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Take It to the GYM!!


Brian Frank’s Weight Sandwich Workout (WSW)


BY BRIAN FRANK

Usage Instructions: 3-4 times per week, year-round!

I started lifting when I was 18. At the same time, I got very serious about cycling and have continued to go to the gym regularly for upper-body strength to complement my endurance training, which is mostly lower-body–cycling. I use this for cross-training for moto trials, which require equal amounts of strength, endurance, and mental focus. In addition to cycling or riding 5-6 days per week, I try to get into the gym at least three times per week. The following workout routine is what I have distilled down from all of my studies on the subject and practiced over the past 38 years.

Start with 5-30 minutes of cardio, do an upper body free weight routine, and finish the workout with 5-30 minutes. This allows the workout length to be increased or decreased, depending on time available and other training.

Cardio options – stationary bike, concept 2 rowing ergo, stair climber, elliptical. (Treadmill/running not encouraged.)

1st Cardio session: needed to get the heart rate up and blood flowing. It should be done for at least 5 minutes or until you break a good sweat. When outdoor cycling/moto is not happening regularly (wintertime), increase the cardio duration to 15-30 minutes to burn more calories.

Weights: Due to the amount of cycling I do and how bad my knees are, I refrain from engaging in resistance/strength training for my lower body. Also, I don’t like to have huge legs, and things like squats, deadlifts, and the like are a great way to injure one’s back. I only do resistance/strength training for upper body muscles for many reasons.

Free Weights and body weight: For the first 3-6 months of structured workouts, use only free weights and bodyweight exercises. Save barbells and machines for later. Free weights are used to develop all supporting/stabilizing muscles, tendons, and ligaments, in addition to the major muscle groups. The former takes longer to develop than the latter. Exercises like pull-ups and dips should be employed regularly for lats and pecs as the body responds fastest to bodyweight-supported exercises.

Strict form while doing resistance training routines is a must, always. Use lighter weights with strict form instead of heavy weights and poor form. The former produces the best results, and the latter causes injuries.

The format for weightlifting follows the size of the muscles – big ones first, little ones last. Chest (pectorals), back (latissimus), and then arms/shoulders (triceps, biceps, deltoids.) Abs and back can be done at any point during the workout.

2nd Cardio session: Cardio options – stationary bike, concept 2 rowing ergo, stair climber, elliptical. (Treadmill/running not encouraged.) After you have completed your upper body weight routine, keep the calorie/fat burn going with a second round of cardio for another 5-30 minutes.

Adaptation: This is the most important and ignored aspect of long-term strength training. You will make the most gains in your entire life in the first six months of following a steady workout routine. Continuing to make gains from that point will only come if routines are changed regularly. The body will only adapt as much as it needs to meet the workload it expects. This is why within the outline of this workout, every muscle should be worked in as many different ways as possible. Varying the number of reps, sets, types of exercise, speed of each rep, and rest time between sets. These must all be changed up every couple of weeks to avoid stagnation. Examples of this will be given below.

Periodization: the final key. Traditional bodybuilding includes the concept of three-month or 12-week cycles that are then broken down into 2–4-week cycles. In each cycle, the number of reps, amount of weight used, number of sets performed, and rest time between sets are altered to force continual adaptation, which translates into growth, strength, and size increase.

Examples of Free Weight Exercises

Building a Workout
The idea is, to begin with a cardio workout as described above, then add your upper body strength routine before finishing with another cardio segment. Begin with compound exercises that work a major and minor muscle group, then continue with muscle isolation exercises that only work one muscle at a time.

Chest/Arms/Shoulders and all supporting muscles:
(Pectorals/triceps/deltoids) are all worked together with exercises such as push-ups, dips, prone dumbbell/bar presses, and similar variations. Alternate between prone, incline, and decline to force further adaptation and growth of all areas of the muscles.

Perform 3-6 sets of compound exercises with weights heavy enough to make a 12-rep set difficult in the last 4 reps. See sample workouts below.

  • Deltoid/tricep combo – military presses

Compound exercises are followed by isolation exercises. Usually, only do 3 sets of isolation exercises to avoid overworking the muscle, especially true of the biceps!!!

  • Pec flies (strict form, prone, incline, decline.)
  • Triceps presses downs, overhead, etc.
  • Deltoid isolation-standing side front and rear deltoid raises.
  • Back/Arms/shoulders (lats, biceps, deltoids) and all supporting muscles-pull-ups, lat pull-downs, low rows, and all other variations.
  • Lat isolation exercises – Straight arm pushdowns/pullovers, landmine rows, dumbbell pullovers.
  • Biceps isolation exercises- (dumbbell curls, etc., add more here).
  • Abdominals/Core: 3-6 sets of exercises of your choice – sit-ups, leg raises, etc.
  • Back/Core- back extension with or without weights on Roman Chair bench.

Sample Workout

Sample workout (intense, short rest periods):

  • Duration- approximately one hour.
  • 15 minutes on a stationary bike with a heart rate over 100.
  • Abs/back super sets, 3 each, 30 seconds rest between each double set, 12-15 reps per set.
  • Chest/tri/delts – 4 sets of prone dumbbell presses, 30 seconds rest in between, 12-15 rep sets.
  • Pec flies – 3 sets, light weights, strict form.

After you have completed your upper body weight routine, keep the calorie/fat burn going with a second cardio segment of 5 to 30 minutes.

Recovery:

12 comments

If one is not cognizant of the actual exercise Dr. Franks article is of little value. People starting a resistance program need detailed explanations
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Hammer Nutrition replied:
Hi Mike, thank you for your comment, um. I’m not a doctor and I don’t even play one on TV. Your dismissal of my article is a bit premature. This is not an attempt to be a start to finish guide on all things strength training. Rather, it’s intended to give our clients, who predominantly engage in lower body intensive training/competition and would like to support that with some strength training other than squats, deadlifts and the like. It’s also the first of many that will be espousing the virtues of consistent weight bearing/strength training for bone density, endocrine function and more. Stay tuned. BDF

Michael J Dul PhD

Love that you mentioned the C2 erg for warm up cardio . It’s one of the best all body cardio training. Said from a on water rower too. : )
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Hammer Nutrition replied:
Hi Becka, thank you for the affirmation! I still have the first one I bought back in 1988 and it works flawlessly. My gym has a wall mounted Skierg that I really enjoy, gives my back/abs a great workout at the same time! BDF

Becca

Thanks for the great info & workout!

Connee Hancock

Nice article Brian. I’m in the same boat and have a hard time biking in NE USA winters. I add some hiking to my winter routine even though my knees are marginal. A long time ago a very good PT told me to do the abductor leg exercises for knee stabilization. That is the only leg exercise I will do and they make a big difference. At 65 with an internal meniscus tear I can do extended hikes with little aggravation to my knees. It has also helped with my skiing though I no longer enjoy the moguls.
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Hammer Nutrition replied:
Hi Steve, thank you for your comments and great suggestion! I’ll get back on the those exercises – need all of the knee stabilization I can get. BDF

Anonymous

Thanks for this article. It would be helpful to have more details regarding some specific exercises for each of the groups you mention. Perhaps links to videos or more details online that we could see how they are performed. Also, you mentioned a couple times hat treadmill running is not encouraged. I certainly do not enjoy a treadmill and prefer run in outdoors but I would like to hear your rationale.

Thanks
Bob

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Hammer Nutrition replied:
Hi Bob, thank you for the comments, we’ll get straight to work on this. I omitted those details as there is already a plethora of explanations, images and videos on weight lifting techniques with proper form, etc. My comments regarding running were more that due to my compromised knee joints, I avoid it whenever I can and pedal instead. If you prefer to run on treadmill, do rowing/ergometer, swimming in place of the cycling for cardio, that is perfectly fine. BDF

Best regards,

Brian

Robert Cherinka

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