You're quickly becoming my favorite strongman. Despite all the accomplishments you have in such a short period of time in the sport, you still keep things down to earth and seem very humble. Hope to meet you in person someday.
This guy is a crazy drug addict. Never trust a “strongman”. Unless they come out and tell you “I’m an insane drug addict, don’t follow in my footsteps”
This could not have come at a more opportune moment. I am stopped next to the highway, on my way home from a rehab session at the clinic, I’m so tired I’m shaking, but I’ve had the most heavy weights this week, plus I’m emotionally fried. This makes complete sense, I haven’t reached my highest limit, I’m just at the max for my current brain/body capacity. I can continue to improve by pushing through this, getting my brain to connect better, and breaking down small amounts of muscle fibre so it can repair stronger. Once again, you’ve inspired me. I can stop crying, get back on the highway, and muse on whether you’d be better off with the hot/cold cycle or a hyperbaric chamber. (Oxygen gets my vote lol!)
You also need adequate rest. While I don’t think 99.9 percent of people come close to overtraining, the life outside the gym plays an important component. Sleep and nutrition are more important than anything
@@Romo69Thabks for this, nutrition quality has never been too high on my self-care list (who am I kidding-never lol), but you’re absolutely right. Time for some menu planning lol!!
@@joytee4967 Idk about you, but the reward of eating tasty and healthy foods is often so much greater than that of eating junk food. Self-care is a virtuous spiral; the more you take the time to get good at taking care of yourself, the more energy and strength you'll get. The task of life and living it virtuously is not to be underestimated, and patience is needed, as reality tends to hold many obstacles to challenge us. But you'll get better at it broo c:
I have a very manual working job. And I go to the gym twice a week. High intensity and I have managed an over two times body weight deadlifts and 120kg bench press and I’m 85kg body weight. I’m happy with that. Still seeing gains. But I have bought hoopers 12 week program
Congratulations Mitch on your win and I love your content cause you break issues down so everyone can understand positive vibes to you keep up the great work.
I’d say train as much as you can stay consistent and providing you can recover from it. I train 3x a week. Two high intensity low volume days and one high volume moderately low intense days. Strongest I have been so far
I've always knew how impressive the nervous system was, but really found out when I had my first heart attack. Every part of your body is asking the brain for blood or oxygen and the brain is answering. This puts a lot of strain on the body especially the spinal cord. The spinal cord will be on fire from all the info going back and forth. The body will do whatever you want to a limit, but the nervous system can only do so much. For example, stub a toe, it can hurt like hell but is really not a big deal. Your body is screaming and you are thinking, shit that hurt but move on. The body, what an amazing piece of work.
This is such good advice. For me, right now, I'm only getting into the gym at twice a week. Not ideal but the season of my life (work, toddler, social) means that I take what I can and ill ramp up again in the future. Still hitting PBs so I'm happy enough for the time being.
I do each group twice a week, with one session being dedicated towards strength, and one a little more towards volume. Sometimes I like a longer or shorter warmup on strength days and sometimes I feel like I can do more before burning out on volume days. Because of this I find my rep and set count quite variable!
Just keep in mind, first and foremost; Progression is always the objective and all progression is predicated on Recovery. I am surprised how many guys have no specific plan or program. (w/o a plan, one is simply exercising or working out. But, they are NOT "Training". ) These guys have no earthly idea what is working and what is not. They just blindly drive until the wheels fall off, with no plan (written plan) going in, no notes (during the block) and no feedback (after their block) Also, "Burning out" is literally Never a good idea. **Unless, that is actually your training objective! -to be conditioned for "Burnout". i.e. "Burnout" as opposed to strength or size... Cheers!
For novices looking for strength: - as many days per week as you can - half of the sets 'grease the groove' - as Mr Moose says - hard to overwork at the beginning due to absolute low intensity - you need literally upwards of few thousand reps to start to feel nuances of the movement - strength is movement based not muscle based! - consistency should be automatically given - focus on fidelity of the movement at least once in a while - do not forget muscle balance and assistive lifts I miss the days I was a novice. Fresh, felt the potential, simple roadmap forward. All one really needs to do is find agency. The rest comes with practice.
Moose dropping in comments Also thank you for this. As an intermediate, I'm not sure what my working sets should be tbh. I top out around 480lbs as a 1rm and 465lbs for 3-6 reps. Mayne I should add more reps at lower weights
The stronger you get, the more taxing max effort or rep/ assistance work gets. General population haven’t even tapped into a tenth of that top level strength.
Wow ive never heard anyone else say 10-15 sets! Not saying its wrong ive just never heard that from any of the others i watch on RUclips that have been the best in powerlifting or strongman. Its something you definitely dont just start with but work up to doing. I also think it depends on what day or how high the intensity is to how many but maybe not. This is definitely one of my new favorite channels and overall favorite's! I am definitely looking to up my work capacity on all 4 of my days but little by little. Thanks Mitch
I think it may be because when we're not as strong we can't lift as much on each set. I don't follow it. I follow what I can stay consistent doing. The reps mentioned in the video were low.
@MrTruthseeker1980 idk everyone has their way of looking at things and progressing and there's so many progressions out there that will work for almost anyone but you definitely back it down the stronger you get.
@@Han-nk3io 9-15 sets per exercise or total for that body part? I want to increase my strength for personal reasons and I don’t care about strongman competitions. I do 6 sets, 1-3 reps per exercise.
Mr. Hooper inspires me. But just remember that 20+ sets per group muscle is only feasible if you are on performance enhancement which might be his case due to the top level athlete he is. For you, like he said, focus on 10-15 sets per group muscle.
It's really hard for me to balance volume, intensity, & frequency. My recovery ability is dismal, but if you don't do enough, your progress stands still too. I've been trying to find the right balance for many, many years.
@davidwelburn have you got your testosterone level checked? I did, and it was well under the minimum "average" range. Started on TRT and am noticing a significant difference.
What would be the best way to judge at which part of the novice-intermediate-advanced spectrum one is? Should it be just months spent training? In this case it would be hard to tell how to factor in long breaks (thanks covid!) into that calculation when it takes like 6-10 months to just get back to one's previous results. Or is it slow progression? It can be caused by using a bad program, getting not enough recovery, suboptimal nutrition, stress levels, etc. Maybe absolute values will help? But different people have different potential, and will therefore peak at very different levels. How would you do it?
There are many factors to consider but I’d highly recommend checking out my video “3 Tips To Get Stronger”. I go over expectations for progress and it should give you a good idea of where you’re at
Generally, I rest for 3-5 minutes between sets. When I’m pushing the limits and going for max effort lifts, I rest 15-20 minutes. Hopefully that helps 💪
wow thanks a lot for responding I am 60 years old I am trying to set a record I am a bench press specialist be4 COVID-1984 I had done 3 plates I was able to get 317.5 but it was really hard to do that little progress it took like 7 attempts to do the double setting up the single right now the lift I am trying to get is 295 for 2 I am going to deload today I had always just used the bench press calculator and pushed thru to the next lift but when I went to do 265 for 4 one day I could only do 2 and felt crushed I think I am at my all time high in terms of ratio I am at about 215 and weighed more then 225 on my best lifts I really feel honored you responded the world' strongest man thanks so much @@mitchellhooperstrongman
Moose! At the start of the video, you mention 5 mins rest inbetween sets. Is there a reason to do this instead of the typical workout plan advice of 60-90 seconds rest?
Quick rests are for body building. For pure strength, moving stuff from A to B you need as much as rest as needed, which is typically about the 3-5 min mark or even more
Ok, I'm not Mitch. But, I do have decades in Bodybuilding and powerlifting under my belt. One working set per what?? per body part?? Or per day?? The answer to your question is actually many more questions! Are you progressing towards your goal(s)?? If yes, then you are in the sweet spot. If no, then it may be any of a lot of things holding you back. Like; maybe you do in fact, need more stimulation. Or more rest time in between sets? Is your recovery ok? (no recovery, no gains) With optimal stimulation, Recovery is key. Recovery is always compromised by less than optimal nutrition and a calorie surplus and/or enough restful sleep... 3 sessions per week can be a good program "IF" you are using big compound movements (Squat, Bench, Deadlift, etc...) and this routine is GREAT for building and polishing technique on these movements. But, 3 times a week doing machines, and isolation work is not going to spur on much growth.... Good Luck!
I do approximately 3 hours a week of cardio alongside 3-4 hours a week of weights. Always important to not neglect the heart. Keep up the good work Mitchell Peace, A
Have you ever considered trying super sets but say you do legs, bicep, back and repeat? It will help you on the cardio side too by keeping the heart active without resting too much and you also get muscle training. It's kind of a sweet spot for both if you aren't a pro athlete training for something specific. When you first start this its a little difficult but as you progress like anything else it gets easier. I would do a meso cycle like this then go back to hypertrophy and cardio cycle then do a pure strength cycle with a rest week before the next. So it would be 6 weeks Super set cycle, rest week, hypertrophy 6W, rest, Strength6W, rest and repeat. By the time you start the strength you have a super solid foundation to work with.
It usually per week on a given muscle group. Any more and it is overkill. You arent getting any benefit and at worst, it will kill any gains because you arent giving your muscles proper time to rest, build and get stronger.
I train 25 to 40h a week + 30-40h of work at the home office. But a lot is moving plates, resting for 5-10 minutes between sets, shitting up to 5 times, making some coffee in between, putting on lifting gear and putting it of again, chalk etc etc ^^ and I do a lot o warm up sets. most of the time it takes me 40 minutes to complete 1 exercise,at other times it takes me 1,5h just deadlifting.
So tired of guys who lift weights all day talking about lifting weights. It is so annoying I started biking instead of lifting. Rather live longer on a bike than shorten life as an obese strongman.
Just do both. Strong also do conditioning sled pulls, stones walks, the Yoke,... they are fairly good at cardio. It just it is a strength sport require muscles mass, it is their jobs. You are talking like that out of insecurity, like a lifting bro wouldn't talk shit on distance runner because they are skinny and cant lift heavy weight.
You're quickly becoming my favorite strongman. Despite all the accomplishments you have in such a short period of time in the sport, you still keep things down to earth and seem very humble. Hope to meet you in person someday.
This guy is a crazy drug addict. Never trust a “strongman”. Unless they come out and tell you “I’m an insane drug addict, don’t follow in my footsteps”
This could not have come at a more opportune moment. I am stopped next to the highway, on my way home from a rehab session at the clinic, I’m so tired I’m shaking, but I’ve had the most heavy weights this week, plus I’m emotionally fried. This makes complete sense, I haven’t reached my highest limit, I’m just at the max for my current brain/body capacity. I can continue to improve by pushing through this, getting my brain to connect better, and breaking down small amounts of muscle fibre so it can repair stronger. Once again, you’ve inspired me. I can stop crying, get back on the highway, and muse on whether you’d be better off with the hot/cold cycle or a hyperbaric chamber. (Oxygen gets my vote lol!)
You also need adequate rest. While I don’t think 99.9 percent of people come close to overtraining, the life outside the gym plays an important component. Sleep and nutrition are more important than anything
@@Romo69Thabks for this, nutrition quality has never been too high on my self-care list (who am I kidding-never lol), but you’re absolutely right. Time for some menu planning lol!!
@@joytee4967 Idk about you, but the reward of eating tasty and healthy foods is often so much greater than that of eating junk food. Self-care is a virtuous spiral; the more you take the time to get good at taking care of yourself, the more energy and strength you'll get. The task of life and living it virtuously is not to be underestimated, and patience is needed, as reality tends to hold many obstacles to challenge us. But you'll get better at it broo c:
I have a very manual working job. And I go to the gym twice a week. High intensity and I have managed an over two times body weight deadlifts and 120kg bench press and I’m 85kg body weight. I’m happy with that. Still seeing gains. But I have bought hoopers 12 week program
Congratulations Mitch on your win and I love your content cause you break issues down so everyone can understand positive vibes to you keep up the great work.
I’d say train as much as you can stay consistent and providing you can recover from it.
I train 3x a week. Two high intensity low volume days and one high volume moderately low intense days. Strongest I have been so far
Good stuff! Thank you for continuing to share your knowledge to help all of us.
Thank you for your great videos Mitch! You're very friendly and you're a Packers Fan too. That makes you my favorite Strongman!
Moose Knuckles in the comments
I've always knew how impressive the nervous system was, but really found out when I had my first heart attack. Every part of your body is asking the brain for blood or oxygen and the brain is answering. This puts a lot of strain on the body especially the spinal cord. The spinal cord will be on fire from all the info going back and forth. The body will do whatever you want to a limit, but the nervous system can only do so much. For example, stub a toe, it can hurt like hell but is really not a big deal. Your body is screaming and you are thinking, shit that hurt but move on. The body, what an amazing piece of work.
just became a member and im so excited for all of the information that im going to get
This is such good advice.
For me, right now, I'm only getting into the gym at twice a week. Not ideal but the season of my life (work, toddler, social) means that I take what I can and ill ramp up again in the future. Still hitting PBs so I'm happy enough for the time being.
I do each group twice a week, with one session being dedicated towards strength, and one a little more towards volume. Sometimes I like a longer or shorter warmup on strength days and sometimes I feel like I can do more before burning out on volume days. Because of this I find my rep and set count quite variable!
That's a good plan! Thanks for sharing that. I will try this with my push, pull, legs routine.
Just keep in mind, first and foremost; Progression is always the objective and all progression is predicated on Recovery. I am surprised how many guys have no specific plan or program. (w/o a plan, one is simply exercising or working out. But, they are NOT "Training". ) These guys have no earthly idea what is working and what is not. They just blindly drive until the wheels fall off, with no plan (written plan) going in, no notes (during the block) and no feedback (after their block) Also, "Burning out" is literally Never a good idea. **Unless, that is actually your training objective! -to be conditioned for "Burnout". i.e. "Burnout" as opposed to strength or size...
Cheers!
@@leeg672 thank you and I wish you success on your journey!
Another great video. So many have no idea how much or little they should put into their routines.
I do 4-5 hours a week, and I have been doing 10x10's this year. I recently changed it up some, but I'm hitting roughly 250 reps a session.
That's completely mental
Great information and knowledge ❤️💪
Setting up and breaking down the implements.... The actual hardest thing in Strongman 😄
For novices looking for strength:
- as many days per week as you can
- half of the sets 'grease the groove'
- as Mr Moose says - hard to overwork at the beginning due to absolute low intensity
- you need literally upwards of few thousand reps to start to feel nuances of the movement
- strength is movement based not muscle based!
- consistency should be automatically given
- focus on fidelity of the movement at least once in a while
- do not forget muscle balance and assistive lifts
I miss the days I was a novice. Fresh, felt the potential, simple roadmap forward.
All one really needs to do is find agency. The rest comes with practice.
Such a great champ
Moose dropping in comments
Also thank you for this. As an intermediate, I'm not sure what my working sets should be tbh. I top out around 480lbs as a 1rm and 465lbs for 3-6 reps. Mayne I should add more reps at lower weights
I did 3 sets of 5 on squats today then left the gym that was enough!
The education is worth it!!!! #lhbk #teammoose
Mitch the living legend
fully agree with everything. nice.
Thanks!
Just got my t-shirt in LHBK for those wondering softest T-shirt ever. Fits great ( order you size)
💪💪
I swear that changing plates out is more exercise than the lifts themselves.
The stronger you get, the more taxing max effort or rep/ assistance work gets. General population haven’t even tapped into a tenth of that top level strength.
This guy is the future of WSM I see him winning three or four more titles
You have definitely caused me to think differently. I may not understand everything, but ill try anything you say.
Wow ive never heard anyone else say 10-15 sets! Not saying its wrong ive just never heard that from any of the others i watch on RUclips that have been the best in powerlifting or strongman. Its something you definitely dont just start with but work up to doing. I also think it depends on what day or how high the intensity is to how many but maybe not. This is definitely one of my new favorite channels and overall favorite's! I am definitely looking to up my work capacity on all 4 of my days but little by little. Thanks Mitch
I think it may be because when we're not as strong we can't lift as much on each set. I don't follow it. I follow what I can stay consistent doing. The reps mentioned in the video were low.
@MrTruthseeker1980 idk everyone has their way of looking at things and progressing and there's so many progressions out there that will work for almost anyone but you definitely back it down the stronger you get.
@@timtwing5886 i have always been doing 9-15 sets.
@@Han-nk3io
9-15 sets per exercise or total for that body part? I want to increase my strength for personal reasons and I don’t care about strongman competitions. I do 6 sets, 1-3 reps per exercise.
@@Aiel-Necromancer Body parts
Mr. Hooper inspires me. But just remember that 20+ sets per group muscle is only feasible if you are on performance enhancement which might be his case due to the top level athlete he is. For you, like he said, focus on 10-15 sets per group muscle.
😂😂😂 not even close to true
Again Great video
I saw that posing training with Antoine near the end. 👍
It's really hard for me to balance volume, intensity, & frequency. My recovery ability is dismal, but if you don't do enough, your progress stands still too. I've been trying to find the right balance for many, many years.
I'm exactly the same. I have chronic fatigue syndrome, so my body doesn't respond well to exercise. Been struggling with it my entire life.
@davidwelburn have you got your testosterone level checked? I did, and it was well under the minimum "average" range. Started on TRT and am noticing a significant difference.
@@demetriuscooksey7147 Thank you. Yes, I have had it checked, and it was towards the high end of normal.
10-15 sets surely thats per movement, right?
should the 10-15 sets be combined or divided among similar movements? eg OHP and bench press
I have the same question..hoping for an answer
I train six days a week each muscle group twice and in the beginning of the week i train volume and the end of the week i train for strength.
Most sets I'd do is 8. Three warm up sets then 5x5. But, mostly it's five. Two warm ups then 3x3.
I am 6 hours week
thx 🌷
What about as a natty who pull’s almost 800? For example I can only pull every other week otherwise I will not recover.
When you say 10-15 working sets, do you mean per muscle group?
10 to 15 sets per week for a movement pattern or for a bodypart?
You are a physical culturist! 🏋️💪😊👍
What would be the best way to judge at which part of the novice-intermediate-advanced spectrum one is?
Should it be just months spent training? In this case it would be hard to tell how to factor in long breaks (thanks covid!) into that calculation when it takes like 6-10 months to just get back to one's previous results.
Or is it slow progression? It can be caused by using a bad program, getting not enough recovery, suboptimal nutrition, stress levels, etc.
Maybe absolute values will help? But different people have different potential, and will therefore peak at very different levels.
How would you do it?
There are many factors to consider but I’d highly recommend checking out my video “3 Tips To Get Stronger”. I go over expectations for progress and it should give you a good idea of where you’re at
the other day in a vid you said 20 minutes rest per set
now you are saying 5 minutes per set
I am confused
Generally, I rest for 3-5 minutes between sets. When I’m pushing the limits and going for max effort lifts, I rest 15-20 minutes. Hopefully that helps 💪
wow thanks a lot for responding I am 60 years old I am trying to set a record
I am a bench press specialist
be4 COVID-1984 I had done 3 plates
I was able to get 317.5 but it was really hard to do that little progress
it took like 7 attempts to do the double
setting up the single
right now the lift I am trying to get is 295 for 2
I am going to deload today
I had always just used the bench press calculator
and pushed thru to the next lift
but when I went to do 265 for 4
one day I could only do 2 and felt crushed
I think I am at my all time high in terms of ratio
I am at about 215 and weighed more then 225 on my best lifts
I really feel honored you responded
the world' strongest man
thanks so much
@@mitchellhooperstrongman
Moose! At the start of the video, you mention 5 mins rest inbetween sets. Is there a reason to do this instead of the typical workout plan advice of 60-90 seconds rest?
I just filmed a video about rest times that will go out in the coming days!
60 to 90 seconds is for bodybuilding
Quick rests are for body building. For pure strength, moving stuff from A to B you need as much as rest as needed, which is typically about the 3-5 min mark or even more
Hi, I'm doing 1 working set with a double drop set attached to the end. I do this 3 time a week. Is this enough? Thanks 👍
Ok, I'm not Mitch. But, I do have decades in Bodybuilding and powerlifting under my belt. One working set per what?? per body part?? Or per day?? The answer to your question is actually many more questions!
Are you progressing towards your goal(s)?? If yes, then you are in the sweet spot. If no, then it may be any of a lot of things holding you back. Like; maybe you do in fact, need more stimulation. Or more rest time in between sets? Is your recovery ok? (no recovery, no gains) With optimal stimulation, Recovery is key. Recovery is always compromised by less than optimal nutrition and a calorie surplus and/or enough restful sleep...
3 sessions per week can be a good program "IF" you are using big compound movements (Squat, Bench, Deadlift, etc...) and this routine is GREAT for building and polishing technique on these movements. But, 3 times a week doing machines, and isolation work is not going to spur on much growth....
Good Luck!
More than I :)
This is what mike mentzer said, the stronger you get the lesser you have to train.
I do approximately 3 hours a week of cardio alongside 3-4 hours a week of weights. Always important to not neglect the heart.
Keep up the good work Mitchell
Peace,
A
Have you ever considered trying super sets but say you do legs, bicep, back and repeat? It will help you on the cardio side too by keeping the heart active without resting too much and you also get muscle training. It's kind of a sweet spot for both if you aren't a pro athlete training for something specific. When you first start this its a little difficult but as you progress like anything else it gets easier. I would do a meso cycle like this then go back to hypertrophy and cardio cycle then do a pure strength cycle with a rest week before the next. So it would be 6 weeks Super set cycle, rest week, hypertrophy 6W, rest, Strength6W, rest and repeat. By the time you start the strength you have a super solid foundation to work with.
When you say 10-15 sets, do you mean per day? Or per week?
It usually per week on a given muscle group. Any more and it is overkill. You arent getting any benefit and at worst, it will kill any gains because you arent giving your muscles proper time to rest, build and get stronger.
You only need 1 set.
1x11,520 at 5 seconds per rep, you're done in a quick 16 hours.
W
BRB, just off down the pub to tell all my mates I work harder in the gym than the worlds strongest man.
I train 25 to 40h a week + 30-40h of work at the home office. But a lot is moving plates, resting for 5-10 minutes between sets, shitting up to 5 times, making some coffee in between, putting on lifting gear and putting it of again, chalk etc etc ^^ and I do a lot o warm up sets. most of the time it takes me 40 minutes to complete 1 exercise,at other times it takes me 1,5h just deadlifting.
👑🦀🍁
...😀
I set of Halo another set of Tren and you're good to go...
Combination of extremely gifted and competing art the perfect time. If mitch competed 10 years ago his rookie year would be very different
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#LHBK
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So tired of guys who lift weights all day talking about lifting weights. It is so annoying I started biking instead of lifting. Rather live longer on a bike than shorten life as an obese strongman.
Just do both. Strong also do conditioning sled pulls, stones walks, the Yoke,... they are fairly good at cardio. It just it is a strength sport require muscles mass, it is their jobs. You are talking like that out of insecurity, like a lifting bro wouldn't talk shit on distance runner because they are skinny and cant lift heavy weight.
How much money do you spend on steroids per month? Crack cocaine is less dangerous than doing test and HGH.
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I can’t stand this guys accent and cadence
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