I had a lot of fun getting creative with some of the graphics in this video and I really hope you guys find it informative! I think this is one of the most commonly misunderstood areas of training/programming, but the science is pretty straightforward. It's also a topic that feels really close to me, as I've had a strong passion for both bodybuilding and powerlifting for over 8 years (before that, I only really cared about bodybuilding). I personally think training is SO much more rewarding when you're not *just* focused on gaining muscle/losing fat/seeing visual improvements, but are also actually getting BETTER at the skill of lifting itself. In my opinion, improving performance should be the goal in the gym, regardless of what you want the outcome to be. Also, let me know if you decide to pick up my new powerbuilding system! I genuinely think it's by far my most comprehensive program to date! If you're an intermediate-advanced level lifter looking for something new to run, check out the program description on my website to see if it's a good fit for you and your goals. Here's the link: jeffnippard.com. Peace!
So what about set volume within the split? Do you think we could add a couple sets of side delts if we know I generally do better with higher rather than lower volume?
Mr. Jeff, I have watched all sorts of training fundamentals videos you made but I have a question, if I am following a full body workout routine, at least 4 times per week, how many total sets should be there in a day's workout. Regardless of what split I follow which has more training frequency, how many sets should be done in a particular training session regardless of muscle group we train. Right now I have super long and fatiguing workout, and I can't train well with this. Please guide me sir
Heh Heh I have that same book "Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning" in my Library left over from college. :) Must be a Kinesiology Staple text. My edition would be an older one though.
Yeah man... and they do this for whatever hobby/profession etc... I'm an audio engineer, the amount of over simplified nonsense "producer tips" is driving me crazy.
I’ve been doing “powerbuilding” type training for years. I came from an athlete background and needed to gain some size while still working on functional lifts for each sport I tried. It’s good to see I had the right idea this whole time. You definitely filled in a few blanks for me. Good stuff man
I never really leave comments on anything. Because it’s just not my community....But Jeff, as a Trainer, as a Human enthusiast, and as a Soul on this planet. I just want to say thank you for your scientific approach, and your patience. You’ve taught me a lot as a Trainer, and your work is MASTERFUL. I know you’ll continue to grow. I just felt Moved to make that known. Thank you again. See you at work one of these days 🤓
Never brought a program anywhere before but i actually consider it right now. Which is like a miracle iny my case because i´m cheap as fuck in that case.
Hey Jeff - the quality of these videos truly are professional grade. They seem so much like your personality I imagine you put them together. Just wanted to say I know how much time and work goes into these and they really are appreciated. You are a craftsmen.
This was a great outline, thank you. I'm 40 and was trying to train like I did in my 20's, this outline has made a significant change in my gains and recovery. Now I'm thinking my lack of gains was due to over training.
What’s so great about Jeff is that even though I learned nothing new as I’ve listened to many podcasts and read many studies, his production is so high that I feel so engaged the whole time. Powerbuilding is definitely my preferred way to train and having Jeff make an awesome video on it is a great thing! Thanks so much man. Will definitely be trying out the program!
I'm running week 6 of his fullbody Program and I can Tell, these are the best gains of my life. Never lifted so much weight, the progression is Crazy and my body changed so much I cant believe It. It really Works. I only wished I had known his Program sooner.
This just shows that there are many approaches to better health, size, and strength. And that finding an approach that works best for YOU is the only approach you should take 💪 Thanks for the info Jeff 👍
this might be the highest quality video i’ve ever seen from you, Jeff! super super impressive, and easily the best powerbuilding video i’ve seen on youtube. freaking awesome seeing you continue to grow as a youtuber, bodybuilder, and powerlifter (and powerbuilder haha)
00:00 Training heavy or light does not significantly impact muscle gain. 01:42 Heavy weights, moderate weights, and light weights can all cause muscle growth. 03:23 Using a structured combination of different rep ranges is important for balanced growth. 05:01 Focus on the big lifts and practice them regularly. 06:36 Including sufficient accessory work is important for power builders 08:17 Periodization helps maximize gains and minimize overtraining in training. 09:51 Combine heavy lifting with light to moderate lifting to achieve size and strength goals. 11:33 Managing recovery and avoiding failure on the big lifts are key for intermediate to advanced trainees.
Actually incredible video man. One of the most informative videos I’ve ever seen on lifting and this literally relates to 95% of all lifters. Great job man.
I do something very similar to this but I mix in accessory work into a 5x5 program. I’ll add 1-3 3x12 sets into the end of my session. For example I’ll add tricep push downs after a bench day or lateral dumbbell raises on overhead press days. It works very well. It saves time and can be super-setted. It works VERY well.
This is exactly what I do. I like to do 5x5 compound work and then toss in exercises like curls, lateral raises, tricep extensions for 3x12-15 at the very end.
I love this video, it breaks barriers on every bodybuilding guide you’ve ever followed. However I cannot stress enough because it was so understated in this video; that you can train as hard and effectively that you possibly can in the gym but if your nutrition is lacking you will not see progress regardless of what you do in the gym.
Started the program early this morning, coming from your full body high-frequency program this is very comfortable! It's a super exciting program I can't wait to see what progress me and others make. Great job Jeff!!!
@@joshanthonygriffin4531 not in detail, it’s suggested to do a 15-20% bulk, and general protein and fat intake but you’ll have to calculate it yourself, he has extensive videos topics discussing nutrition depending on your goal on his channel
I bought your powerbuilding program during preorder and got it last night. I read through it and it's one of the most well thought out programs I've seen. I can't wait to run through it after my current program
I have been doing something similar to this with some influence from greyskull lp. I train a day on, day off style. And do bench, squat and row/weighted pull ups every session using 3x5. This takes about 35-40 minutes including warm ups. I then do 2 movements a day for the 5 missing bodyparts as Jeff called them, I'm absolutely loving it. Just thought I'd put it out there for anyone else to use if they like the sound of it Squat 3x5 Bench 3x5 Row/weighted pull up 3x5 2 accessory movement of your choice for the following bodyparts using 3x8-12 Biceps Traps Rear delts Side delts Calves I don't include lats as a missed bodypart as I do rows/pull ups instead of deadlifts. It works well as I train at home and can make good progress with limited equipment, I have just a rack, bar and then use bands for my accessory work
@@secretagentrandybeans7533 He probably thought you didnt make a lot of gains during those 16 years, rather than the gains you make year on year as youre reaching or reached your natural limit
Very comprehensive approach. I’ve tested all your programs, and they all helped me progress throughout my years of lifting. I’m sure this one will be amazing!
Just do PPL 2x a week. First workouts are strength focused and second are hypertrophy. I’ve been doing this and it works very well. My lifts have been going up every week.
Formerly obese guy here. 31 years old. 5'10". I used to weigh 305lbs sophomore year of high school (heaviest) until I developed an eating disorder and starved myself to 170 by my Junior year. Since then I've had a rollercoaster of a journey. P90X/Insanity was the gateway that taught me not to starve myself, but I was left with loose skin and started learning about bulking muscles to "fill the gaps." Yet I strayed from hypertrophy and always cared more about strength (ego lifting) which always fried my CNS and led to constant overtraining and subsequently, another "rebound." On to my point: JEFF, I wish I had your amazing videos to guide me through all the counterproductive bro-science back in the day. After losing my greatest mentor and 2nd father figure this last month, a new fire has been lit inside me. I find myself watching your videos before, during and after my lifts. I'm commenting now while waiting for my pre workout to kick in... All this to say. I'VE NEVER TAKEN SO MANY SCREENSHOTS in my life, hahah. I'm not in the best financial situation in my life, but once I saw the included spreadsheets in this program, I knew it was right for me and I'm going to buy it. You deserve every penny and more. I always forget the %s and tbh, the #s I was putting up a week or two before. So this seems like the perfect pocket assistant. THANK YOU!! Sincerely. Anyone else still reading, keep up the good work and always compare yourself to YOURSELF. Keep striving to be your best self. You'll get there.
I called myself a "powerbuilder" for years, but slowly transitioned to "powerlifter" of the last 2 years. I got your new powerbuilding system so lets see if I can see great muscle and strength gains.
@@Belovedthegreat My maxes before the program were 315 squat, 245 bench, 365 deadlift and when I finished they were 410 squat, 315 bench, 505 deadlift. I was mostly regaining strength that I lost but they are all still PRs.
So I used to work in construction, and I never worked out because my job kept me in fairly good shape (Roofing and stonework). Two years ago I changed careers dramatically; I became a cook. Since then I've gained at least 40 lbs. and worse than that Ive lost a considerable amount of muscle mass. I never learned how to workout because I never needed to. You just inspired me to get my ass in a gym and get my body back, and then some. Thanks. This is easily the best explanation of weight training I have ever seen. Absolutely smashed that subscribe & like.
@@youandiarelikemybuttcheeks2051 I'm gaining strength and decent amount of muscle but now I'm on 10-8 percent body fat which is making my progress slow but I look good and feel good , I'm thinking about lean bulk without gaining fat so I have increased 250 calories above my maintenance , I'm following push pull leg kind of split so I'm feeling quiet well then of bro split, I'm doing better then my other gym bros
Coath Blaha maxes out every day. Good consistent form, load/fatigue management and a calm state of mind is how you can max out regularly without getting hurt.
I must say, this is the second video I have watched of Jeff's and the camera skills and editing is top notch! It keeps the viewer engaged with the video really well.
I’ve always found just doing a bit of both works great for me. Say I’m doing bench, I’d do 3 sets of 8 at a lower weight, then I’d do 5x5 at a mid range weight and finally 2-3 sets ranging from 2-3 reps at a heavy weight. Lotta work but it’s great for me and it’s still enjoyable.
Hey Jeff, just kicked off week 2 of your 4 day powerbuilding program. Really enjoying it so far and strength is already coming back quickly on my SBD (which admittedly I've neglected for ages). It's helped me find my motivation again after just going through the motions with typical bro split style training the last year or so.
Damn you’re hittin me with a lot of condensed knowledge and I’m lovin it! I don’t usually subscribe to fitness people but your videos are concise, not clickbait, backed by science, AND look fantastically edited. Hits all the high notes chief. *chef kiss*
There’s nothing wrong with this vid in of itself but Jeff should really start promoting Conjugate. It allows you to do high volume high intensity at the same time because using different variations of a lift reduces injury risk from overuse. It also brings up weak links like if you’re good at the flat barbell bench but not dumbbell, close grip, incline, swiss bar, pin or floor press. Watch Alpha Destiny’s video on maxing out weekly from a couple months ago, he was on the channel doing a bench off with Jeff a few years ago. Another thing is that I think Jeff is still separating size and strength a bit. In this vid he emphasizes that you can build muscle at rep range but the research that shows that isn’t using advanced lifters as in people who have been training properly for 5-10 years. If all that mattered was volume then doing 20 reps is better than doing 12-10. Example having a 1 RM of 315 and you do 12 reps of 220 that’s 2640 of volume. 20 reps of 189 is 3780. 30 reps of 157.5 would be 4725. Any of us who have gotten past the novice stage knows this isn’t true If we understand that at least 70% intensity is optimal for less advanced lifters then why wouldn’t higher intensity be optimal for advanced? And that’s exactly what we see. Even with max intensity like maxing out 2 a week advanced lifters still take a year to add 10-20 pounds to a lift. People who don’t do higher intensity and or conjugate tend to stagnate like Will Tennyson and Jesse James West for example. Jesse showed 340 bench a few months back and hasn’t moved from that far as we know. He did a handful of 315 reps against Brandon Walsh. Will showed a smooth 330 6 months ago and in his last maxing out vid he was struggling to put up 325. Higher frequency could help them but at some point they need to take the real next step. This goes back to the whole RPE/RIR debate. Greg Doucette is right in that if you just stick to their type of training you need to leave 0 reps in the tank to make better gains but if you were doing the proper balance of volume/intensity for your experience level then most of us need to leave reps in the tank on most sets to avoid fatigue If you’re still confused about how size and strength end up correlating long term it’s because past the novice stage 90% of your strength is from how much muscle you have. A “bodybuilder” who decides to start lifting heavy could go from 315 to 350 in a month from neurological gains but after that they aren’t getting stronger without gaining muscle. AD has 2 good vids titled Just Get Strong and Max Strength=Max Size
Thanks Jeff, although gyms are closed in my area, I am glad I can get my 'gym fix' from watching your videos. Working out at home is just not the same sadly.
Man I'm so thankful mine's open and masks are only required entering and exiting. Told my trainer if masks were gonna be fully required I'd go back to lifting at home. I couldn't breathe in that crap working out. Have a feeling the owner at least somewhat feels the same.
clamum tbh at this piont I’m grateful to be able to train so even if I had to wear mask I wouldn’t mind mine doesn’t make us but Yh but if u have home gym that makes sense it’s annoying af but there are worse things in life
@@pats9435 Yeah I personally think the whole thing has been vastly overblown (I'm very critical of any hysteria) but that's a separate thing. I just personally can't breathe that well just wearing one in a store, there's no way I could wear one working out, breathing hard doing lunges and whatnot. I don't have a home gym, just a inclining bench and six dumbells and a band set, but I'd immediately go back to that if they required masks, as much as I'd hate it.
I found this to be great. My coach did exactly this. I work out 5 days a week so we went with 2x str days with 8 reps per activity groups of 4. Two Hypertrophy days with higher reps of 15 reps groups of 3-4 sets and one day of 5 sets of 10 with rest times similar to Hypertrophy.
One recommendation I have heard (purely intuitive, I am certain), is to use low reps for compound, CNS heavy movements like Deadlift, Squat, Bench Press and Cleans and use the 8-15 rep range for the isolation movements where mind-muscle connection is more important
I love how you explain everything so thoroughly and I love the use of graphs and charts. Fantastic page and one of my favorite RUclips page on weightlifting.
I love the effort you put into these, man! A.1. Currently running the full body high frequency one (which is amazing btw), but definitely gonna jump on this as soon I’m done!
I've been in to 4x 10-12 rep for body building which took 45-60 minutes in the gym but switched roughly 25 years ago to 3x5 because of TIME in the gym. Its worked for me occasionally adding 3/4x 10-12 protocol
Great vid Jeff! Currently on week 3 of your fundamentals program and I love how you explain the science behind all of your practices and why you do things a certain way.
I wish I found Jeff 6 years ago when I first started working out. Now six years later... having to restart again after learning all the right ways to better myself. Trusting the process. Back to beginner level lifts
Great information, basic and clear explanations on this video. Couple of things that would be great to mention: A beginner will see strength and size gains pretty much doing anything, but it only takes you so far before you need a more structured program. You can change up sets to make training more interesting by doing clusters, pyramids etc I personally like doing Olympic lifts as a leg/shoulder day due to the technical side of it. But this leans heavily to power development instead of strength and hypertrophy. Also anyone with tendon problems in your knees, a great exercise is heavy single leg leg press. Using both legs to return the weight to the starting position of the lift. It has worked really well for me. It was recommended to me by Luke Taylor (football association of Wales/Oxford Brookes University S&C lecturer & coach).
Absolute quality video. Had to watch this at least 4 times just to soak up the information. Very detailed and we'll articulated and also so helpful. Im struggling with fatigue. This video pointed out that I'm not setting my rep range and that I'm always pushing to failure in every exercise I do. My recovery has obviously took a beating for this approach. So thanks for such a detailed video.
You dont know how much I needed this vid. Started ax-1 back in december 2019 and wanted to finish it and meet my goals while I fixed my diet. Recently just got back at the gym and wanted to powerlift but I still have a couple ppunds to finally lose but I really want strength. Im on week 3 today and for the past 2 weeks ive been following the program and adding a compound movement if not added on the date. Example ( Friday was pull and had only 2 back excercises and biceps to failure but added deadlifts 5x5 and hit 315 again) so i thoight of following program and adding powertlifting in it without overdoing it. This really helps
I just finished half of the video but i am already 'suprised' about the quality of your content ... again. Started watching your videos a couple of years ago befor i finished school and it helped me a lot for writing my own powerbuilding programms and generally train, eat and 'be' better. Now i'm studying Human Factors and Sports Engeneering and started educating myself more and more about the human physiology ... Nevermind, i just wanted to say that from my modest point of view, your videos are always a pleasure to watch and they help me a lot. Especially for my CrossFit coaches training... Yes i switched from powerbuilding to crossfit.
one thing i really love about your videos jeff, is that they are so easy to understand and digest, despite being shown so many studies and other data. thanks a lot!
This is why I chose to go for 8 reps on the compound lifts. I did that and started seeing strength gains and hypertrophy gains. When I was just doing Hypertrophy the strength gains were a struggle. Was doing 10 to 12 reps but at a much lower weight.
Man you explained this so amazingly, I'm just starting to lift and this really helped me start especially building strength and size at the same time 👑
I've run his power building 1.0 program twice now and can honestly say it's the best program I've ever done. Also, the strength gains were insane for my squat and deadlift.
Jeff has dedicated his life and time to finding the science behind bodybuilding, and spreading the research for all of our benefits, this is amazing dude
I've read some thoughts that lifting in the 80% of max for the moment (taking accrued fatigue into consideration) is where maximal muscle fiber recruitment happens triggering increased muscle protein synthesis. Do you have any thoughts on the use of cluster sets for both strength and hypertrophic training simultaneously?
Also read about it not long ago in an article from Christian Thibaudeau iirc. Each rep ups the intensity by 2% and the lifter should count only the reps executed at +80% as optimal (muscle recruitment wise). In my extremely humble opinion, Clusters are an amazing tool in this regard, since you can keep the intensity considerably high at moderate to high reps, which covers many bases. Don't actualy know its limitations, though. As everything in the world, nothing is all good lol
@@antonioschmidt4105 that is the exact article I read. I just finished a 4 week block focusing only on deads, squat, bench, and push press. Being in a caloric deficit right now I didn't want to push the stress too high. Even in a deficit my weight has stayed at about 215 to 220 depending on carb intake for the day, aaaaand the weight belt is now one notch looser than before. Definitely going to be revisiting this plan
The trick to getting bigger and stronger is to achieve more reps and weight without over training. you can't go from doing 1 top set to 5 top sets in one workout. you have to slowly add more volume when you aren't making strength gains and lessen the time in between workouts slowly. train heavy once a week. then train once heavy and once moderate in a ten day cycle. then train once heavy and twice moderate in a twelve day cycle. then train once heavy and once moderate in a eight day cycle. then train once heavy and twice moderate in a ten day cycle. as you do this start with one top set on your heavy day and 2-3 top set/drop set on your moderate days. then slowly make this more difficult like one top set one drop set on heavy day.... 3-4 top set/drop sets on your moderate days. also remember on moderate day multi top/drop sets you should only rest about a minute between sets and on heavy days fully rest till maximum strength 4-7 minutes depending on compound movement. another thing i see almost nobody doing is sitting in between heavy compound movements. if you are standing in between sets of squatting while warming up it is gonna make your top set way weaker than it would be if you were sitting down and resting in between sets. in case this was confusing i only do full body workouts. except when training moderately I do little to no back and leg work. also if your life gets busy or you feel lazy you really only need to train heavy once every two to three weeks to maintain size.
a family member mocked me so damn bad about strength that now I'm insecure of my weakness. i want to be stronger to protect my family during dangers now💪🏼
Really just wanted to drop a shout out of pure genuine appreciation for all of the information you present for us! Your videos are over top on quality, your focus on the science seems second to none. Thanks man!
This man is the reason lifting is deadass a sport the way you explained it makes it very complicated I did not know so much wind into it a lot of people are just like well it’s just lifting weights with sporty about that until you consider all of this information that is both typical the process and digest
0:45 And this has lead to a flurry of Instagram infographics featuring a mixture of furry art and jacked Rick & Morty characters and no one can tell why
@@altofant Agreed the one I saw was Strength was a picture of a man and Hypertrophy was a picture of a jacked to the Hilt Werewolf which looked cool but was stupid.
So much incredible information, guys like this always push us when we feel despair or lost in this journey of body building and better physique, Thankyou
I had a lot of fun getting creative with some of the graphics in this video and I really hope you guys find it informative! I think this is one of the most commonly misunderstood areas of training/programming, but the science is pretty straightforward. It's also a topic that feels really close to me, as I've had a strong passion for both bodybuilding and powerlifting for over 8 years (before that, I only really cared about bodybuilding). I personally think training is SO much more rewarding when you're not *just* focused on gaining muscle/losing fat/seeing visual improvements, but are also actually getting BETTER at the skill of lifting itself. In my opinion, improving performance should be the goal in the gym, regardless of what you want the outcome to be.
Also, let me know if you decide to pick up my new powerbuilding system! I genuinely think it's by far my most comprehensive program to date! If you're an intermediate-advanced level lifter looking for something new to run, check out the program description on my website to see if it's a good fit for you and your goals. Here's the link: jeffnippard.com. Peace!
So what about set volume within the split? Do you think we could add a couple sets of side delts if we know I generally do better with higher rather than lower volume?
Started the program this morning💪👍🏻
Mr. Jeff, I have watched all sorts of training fundamentals videos you made but I have a question, if I am following a full body workout routine, at least 4 times per week, how many total sets should be there in a day's workout. Regardless of what split I follow which has more training frequency, how many sets should be done in a particular training session regardless of muscle group we train. Right now I have super long and fatiguing workout, and I can't train well with this. Please guide me sir
Best email of the week :) I
Heh Heh I have that same book "Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning" in my Library left over from college. :) Must be a Kinesiology Staple text. My edition would be an older one though.
Jeff Nippard is the guy who brushes his teeth with perfect, science backed form.
also knows the spelling too.
@@Dante-xf1mu lmao that’s filthy😭
@@ny_4710 he was wrong for that 🤦🏼♂️😂
you don't? base to tip at a 45° angle. back of the teeth first
this is real advice
Lol. But whats the science behind "sience"🤔🤔
How is this free, honestly? This is incredible.
I thought it was obvious, they make the money from these videos of course, probably more than if they put it behind the paywall.
bro do you know how much money he makes from these videos xD
Even put almost complte week program for free
It’s not bodybuilding can get very expensive once u get started
If you aren't paying for it... Then you are the product
So glad you pointed out those Instagram posts. They piss me off so much with the over simplified “do-this/not-that” points
Those are for the normies
Colvin?
@@joshwilliams6517 doesn't mean they're helpful or correct
Felix Saul don’t speak to me boy
Yeah man... and they do this for whatever hobby/profession etc... I'm an audio engineer, the amount of over simplified nonsense "producer tips" is driving me crazy.
I’ve been doing “powerbuilding” type training for years. I came from an athlete background and needed to gain some size while still working on functional lifts for each sport I tried. It’s good to see I had the right idea this whole time. You definitely filled in a few blanks for me. Good stuff man
Did you buy the power building program?
@@kingkailie. i did
@@dylankunz7807 can u share it
im also same like u, so whats the best way of training according to u
@@卄卂卂乂 train heavy compounds first, then add in isolation supersets for hypertrophy. A stronger muscle has the potential to be a bigger muscle.
I never really leave comments on anything. Because it’s just not my community....But Jeff, as a Trainer, as a Human enthusiast, and as a Soul on this planet. I just want to say thank you for your scientific approach, and your patience. You’ve taught me a lot as a Trainer, and your work is MASTERFUL. I know you’ll continue to grow. I just felt Moved to make that known. Thank you again. See you at work one of these days 🤓
This is shot so well, quality is next level. I bought the program and can’t wait to run it, glad all your hard work paid off Jeff!
Agree, this was a very high quality video, both in the content and production quality.
Thanks a lot man!! And I appreciate that! Best of luck with it 🤜🏼
Never brought a program anywhere before but i actually consider it right now. Which is like a miracle iny my case because i´m cheap as fuck in that case.
@@TylerDurden-td2yg jeff just punched a buyer in fronf of our eyes, be carefull mate
Also just got the program after running RP's Male Physique twice. Looking forward to seeing how it compares!
"E'rrybody wanna be a bodybuilder but don't nobody want to lift no heavy ass weights"- Ronnie Coleman aka black Jesus
@@sethw7399 Highly respected by many in the industry as one of the greatest, if not the greatest athlete in his sport? Yeah, good point
@@sethw7399 That's why no one will remember your name
“Aka real Jesus” -Dom mazzetti
@@jackhultstrand8673 i was hoping someone responded that
*walks* on water
Hey Jeff - the quality of these videos truly are professional grade. They seem so much like your personality I imagine you put them together. Just wanted to say I know how much time and work goes into these and they really are appreciated. You are a craftsmen.
This was a great outline, thank you. I'm 40 and was trying to train like I did in my 20's, this outline has made a significant change in my gains and recovery. Now I'm thinking my lack of gains was due to over training.
it’s been 6 months, how’s your progress
@@smashb3766 how the hell did you find his Facebook lol
@@smashb3766 he did
@@imjustherewastaken word like wtf . How u even find dat
me when i spread misinformation online :3
“As long as you train sufficiently hard.”
Somewhere out there, coach Greg is smiling and thanking God for answering his prayers
You mean Doctor Greg the guy with a medical degree and is a doctor?
@@loozer9598 he can certainly be both can't he?
@@loozer9598 no he eans Greg Douchette
@@saltyavocado403 Yeah that's who I'm talking about. Dr. Greg Douchette the Douche.
Jeff has already acknowledged that Greg’s initial commentary had merit. I don’t know that this is a thing any more.
What’s so great about Jeff is that even though I learned nothing new as I’ve listened to many podcasts and read many studies, his production is so high that I feel so engaged the whole time. Powerbuilding is definitely my preferred way to train and having Jeff make an awesome video on it is a great thing! Thanks so much man. Will definitely be trying out the program!
That’s how I train too but this video is top notch
Jeff’s biggest muscle has to be his brain, after all the years of research
But it's not a muscle 😪
But he flexes with it all the time soo...
Love this comment
@@octane8872 This is not what the mighty Thor Odison said.
And Hybrid Calisthenics is his heart
What a great video. Cheers Jeff 💯👍
Had to come back here and say it is true. My strength has increased. I’ve curled 70lbs dumbbells today. 🤯Thanks mate
I'm running week 6 of his fullbody Program and I can Tell, these are the best gains of my life. Never lifted so much weight, the progression is Crazy and my body changed so much I cant believe It. It really Works. I only wished I had known his Program sooner.
This just shows that there are many approaches to better health, size, and strength. And that finding an approach that works best for YOU is the only approach you should take 💪 Thanks for the info Jeff 👍
Jeff
@@jeffreycamper6189 true
this might be the highest quality video i’ve ever seen from you, Jeff! super super impressive, and easily the best powerbuilding video i’ve seen on youtube. freaking awesome seeing you continue to grow as a youtuber, bodybuilder, and powerlifter (and powerbuilder haha)
Dude is so humble about everything he talks about, good info and obviously he practices what he preaches, and no ego....I just subbed!
00:00 Training heavy or light does not significantly impact muscle gain.
01:42 Heavy weights, moderate weights, and light weights can all cause muscle growth.
03:23 Using a structured combination of different rep ranges is important for balanced growth.
05:01 Focus on the big lifts and practice them regularly.
06:36 Including sufficient accessory work is important for power builders
08:17 Periodization helps maximize gains and minimize overtraining in training.
09:51 Combine heavy lifting with light to moderate lifting to achieve size and strength goals.
11:33 Managing recovery and avoiding failure on the big lifts are key for intermediate to advanced trainees.
TIMING, PERFECT TIMING.
the fact that he actually knows what hes talking about and knows the science is amazingly helpful
Actually incredible video man. One of the most informative videos I’ve ever seen on lifting and this literally relates to 95% of all lifters. Great job man.
he puts so much work into his content like, a ridiculous amount of work. i love this guy
I do something very similar to this but I mix in accessory work into a 5x5 program. I’ll add 1-3 3x12 sets into the end of my session. For example I’ll add tricep push downs after a bench day or lateral dumbbell raises on overhead press days. It works very well. It saves time and can be super-setted. It works VERY well.
This is exactly what I do. I like to do 5x5 compound work and then toss in exercises like curls, lateral raises, tricep extensions for 3x12-15 at the very end.
I love this video, it breaks barriers on every bodybuilding guide you’ve ever followed.
However I cannot stress enough because it was so understated in this video; that you can train as hard and effectively that you possibly can in the gym but if your nutrition is lacking you will not see progress regardless of what you do in the gym.
that’s not true
Started the program early this morning, coming from your full body high-frequency program this is very comfortable! It's a super exciting program I can't wait to see what progress me and others make. Great job Jeff!!!
@@joshanthonygriffin4531 not in detail, it’s suggested to do a 15-20% bulk, and general protein and fat intake but you’ll have to calculate it yourself, he has extensive videos topics discussing nutrition depending on your goal on his channel
How were the gains from the full body frequency program ?
I bought your powerbuilding program during preorder and got it last night. I read through it and it's one of the most well thought out programs I've seen. I can't wait to run through it after my current program
How’d it work for you?
@@stinkysanchez4271 haven't ran it yet
@@jtsandig how about now?
Perhaps the most erudite, practical, relavent and accurate channel on the internet. PURE GOLD and exemplary of excellence.
I have been doing something similar to this with some influence from greyskull lp. I train a day on, day off style. And do bench, squat and row/weighted pull ups every session using 3x5. This takes about 35-40 minutes including warm ups. I then do 2 movements a day for the 5 missing bodyparts as Jeff called them, I'm absolutely loving it. Just thought I'd put it out there for anyone else to use if they like the sound of it
Squat 3x5
Bench 3x5
Row/weighted pull up 3x5
2 accessory movement of your choice for the following bodyparts using 3x8-12
Biceps
Traps
Rear delts
Side delts
Calves
I don't include lats as a missed bodypart as I do rows/pull ups instead of deadlifts.
It works well as I train at home and can make good progress with limited equipment, I have just a rack, bar and then use bands for my accessory work
what do you increase more in, strength or hypertrophy? Or is it more of an even balance?
@@bobbob-kw9qo after 16 years of training as a natural, not a lot of either haha
@@secretagentrandybeans7533 why would you recommend your routine on the Internet if it doesn't work.
@@bobbob-kw9qo hit me back after you've been training hard for 16 years and tell me how much progress you make year on year
@@secretagentrandybeans7533 He probably thought you didnt make a lot of gains during those 16 years, rather than the gains you make year on year as youre reaching or reached your natural limit
Very comprehensive approach. I’ve tested all your programs, and they all helped me progress throughout my years of lifting. I’m sure this one will be amazing!
E'rrybody wants to deadlift heavy ass weights but don't nobody wants to die.
Forget deadlifts those squats are gonna flatten me
@@alaaeddinearnaout5723 ye squats kill me more than deadlifts. 🥴
@@catedoge3206 deadlifts are gae
@@dotdashdotdash big facts
@@alaaeddinearnaout5723 squats are more grindy but so much more satisfying when you execute that rep
Just do PPL 2x a week. First workouts are strength focused and second are hypertrophy. I’ve been doing this and it works very well. My lifts have been going up every week.
I would recommend upper/lower and mix rep ranges instead of strength/ hypertrophy focused workouts
@@ihaab4225 So, 1st day of Lower Body would be 5-8 and the next 8-12 Reps?? Is that what you’re saying?????
Ima try upper/lower/upper/lower/upper/lower split
My legs are tiny 😓🤣
Formerly obese guy here. 31 years old. 5'10". I used to weigh 305lbs sophomore year of high school (heaviest) until I developed an eating disorder and starved myself to 170 by my Junior year. Since then I've had a rollercoaster of a journey. P90X/Insanity was the gateway that taught me not to starve myself, but I was left with loose skin and started learning about bulking muscles to "fill the gaps." Yet I strayed from hypertrophy and always cared more about strength (ego lifting) which always fried my CNS and led to constant overtraining and subsequently, another "rebound."
On to my point: JEFF, I wish I had your amazing videos to guide me through all the counterproductive bro-science back in the day. After losing my greatest mentor and 2nd father figure this last month, a new fire has been lit inside me. I find myself watching your videos before, during and after my lifts. I'm commenting now while waiting for my pre workout to kick in...
All this to say. I'VE NEVER TAKEN SO MANY SCREENSHOTS in my life, hahah. I'm not in the best financial situation in my life, but once I saw the included spreadsheets in this program, I knew it was right for me and I'm going to buy it. You deserve every penny and more. I always forget the %s and tbh, the #s I was putting up a week or two before. So this seems like the perfect pocket assistant.
THANK YOU!!
Sincerely.
Anyone else still reading, keep up the good work and always compare yourself to YOURSELF. Keep striving to be your best self. You'll get there.
Top sets are best way to program power building, I’ve tried it, it works
We need more guys like Jeff in the industry
Awesome video. I absolutely love Jeff’s breakdowns. It fits my learning mentality and it encourages me to do more. Keep it up man.
I called myself a "powerbuilder" for years, but slowly transitioned to "powerlifter" of the last 2 years. I got your new powerbuilding system so lets see if I can see great muscle and strength gains.
How’s it going for you?
@@Belovedthegreat My maxes before the program were 315 squat, 245 bench, 365 deadlift and when I finished they were 410 squat, 315 bench, 505 deadlift. I was mostly regaining strength that I lost but they are all still PRs.
@@deathleaperd1 drop the split broo 🥺
So I used to work in construction, and I never worked out because my job kept me in fairly good shape (Roofing and stonework). Two years ago I changed careers dramatically; I became a cook. Since then I've gained at least 40 lbs. and worse than that Ive lost a considerable amount of muscle mass. I never learned how to workout because I never needed to. You just inspired me to get my ass in a gym and get my body back, and then some. Thanks. This is easily the best explanation of weight training I have ever seen. Absolutely smashed that subscribe & like.
This is the best pogram I've ever done. The powerbuilding mentallity really shifted the way I see fitness. Thanks Jeff
Look up Alpha Destiny
I've always been doing this.. the first 2 exercises are always strength and the rest is hypertrophy.
I do reverse pyramid first 2 heavy set for strength and next 2-3 for hypertrophy
How’s your progress and what do you think of bulking?
@@youandiarelikemybuttcheeks2051 I'm gaining strength and decent amount of muscle but now I'm on 10-8 percent body fat which is making my progress slow but I look good and feel good , I'm thinking about lean bulk without gaining fat so I have increased 250 calories above my maintenance , I'm following push pull leg kind of split so I'm feeling quiet well then of bro split, I'm doing better then my other gym bros
I do the same
I’ve been doing this as well for the last year and a half or so. Massive gains
Jeff: 4:52
Bros who max out on bench everyday: *Angry rotator cuff noises*
dont forget the collar bone noises too
Coath Blaha maxes out every day. Good consistent form, load/fatigue management and a calm state of mind is how you can max out regularly without getting hurt.
I see you in every comment section and wanted to say that I love the content, keep it up Natural Hypertrophy
@@PendlayRoe he was talking about gym bros, so there is no optimal programming
Balls to the wall?!
I must say, this is the second video I have watched of Jeff's and the camera skills and editing is top notch! It keeps the viewer engaged with the video really well.
I think it'd be cool if there's a "streetlifting" variant of this. The weighted pull-up, weighted dip, and squat align nicely with push pull legs too
honestly THE best fitness youtuber. Real informational content supported by scientific evidence, great video quality.
Great job Jeff! I love that you bring more of the nuance around training to light. Super informative!
I’ve always found just doing a bit of both works great for me. Say I’m doing bench, I’d do 3 sets of 8 at a lower weight, then I’d do 5x5 at a mid range weight and finally 2-3 sets ranging from 2-3 reps at a heavy weight. Lotta work but it’s great for me and it’s still enjoyable.
How much time?
Hey Jeff, just kicked off week 2 of your 4 day powerbuilding program. Really enjoying it so far and strength is already coming back quickly on my SBD (which admittedly I've neglected for ages). It's helped me find my motivation again after just going through the motions with typical bro split style training the last year or so.
Really appreciate channels like yours that cite studies and sources
Damn you’re hittin me with a lot of condensed knowledge and I’m lovin it! I don’t usually subscribe to fitness people but your videos are concise, not clickbait, backed by science, AND look fantastically edited. Hits all the high notes chief.
*chef kiss*
There’s nothing wrong with this vid in of itself but Jeff should really start promoting Conjugate. It allows you to do high volume high intensity at the same time because using different variations of a lift reduces injury risk from overuse. It also brings up weak links like if you’re good at the flat barbell bench but not dumbbell, close grip, incline, swiss bar, pin or floor press. Watch Alpha Destiny’s video on maxing out weekly from a couple months ago, he was on the channel doing a bench off with Jeff a few years ago. Another thing is that I think Jeff is still separating size and strength a bit. In this vid he emphasizes that you can build muscle at rep range but the research that shows that isn’t using advanced lifters as in people who have been training properly for 5-10 years. If all that mattered was volume then doing 20 reps is better than doing 12-10. Example having a 1 RM of 315 and you do 12 reps of 220 that’s 2640 of volume. 20 reps of 189 is 3780. 30 reps of 157.5 would be 4725. Any of us who have gotten past the novice stage knows this isn’t true
If we understand that at least 70% intensity is optimal for less advanced lifters then why wouldn’t higher intensity be optimal for advanced? And that’s exactly what we see. Even with max intensity like maxing out 2 a week advanced lifters still take a year to add 10-20 pounds to a lift. People who don’t do higher intensity and or conjugate tend to stagnate like Will Tennyson and Jesse James West for example. Jesse showed 340 bench a few months back and hasn’t moved from that far as we know. He did a handful of 315 reps against Brandon Walsh. Will showed a smooth 330 6 months ago and in his last maxing out vid he was struggling to put up 325. Higher frequency could help them but at some point they need to take the real next step. This goes back to the whole RPE/RIR debate. Greg Doucette is right in that if you just stick to their type of training you need to leave 0 reps in the tank to make better gains but if you were doing the proper balance of volume/intensity for your experience level then most of us need to leave reps in the tank on most sets to avoid fatigue
If you’re still confused about how size and strength end up correlating long term it’s because past the novice stage 90% of your strength is from how much muscle you have. A “bodybuilder” who decides to start lifting heavy could go from 315 to 350 in a month from neurological gains but after that they aren’t getting stronger without gaining muscle. AD has 2 good vids titled Just Get Strong and Max Strength=Max Size
Thanks Jeff, although gyms are closed in my area, I am glad I can get my 'gym fix' from watching your videos. Working out at home is just not the same sadly.
I hope you keep the itch for Training ain whatever form ? Keep going strong
Where do u live? That sucks
Man I'm so thankful mine's open and masks are only required entering and exiting. Told my trainer if masks were gonna be fully required I'd go back to lifting at home. I couldn't breathe in that crap working out. Have a feeling the owner at least somewhat feels the same.
clamum tbh at this piont I’m grateful to be able to train so even if I had to wear mask I wouldn’t mind mine doesn’t make us but Yh but if u have home gym that makes sense it’s annoying af but there are worse things in life
@@pats9435 Yeah I personally think the whole thing has been vastly overblown (I'm very critical of any hysteria) but that's a separate thing. I just personally can't breathe that well just wearing one in a store, there's no way I could wear one working out, breathing hard doing lunges and whatnot.
I don't have a home gym, just a inclining bench and six dumbells and a band set, but I'd immediately go back to that if they required masks, as much as I'd hate it.
Every Jeff Nippard video has such a high replay potential. I think I’ve watched this vid alone at least 20 times
Yeah same. Theres so much useful information in one vieeo
How tf is this info free to us
Because the poster is an absolute giga short king 💪
Because he's making money from indirect sales. He's still greedy
@@Sfaruk91lol
Internet
@@Sfaruk91everyone’s gotta make money bud
One of the few people in the fitness industry who actually uses science and studies and comes with an unbiased approach, great videos!
One of the most authentic channel on RUclips.... keep helping me Jeff
This is literally the best fitness video i've seen in years.
Top notch planning, periodization and exercising insights
I found this to be great. My coach did exactly this. I work out 5 days a week so we went with 2x str days with 8 reps per activity groups of 4. Two Hypertrophy days with higher reps of 15 reps groups of 3-4 sets and one day of 5 sets of 10 with rest times similar to Hypertrophy.
One recommendation I have heard (purely intuitive, I am certain), is to use low reps for compound, CNS heavy movements like Deadlift, Squat, Bench Press and Cleans and use the 8-15 rep range for the isolation movements where mind-muscle connection is more important
Best fitness channel on RUclips
The people who put your videos together should be paid 3 times what they are getting now. The production quality is of the highest.
Damn Jeff, thats some top notch quality right there
A T-shirt with the words "I train sufficiently hard" is in my future
Did you got the shirt?
Did you get the shirt? Or did you put it on your seven-thousandth twenty-third yellow jacket?
Omg amazing 👌💪
And we need a vlog about how to gain musle and strength with body weight ( push up / pull up / dips ) thank you 😘💪💪
This is one of the best overall channels I have found on RUclips. Entertaining, but also so informative. No Bro science.
That's some insane knowledge..but I also want to appreciate that handwriting ,super clean and clear 😁
I love how you explain everything so thoroughly and I love the use of graphs and charts. Fantastic page and one of my favorite RUclips page on weightlifting.
I love the effort you put into these, man! A.1. Currently running the full body high frequency one (which is amazing btw), but definitely gonna jump on this as soon I’m done!
I've been in to 4x 10-12 rep for body building which took 45-60 minutes in the gym but switched roughly 25 years ago to 3x5 because of TIME in the gym. Its worked for me occasionally adding 3/4x 10-12 protocol
Your content is gold. Your personality is killer. You're probably my favorite lift channel.
man jeff nippard is the only person i come to for gym advice and knowledge. no others compare
Great vid Jeff! Currently on week 3 of your fundamentals program and I love how you explain the science behind all of your practices and why you do things a certain way.
Jeff is back!💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾
The GOAT!
My guy!
Bro Jeff is such a convincing alternate personality that I sometimes forget it’s the same guy
The fact that this info is free is awesome, thanks Jeff.
I wish I found Jeff 6 years ago when I first started working out. Now six years later... having to restart again after learning all the right ways to better myself. Trusting the process. Back to beginner level lifts
Great information, basic and clear explanations on this video. Couple of things that would be great to mention:
A beginner will see strength and size gains pretty much doing anything, but it only takes you so far before you need a more structured program.
You can change up sets to make training more interesting by doing clusters, pyramids etc
I personally like doing Olympic lifts as a leg/shoulder day due to the technical side of it. But this leans heavily to power development instead of strength and hypertrophy.
Also anyone with tendon problems in your knees, a great exercise is heavy single leg leg press. Using both legs to return the weight to the starting position of the lift. It has worked really well for me. It was recommended to me by Luke Taylor (football association of Wales/Oxford Brookes University S&C lecturer & coach).
Absolute quality video. Had to watch this at least 4 times just to soak up the information. Very detailed and we'll articulated and also so helpful.
Im struggling with fatigue. This video pointed out that I'm not setting my rep range and that I'm always pushing to failure in every exercise I do. My recovery has obviously took a beating for this approach. So thanks for such a detailed video.
You dont know how much I needed this vid. Started ax-1 back in december 2019 and wanted to finish it and meet my goals while I fixed my diet. Recently just got back at the gym and wanted to powerlift but I still have a couple ppunds to finally lose but I really want strength. Im on week 3 today and for the past 2 weeks ive been following the program and adding a compound movement if not added on the date. Example ( Friday was pull and had only 2 back excercises and biceps to failure but added deadlifts 5x5 and hit 315 again) so i thoight of following program and adding powertlifting in it without overdoing it. This really helps
I just finished half of the video but i am already 'suprised' about the quality of your content ... again. Started watching your videos a couple of years ago befor i finished school and it helped me a lot for writing my own powerbuilding programms and generally train, eat and 'be' better.
Now i'm studying Human Factors and Sports Engeneering and started educating myself more and more about the human physiology ...
Nevermind, i just wanted to say that from my modest point of view, your videos are always a pleasure to watch and they help me a lot.
Especially for my CrossFit coaches training... Yes i switched from powerbuilding to crossfit.
one thing i really love about your videos jeff, is that they are so easy to understand and digest, despite being shown so many studies and other data. thanks a lot!
This is why I chose to go for 8 reps on the compound lifts. I did that and started seeing strength gains and hypertrophy gains. When I was just doing Hypertrophy the strength gains were a struggle. Was doing 10 to 12 reps but at a much lower weight.
Man you explained this so amazingly, I'm just starting to lift and this really helped me start especially building strength and size at the same time 👑
I've run his power building 1.0 program twice now and can honestly say it's the best program I've ever done. Also, the strength gains were insane for my squat and deadlift.
Just started it!
Jeff has dedicated his life and time to finding the science behind bodybuilding, and spreading the research for all of our benefits, this is amazing dude
Literally the only video on RUclips that answered my question.
"Roaming Hypertrophy Day" is the most honest description. Love it.
I've read some thoughts that lifting in the 80% of max for the moment (taking accrued fatigue into consideration) is where maximal muscle fiber recruitment happens triggering increased muscle protein synthesis. Do you have any thoughts on the use of cluster sets for both strength and hypertrophic training simultaneously?
Also read about it not long ago in an article from Christian Thibaudeau iirc. Each rep ups the intensity by 2% and the lifter should count only the reps executed at +80% as optimal (muscle recruitment wise). In my extremely humble opinion, Clusters are an amazing tool in this regard, since you can keep the intensity considerably high at moderate to high reps, which covers many bases. Don't actualy know its limitations, though. As everything in the world, nothing is all good lol
@@antonioschmidt4105 that is the exact article I read. I just finished a 4 week block focusing only on deads, squat, bench, and push press. Being in a caloric deficit right now I didn't want to push the stress too high. Even in a deficit my weight has stayed at about 215 to 220 depending on carb intake for the day, aaaaand the weight belt is now one notch looser than before. Definitely going to be revisiting this plan
Does this count for moderate weight or heavy?
@@Mr.Josh. 80% of true tested max . So pretty heavy sets with 1-3 reps and variable rest periods based on the cluster technique your using
The trick to getting bigger and stronger is to achieve more reps and weight without over training. you can't go from doing 1 top set to 5 top sets in one workout. you have to slowly add more volume when you aren't making strength gains and lessen the time in between workouts slowly. train heavy once a week. then train once heavy and once moderate in a ten day cycle. then train once heavy and twice moderate in a twelve day cycle. then train once heavy and once moderate in a eight day cycle. then train once heavy and twice moderate in a ten day cycle. as you do this start with one top set on your heavy day and 2-3 top set/drop set on your moderate days. then slowly make this more difficult like one top set one drop set on heavy day.... 3-4 top set/drop sets on your moderate days. also remember on moderate day multi top/drop sets you should only rest about a minute between sets and on heavy days fully rest till maximum strength 4-7 minutes depending on compound movement. another thing i see almost nobody doing is sitting in between heavy compound movements. if you are standing in between sets of squatting while warming up it is gonna make your top set way weaker than it would be if you were sitting down and resting in between sets. in case this was confusing i only do full body workouts. except when training moderately I do little to no back and leg work. also if your life gets busy or you feel lazy you really only need to train heavy once every two to three weeks to maintain size.
a family member mocked me so damn bad about strength that now I'm insecure of my weakness. i want to be stronger to protect my family during dangers now💪🏼
Really just wanted to drop a shout out of pure genuine appreciation for all of the information you present for us! Your videos are over top on quality, your focus on the science seems second to none. Thanks man!
I’ll be waiting for Greg’s response
Cool, this is like a video version of the Get Ready Manual.
I feel like traning 5x5 and then adding in pump (drop sets at the end of the work out) is a good way to cover all bases
Maxing out weekly with the conjugate method while doing high volume sets, look up Alpha Destiny if you want
probably overall the best primer video ive seen on youtube
This man is the reason lifting is deadass a sport the way you explained it makes it very complicated I did not know so much wind into it a lot of people are just like well it’s just lifting weights with sporty about that until you consider all of this information that is both typical the process and digest
00:01 Steroids. Is it steroids? It’s steroids isn’t it.
0:45
And this has lead to a flurry of Instagram infographics featuring a mixture of furry art and jacked Rick & Morty characters and no one can tell why
😂😂😂
I hate the ig algorithm for this no matter what your feed is gonna have some oversimplified bs
@@altofant Agreed the one I saw was Strength was a picture of a man and Hypertrophy was a picture of a jacked to the Hilt Werewolf which looked cool but was stupid.
Hahaha this is a fact
Sometimes i just come listen jeff smooth voice when coach greg have yelled me for 20 minutes
Haha..same tho!
this is gold, i love the way u explain with pics/graphics, great work!
So much incredible information, guys like this always push us when we feel despair or lost in this journey of body building and better physique, Thankyou