60s

30-60

2b) Slow Motion Farmers Walk

60s

30-60

2c) Battling Rope Slam or Medicine Ball Slam

60s 30-60

2d) Kettlebell Swing or Reverse Hyper

60s

60-120

*Rest as little as needed to get through each exercise in the circuit, then take 1-2 minutes at the end of the circuit before starting it over.

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FREQUENTLY
ASKED QUESTIONS
What if I dont have chains?

Just do the exercise without chains.

Dips bother my shoulders. What can I do instead?

Barbell floor presses, dumbbell floor presses, close grip pushups, reverse grip bench presses on
smith machine, close grip bench presses on smith machine, or EZ bar pullover/extension combo.

I dont have a pulldown machine. What can I do instead?


Band assisted pull ups.

What if I dont have a band?

Buy one at http://www.strengthtrainingbands.com/

What if I dont have a glute ham bench or leg curl machine?

You can do natural glute ham raises while kneeling on a padded surface and having someone
hold your ankles. You can also do leg curls with your feet in straps or on furniture sliders. The final
option is to set up a band around an immovable object and loop the other end around your ankles.
Sit on a chair or bench and leg curl your heels under your body, using the band as resistance.

Is it okay to use a leg curl machine?

Yes, just be sure you dont extend your knees all the way. Stop about 2-3 inches from the bottom
position. If the machine causes you any knee pain at all try a different machine or go from a lying to
a seated (or vice versa).

Can I do goblet or kettlebell front squats instead of barbell squats?


Yes.

Can I use the safety bar for squats?


Yes

Can I do box squats instead of free squats?

Yes, but know that the quads will receive far less stimulation from a box squat.

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How high should my foot be on the rear


foot elevated split squat?
A box or bench of anywhere between 8 and about 15
inches will be fine for most people.

Do I have to do a warm up set(s)


for each exercise in the workouts or
just the first movement of the day?
Id highly recommend doing at least one warm
up/feeler set for every new exercise you start.
The stronger you are, the greater number of warm
up sets you will need. The exception would be the
inverted rows on Day 1.

Overhead pressing bothers my


shoulders. What should I do instead?

Because the overhead presses come third in the workout,


after you have already done quite a bit of pressing to warm up,
you may not find this to the case. However, if they still bother you
try pressing on a steep angle of somewhere between 60 and 80 degrees
and see if that helps. If that doesnt alleviate the pain simply sub in lateral
raises instead.

Should my arms be straight on lateral raises or slightly bent?


Slightly bent.

Should I raise the weights directly out to the side on lateral


raises or slightly in front of me?
Raise them ever so slightly in front of you.

On the supinated/curl grip pulldown do I use a straight bar?

Ideally, you should use one of those pulldown machines that has double handles, which allows
you to move your arms naturally as you pull the weight down. If thats not an option use an EZ bar
attachment. The last choice would be a straight bar. If thats your only option and it bothers your
elbows or wrists just use a neutral grip attachment.

What if I dont have a box to jump on?

Simply do jump squats. Squat down a quarter of the way then explode and jump up as high as
you can reaching both hands overhead. Stick the landing then repeat.

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What if I dont have a trap bar?

Just do two different squat variations on each of the training weeks. So on Week A
you could do a front squat and on Week B you could do a goblet squat or back
squat.

What if I dont have an EZ bar?


Do standing dumbbell curls.

On the 75-degree incline lateral raise


does my chest face the bench, or my back?

Your chest is on the bench with arms hanging down in front


of you. Raise the weights out to the side like you would on a
standing lateral raise.

What if I dont have a cable machine for


pushdowns?

Use bands instead. Do pushdowns on Week A and overhead band


extensions on Week B.

What if I dont have a cable for pulldown abs?

You can do these with a band attached to a pull up bar. Or you can do slow motion straight leg
sit-ups.

Whats the difference between a farmers walk and a slow motion


farmers walk?

The regular farmers walk should be done at power-walk speed. On the slow motion farmers
walk you will use lighter weights and take three seconds per step. Lift your leg up high as you step
and slowly, softly put it on the ground. Think about walking on eggshells when doing the slow
motion farmers walk. So step as quietly and lightly as you can.

What can I sub in for the sled on Day 4 if I dont have one?
High resistance sprints on a stationary bike.

What about incline sprints on a treadmill?

Sprints on a treadmill encourage you to use a very unnatural stride. A better idea is to incline
the treadmill then turn it off. Hold on to the handles like you would during a sled push. Then, take
long, powerful strides for the prescribed amount of time.

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My gym doesnt have a sled, treadmill or bike. What can I do to


replace sled pushes?
Walking lunges for sets of 15 reps per leg.

What if I want to add front lever iso holds to the program?

Do them on Day 3 before the first exercise of the day. Do 4 sets of 10 seconds, resting 45 seconds
between.

What if I want to add frog stands/planche progression iso holds


to the program?

Do them on Day 1 before the first exercise of the day. Do 4 sets of 10 seconds, resting 45 seconds
between.

How slowly should I lower the weight on each exercise?

You dont necessarily need to count the seconds but you always want to be in full control of the
weight. Two seconds is good on most exercises with a shorter range. On exercises that have a longer range of motion like a squat, pull up or overhead press, it might be closer to three seconds.
If you have only been training for a year or so Id recommend sticking closer to a three second
negative on most exercises. If youre over 40 and/or have a lot of joint pain Id also recommend
always using a slower eccentric. Finally, if there is any muscle group that you cant feel or get a
pump on, you should definitely lighten the weight and slow down the negative portion of each rep.

Should I take my sets to failure?

No. There is no reason to take your sets to failure.


Research and real world evidence shows that doing so
has a negative impact on muscle growth. It also burns
out your CNS and leaves you with a feeling of overall
systemic fatigue. Ive noticed that those who train
to failure most often are also those who are constantly catching a cold or getting the flu.
You should train very hard but always leave at
least 1-2 perfect reps in the tank on each set.

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What is the perfect rep execution for maximal muscle growth?

1) Lower the weight slowly and under control, feeling the target muscle every inch of the way
down.
2) Get a full stretch. But be sure you are only going
to the full range of movement for the muscle,
and not the exercise. There is a difference. Going beyond the muscles full range of motion
puts too much stress on the tendons and ligaments. Doing this can result in injury.
3) Dont pause at the bottom but instead rapidly reverse the motion.
4) Initiate the lifting portion with the target muscle. You should never feel it in your joints,
hips or spine. If you do the weight is too heavy or your form is off.
5) Drive the weight up forcefully but not so explosively that you take tension off the muscles or
let momentum take over.
6) Maintain constant tension throughout both the positive and negative portion of each rep.
7) Fully shorten the muscle at the top of the movement. SQUEEZE!
8) Immediately start lowering the weight, going right into the next rep. CONTINUOUS
MOVEMENT.*
*The exception to this rule would be barbell presses, squats and deadlifts. You can pause at lockout on these movements when you are training them for lower reps, with a strength emphasis.

Should I stretch at the end of each workout?


Yes. Follow the specific protocol below:

Day 1

After exercise 4 do a 60 second stretch for your chest. This usually involves having both arms out
to the side, holding onto something and pushing your chest forward.
After the last exercise of the day hang from a chin up bar for as long as you can.

Day 2

After exercise 4 do a kneeling quad stretch for 60 seconds per side.


After the curls, lay down on an incline bench with light dumbbells and let your arms hang for
sixty seconds. Make sure your shoulders are externally rotated and that your palms are facing
directly up.
After the ab exercise hang from a chin up bar for 60 seconds.

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Day 3

After the last exercise of the day do a 60 second stretch for the pecs, then hang from a chin up bar
for 60 seconds. Finish up with a sixty-second stretch for the triceps. The easiest way to do this is to
hold a light dumbbell overhead with arm full flexed and the dumbbell behind your head. This is the
start position of a one-arm dumbbell French press aka one-arm overhead dumbbell extension.

Day 4

After the last exercise of the day do a 60 second stretch for the glutes, hamstrings and quads, in
that order.

What days should I train on?

Ideally you would want to separate Day 1 and Day 2 with a day off in between. So the following
options would work:
Option A
Monday- Upper Body
Wednesday- Lower Body
Friday- Upper Body
Saturday- Lower Body
Option B
Monday- Upper Body
Wednesday- Lower Body
Thursday- Upper Body
Saturday- Lower Body
Option C
Sunday- Upper Body
Tuesday- Lower Body
Thursday- Upper Body
Friday- Lower Body

What about high intensity cardio (HIIT)? How much and when?

Day 4 of the program already falls under the spectrum of HIIT. So youve got one session covered. In addition to that Id add one sprint day per week. Ideally that should be done as a second
workout on Day 2 either 4-6 hours before or after strength training. If thats not possible it can be
done as a second workout on any other training day that isnt the day before or the day after the primary lower body workout (Day 2).

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Can I add a third HIIT session each week?

That will be a bit excessive for a lot of people. Two HIIT sessions of 15-30 minutes is usually
enough to get the job done. But if you keep it to 10 minutes and make it a finisher immediately after
your Day 1, Day 2 or Day 3 workout it wont kill you. Aim for 20-40 second work intervals followed
by a brief rest period. Repeat at high intensity for 10 minutes. Some good choices are the stationary
bike, sled drags, swimming, jump rope, boxing, and concept 2 row machines. You can stick with just
one of those for the entire 10 minutes or break it up.

I can only train once per day on the 4 main training days. And I
can do something once on weekends. What should I do?
Just do a low intensity cardio session and/or some yoga or mobility work for 30 minutes.

Is yoga something I can do on a regular basis?


How often and when?

Yes. Yoga is great for recovery and enhancing your mobility and flexibility. Choose one of the
lower intensity, easier, more relaxing and restorative forms of yoga. You dont want to be doing
advanced bodyweight strength training like handstand holds in yoga class. You want to be recovering from your workouts. If you stick with the easier forms of yoga you can do it 2-3 times per week
and shouldnt have any trouble.

What if I cant train on weekends?


Its not the end of the world. Just do this instead:
Monday-Upper Body
Tuesday- Lower Body

Thursday- Upper Body


Friday- Lower Body

What if I can only train three days per week?

Skip Day 4 but try to get some kind of conditioning/ HIIT training in on the weekend, if only for
10-15 minutes.

What should I do for recovery on my off days?

Weve already covered the benefits of low intensity cardio, yoga, and mobility work. In addition
to that I highly recommend the following recovery techniques:
Meditation
Massage
Ice baths
Epsom salt baths

Float tanks
Cyrotherapy
ART (Active Release Techniques)
MAT (Muscle Activation Techniques)

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What if I dont have an adjustable bench? How can I perform


the different incline presses?

Those of you who dont have an adjustable bench will need to stack plates under the head of a
bench for the 10 degree and 30 degree incline presses. How many you use depends on how thick
your plates are. Just estimate it and make sure the angles are different. And dont stack so many
that it becomes unsafe.
For the 45 degree incline press, sub it out with Incline Push-Ups with your Feet in a TRX. Your
hands will be on parallettes (or the ground, but parallettes are preferred), and your feet will be in
TRX straps. Your body should be at around a 45 deg. angle to the ground with your feet above your
head. Perform push-ups from that position.

What can I do to replace sled pushes?

Bike sprints. Perform them for the same length of time as you would the sled pushes, and if you
can, do them on a bike where you can crank up the resistance. That way, you can replicate the constant tension you get on a sled and get a similar training effect.

Can I do Trap Bar Deadlifts as the main movement both weeks?

You are better off picking a different big movement. So, one week you do Trap Bar Deadlifts and
another week you do something else. It could be a belt squat, or even a leg press. If you choose to do
a leg press, bump the reps up to 12-15 per set.

What if I dont have a leg press machine and can only do


Trap Bar Deads as my main lower body exercise since
squatting beats me up?

If you will only be doing Trap Bar Deadlifts as your only main lower body movement, you need to
switch up your technique each week. One week, do them in flat shoes, using the high handles with
a deadlift technique. The next week, do them in squat shoes, using the low handles and a vertical
torso so it simulates the movement of a squat more than a deadlift.

What kind of nutrition plan should I follow with this


training program?
The Renegade Diet. Get it at http://www.RenegadeDietBook.com/

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What about supplements?

Most supplements are overrated. I recommend the following:






Athletic Greens
Omega 3s
Grass Fed Protein Powder or Vegan/ Non-Dairy Protein Powder
BCAA (only if you train first thing in the am on an empty stomach)
Shroom Tech Sport (pre workout)

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