Pavel Tsatsouline on the Science of Strength and the Art of Physical Performance | Tim Ferriss Show

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  • Опубликовано: 22 май 2024
  • Pavel Tsatsouline is Chairman of StrongFirst, Inc. and was born in Minsk, USSR, which is now part of Belarus.
    In the 1980s, he was a physical-training instructor for Spetnaz, the elite Soviet special-forces units. Pavel is now a subject matter expert to the US Marine Corps, the US Secret Service, and the US Navy SEALs. He is widely credited with introducing the now ubiquitous kettlebell to the United States.
    Whether you’ve heard of him or not, prepare to have your mind blown, and I don’t say that lightly 🙂 Enjoy!
    Connect with Pavel Tsatsouline:
    Like Pavel Tsatsouline on Facebook: / bestrongfirst
    Follow Pavel Tsatsouline on Twitter: / bestrongfirst
    Follow Pavel Tsatsouline on Instagram: / strongfirst
    Pavel Tsatsouline on the Science of Strength and the Art of Physical Performance
    Show Notes: tim.blog/2015/01/15/pavel-tsa...
    SUBSCRIBE: bit.ly/1dSzTkW
    About Tim Ferriss:
    Tim Ferriss is one of Fast Company’s “Most Innovative Business People” and an early-stage tech investor/advisor in Uber, Facebook, Twitter, Shopify, Duolingo, Alibaba, and 50+ other companies. He is also the author of five #1 New York Times and Wall Street Journal bestsellers: The 4-Hour Workweek, The 4-Hour Body, The 4-Hour Chef, Tools of Titans and Tribe of Mentors. The Observer and other media have named him “the Oprah of audio” due to the influence of his podcast, The Tim Ferriss Show, which has exceeded 200 million downloads and been selected for “Best of iTunes” three years running.
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    Start [00:00]
    How Pavel and Tim first came in contact [1:00]
    How others define Pavel as “world-class” [2:00]
    Considerations for designing training for top performers [5:00]
    The biggest misconceptions about Pavel Tsatsouline [11:25]
    When in doubt, what’s the minimum you should train? [18:00]
    How to train “grease to groove” [21:15]
    Approaching training as a practice [35:45]
    Prioritizing skills that lead to strength [39:20]
    The most counter-productive myths about strength training [42:20]
    Pavel’s hypothesis for the science behind hypertrophy [48:30]
    What is preventing new powerlifting records? [1:02:00]
    Deadlifts, kettlebells, and the most common mistakes with both [1:10:00]
    Morning rituals [1:13:50]
    Most frequently played music [1:16:50]
    Pavel’s writing mechanics [1:18:05]
    Current professional improvement endeavors [1:21:30]
    Mobility, flexibility, and the goal of full side splits [1:22:45]
    On the malfunction of over-sharing [1:39:00]
    What Americans can learn from former Soviet culture [1:40:20]
    Mitigating distractions [1:48:40]
  • ХоббиХобби

Комментарии • 320

  • @timferriss
    @timferriss  Год назад +6

    Take 10 seconds and sign up for my free "5-Bullet Friday" newsletter: go.tim.blog/5-bullet-friday-yt/ Each Friday, you’ll get a short email from me with five things I've discovered that week, sending you off to your weekend with fun and useful things to ponder and try. 🙌

    • @dustencross357
      @dustencross357 7 месяцев назад

      Why would any man wish for a 4 hour work week? I would be so depressed....

    • @johnhurt8968
      @johnhurt8968 3 месяца назад

      😊😊😊😊😊

  • @rafagrzesiakowski9096
    @rafagrzesiakowski9096 7 лет назад +717

    How Pavel and Tim first came in contact [1:00]
    How others define Pavel as “world-class” [2:00]
    Considerations for designing training for top performers [5:00]
    The biggest misconceptions about Pavel Tsatsouline [11:25]
    When in doubt, what’s the minimum you should train? [18:00]
    How to train “grease to groove” [21:15]
    Approaching training as a practice [35:45]
    Prioritizing skills that lead to strength [39:20]
    The most counter-productive myths about strength training [42:20]
    Pavel’s hypothesis for the science behind hypertrophy [48:30]
    What is preventing new powerlifting records? [1:02:00]
    Deadlifts, kettlebells, and the most common mistakes with both [1:10:00]
    Morning rituals [1:13:50]
    Most frequently played music [1:16:50]
    Pavel’s writing mechanics [1:18:05]
    Current professional improvement endeavors [1:21:30]
    Mobility, flexibility, and the goal of full side splits [1:22:45]
    On the malfunction of over-sharing [1:39:00]
    What Americans can learn from former Soviet culture [1:40:20]
    Mitigating distractions [1:48:40]

  • @MichaelLynchMusic
    @MichaelLynchMusic 4 года назад +55

    This is still in the top five greatest episodes in the history of the Tim Ferriss Show

  • @mactireliath2356
    @mactireliath2356 7 лет назад +107

    I could listen to this a thousand times and still get something out of it. Exceptional

    • @BlakeNix
      @BlakeNix 6 лет назад +3

      I agree. A lot to chew on. I'll be coming back to it as well.

    • @pranakhan
      @pranakhan 6 лет назад +1

      StrongFirst: the School of Strength

    • @misskai8158
      @misskai8158 4 года назад

      Pretty much every podcast of Tim’s. ❤️

  • @andthereisntone3454
    @andthereisntone3454 3 года назад +66

    For future reference:
    12:45 White knuckle/contract glutes & abs as tight as possible to amplify strength.
    17:40 The four quadrants: Dan John.
    21:50 When in doubt, train grip & core.
    24:40 Developing the grip: hand grippers.
    25:50 Grease the groove.
    27:35 Training abs: 3-5 sets of 3-5 reps - 3x week of any good exercise, focus on contraction, plank no longer than 10 secs contracting everything below neck (3 sets of 10s, 3x week)
    36:00 The hollow rock position
    37:54 To be strong: 5 reps & under is key.
    38:38 Avoid the fatigue & burn.
    39:20 A training session or practice _not_ a "workout". It should be enjoyed.
    1:16:25 Balance with priorities. Be calm and thus have time to meditate, reflect and set priorities.
    1:31:25 Kettlebell: Simple & Sinister.
    1:31:45 Prying goblet squat.
    1:32:35 The three S's: use strength, find space, spread the load.

  • @prisoneroftech2237
    @prisoneroftech2237 7 лет назад +70

    "Strength is a Skill" THIS!!!

  • @LiquidRush
    @LiquidRush 4 года назад +98

    "Soundcheck. Breakfast. Coffee."

    • @MrWinklbauer
      @MrWinklbauer 4 года назад +3

      LiquidRush That was great.

  • @RugilePenno-qr1nh
    @RugilePenno-qr1nh 2 месяца назад +1

    Thank you Pavel and Tim, very inspiring and motivating interview.

  • @chancedriscoll5350
    @chancedriscoll5350 4 года назад +29

    You knew this shit was going to be intense when Tim asked to tell him about his breakfast and Pavel replied, “Coffee”.

  • @dumshark6873
    @dumshark6873 7 лет назад +24

    The idea of more sets with perfect form makes great sense. Its hard to put the ego to the side and mentally accept lifting with control rather than raw will

  • @trueunion
    @trueunion 4 года назад +51

    I Learned about Pavel when reading about GTG back in 2014. I could barely do 1 handstand pushup and I began doing 1 every hour on the hour for 5-7 hours...after a couple of weeks I could do 2,3 and so on and ended with 10 handstand pushups just over 4 weeks. I use this technique to help my military students get better at pushups or pull-ups. Love it. Thank you Pavel!

    • @DavidLoveOfficial
      @DavidLoveOfficial 3 года назад +3

      Great share.

    • @enlighten92
      @enlighten92 2 года назад +1

      Did you see any noticeable changes in the muscle size?

    • @trueunion
      @trueunion 2 года назад +2

      @@enlighten92 some but not a lot. If I was a male I’d probably see a bigger increase in muscle size. Mainly was a bit more definition for me

  • @geospas
    @geospas 3 года назад +33

    35:30 Pullup repetition increase
    Tighten abs
    Master Hollow position
    Strengthen grip
    Assisted repetition
    3 times a week
    3 sets
    3-5 reps
    Avoid the burn

  • @AthleticTraynorServices
    @AthleticTraynorServices 2 года назад +6

    Got my first Kettlebell 20 years ago because of this guy. Pavel still kicks ass to this day.

  • @Businessaccount312
    @Businessaccount312 6 лет назад +194

    i could do a max of 15 pushups, then i did the greasing the groove technique, so i did 5 pushups at normal speed, and i did about 4-5 sets through out the day with about a 2 hour gap in between sets. I was able to increase my max to 25 pushups after 3 weeks, its an amazing technique that doesn't even tire you out.

    • @maxsilbert
      @maxsilbert 5 лет назад +24

      Your insecure masculinity and need to put positive people down is disgusting, Paul

    • @djsubliminalreeve
      @djsubliminalreeve 5 лет назад +1

      i do a different method as im trying to get back to my 92 pushups again. right now i can do about 85 push ups. what i do is one set as fast as possible in a explosive manner and get my 85 reps then i do 7 sets of 20-33 reps depending on how fresh i feel. i do this on tuseday and friday. i went from just 60 pushups to 85 in a matter of weeks. now im at 85 though i plateaued for a while and took a reduced workout for recvery whilst still greasing the groove. my goal is to pass my 92 pushups of pain and get to 100. once i reach 100 then i will add 10lbs on a vest and start back at 60 even if i can do more. then build back up again. i feel if i can get 100 push ups with a 10lb then i will be a bad ass lol. one thing i will say is it becomes a matter of cardio once you pass just about 50 reps and the pain really kicks in to overdrive. oh and before you do that first all out demanding set warm your shoulders up as you will not be able to explode or just get injured.

    • @a_fuckin_spacemarine7514
      @a_fuckin_spacemarine7514 4 года назад +7

      @golden child I was doing 50 rep sets of finger pushups as a 7 year old. Weakling.

    • @a_fuckin_spacemarine7514
      @a_fuckin_spacemarine7514 4 года назад +1

      @golden child
      Knuckle ups are easy.

    • @Broxine
      @Broxine 4 года назад

      BroToPro how you warm up your shoulder?

  • @michaelgrayman7614
    @michaelgrayman7614 4 года назад +7

    Squeezing your fist for the spill over tension thing had me sold.

  • @boxerfencer
    @boxerfencer 4 года назад +27

    45:57 The training to failure misconception
    47:55 Superiority of USSR training & Universality of principle based training: applicability to powerlifting and calisthenics.
    49:00 Maximal hypertrophy, lots of 5 & 6 reps sets, with 60-70% 1RM (5@6-10RIR, 6@5-9RIR), and contracted rest periods (

  • @theironforce3000
    @theironforce3000 4 года назад +5

    Pavel mentioned his playlist is 80s HeavyMetal - ACCEPT, Maiden, Saxon. .
    On top of the wealth of knowledge with training , this man is a win in my book.
    Don't mind me - just strolling by after hearing him on Rogan's podcast. .

  • @geospas
    @geospas 3 года назад +7

    27:35 How to strengthen abdomen
    3 times a week
    3-5 sets
    3-5 reps
    Plank 3 x 10 sec flexing every muscle below the neck
    Focus on contraction and tension

    • @haveaniceday7950
      @haveaniceday7950 3 года назад +2

      And wait at least 15 minutes between sets if I remember correctly?

    • @abhinayvj
      @abhinayvj 2 года назад

      @@haveaniceday7950 yes

  • @karenbailey1339
    @karenbailey1339 8 лет назад +1

    I loved listening to both of you! Thank you!

  • @Danbach90
    @Danbach90 8 лет назад +7

    This was awesome Thank You Pavel and Tim!

  • @waldemarlemos1696
    @waldemarlemos1696 8 лет назад +18

    kettlebell swing and deadlift are both great for longetivity. Great i will always remember this advice and pass it onto anyone that wants a good long strong healthy life. Thanks again for this interview you have with pavel.

  • @waldemarlemos1696
    @waldemarlemos1696 8 лет назад +35

    pavels awesome more sets less reps. This will help me heaps. I am self taught from reading and wathching pavels Enter the kettlebell.I have restarted my kettlebell training and your interview with pavel has reminded me the importance of my sets and reps. Grip. Tight abs and Butt is also true for extra reps and power. Awesome interview thanks from Darwin.Australia.

  • @One1Raptor
    @One1Raptor 7 лет назад +1

    Thank you for this!

  • @madisonfosterDiscGolf
    @madisonfosterDiscGolf 4 года назад +5

    The segment about what Americans and Soviets can learn from each other was very refreshing. I loved Pavel's take on this without using any hyperbole

  • @mikemontgomery15
    @mikemontgomery15 8 лет назад +2

    Well done. Both of you. Very informative.

  • @americanmambi
    @americanmambi 8 лет назад +8

    thanks a ton for sharing all this amazing info

  • @theunassumnglocalguy5441
    @theunassumnglocalguy5441 3 года назад +1

    This is fantastic. Thank you for the conversation.

  • @redgwinterberg
    @redgwinterberg 3 года назад +2

    Thanx Tim and Pavel for the knowledge to think about, i used this pod to train en before i go to sleep👌🏽👊🏽

  • @flowintofreedom4531
    @flowintofreedom4531 3 года назад

    such great lessons - thank you!

  • @geeemm909
    @geeemm909 6 лет назад +1

    Excellent interview.

  • @awakenotwoke6930
    @awakenotwoke6930 2 года назад +1

    Easily one of the best podcast ever. Period.

  • @hapkido690
    @hapkido690 6 лет назад +8

    This is great. I'm going to have to relisten to get all the great information. But can't wait to begin white knuckling and flexing the core.

  • @timlazenby9746
    @timlazenby9746 6 лет назад +20

    This guy is a master. The idea of greasing the groove, doing something every you walk past a bar or kettle bell. This works so well to anyones fitness.

    • @bigbaba4542
      @bigbaba4542 3 года назад

      For what? What's the point of just getting stronger without size. Look at him, he looks like a skinny high school teacher. Maybe he can bench press 350-400 pounds but isn't that pretty pointless, and has no carry over to real life?

    • @o0m9
      @o0m9 3 года назад +14

      @@bigbaba4542 To be able to lift things, have endurance, and age well. That has always been the purpose of strength.

  • @richardmclaughlin3926
    @richardmclaughlin3926 6 лет назад +10

    this pavel guy is amazing this stretching advice was just spot on he is indeed the man

  • @HJOTech
    @HJOTech 3 года назад

    Soundcheck. Coffee. I love this guy.

  • @delazzuro
    @delazzuro 3 года назад

    A great interview with someone really worth listening to👍

  • @jonathanguinn3929
    @jonathanguinn3929 8 лет назад +15

    very wise words about what americans can learn from other cultures. I needed to hear that. Thanks Tim and Pavel

  • @Njalgreybeard
    @Njalgreybeard 2 года назад +1

    Coffee. Didn't mention if it was a drink, or eaten like a bowl of cereal! Legend!

  • @josefrancisco6969
    @josefrancisco6969 8 лет назад +2

    Lots of great information here.

  • @alexandruchirila8224
    @alexandruchirila8224 3 года назад +1

    Amazing conversation!

  • @Brndndutton
    @Brndndutton 6 лет назад +3

    Awesomeness

  • @giuice
    @giuice 2 года назад +5

    Dude, this episode is a diamond cut, if you don't watch it, you're missing out on extremely valuable information. Kudos to Tim and Pavel for sharing

  • @Tombalino
    @Tombalino 5 лет назад +1

    This is gold

  • @brendapeter446
    @brendapeter446 11 месяцев назад

    Such an amazing interview but the last 10 minutes were extra special. Pavel is not only a very gifted man but he is also obviously a quite virtuous one as well. I was very impressed by his humility & wisdom.

  • @johkonut
    @johkonut 3 года назад

    That was fantastic!

  • @dwaynepedals
    @dwaynepedals 7 месяцев назад

    Great podcast! Thanks for sharing.

  • @albinveselka258
    @albinveselka258 4 года назад +5

    Great interview all around, but the best part starts with the question at 1:42:56. Pavel's response is so well rounded and wise.

  • @panthiosportphysio
    @panthiosportphysio 8 месяцев назад +2

    Great questions !!!

  • @ronaldchan3540
    @ronaldchan3540 Год назад

    Pavel and Tim are amazing 👏

  • @marko76
    @marko76 Год назад

    Same same when it came to swimming for me. Total Immersion had exactly the same effect on my love of moving through the water. Around the same decade too.

  • @daAwns3r
    @daAwns3r 3 года назад

    This is GOLD

  • @TheSFShogun
    @TheSFShogun 2 года назад

    Pavel is extremely clear and persuasive. I haven’t listened to a lot of strength trainers, but Pavel is by far my biggest inspiration at the moment. Today I do 60 swings (standard weight) and 100 squats (at light weight) based on his philosophy of volume and functional training.

  • @MrMemozzza
    @MrMemozzza 6 лет назад +25

    I see a podcast with Pablo, I click like !

  • @nauvalfakhri
    @nauvalfakhri Год назад

    Brilliant man.

  • @antwannn111
    @antwannn111 7 лет назад +37

    I can't stand how much Tim fumbles around for words. He's a smart dude... Just take an extra second to figure it out instead of spitting out the beginning of 6 different words before finding the right one... On the other hand I could listen to Pavel all day.

    • @davesmit8162
      @davesmit8162 4 года назад +4

      Tony P. I 100% agree and Pavel is in his third language.

  • @Draakur
    @Draakur 7 лет назад +2

    This was absolutely awesome. I now have a new influence and lots of reading to do!

  • @walkerskii
    @walkerskii 3 года назад +2

    The magnificent seven is also my favorite movie! I love that each of the seven has a different personality, a different set of character traits (negative & positive) The idea of bravery, personal sacrifice, teamwork, depending on each other to accomplish a shared goal - for good to concrete evil & rescue the oppressed. It's a great demonstration of masculinity, encouraging each other in bravery, to overcome personal fears, to selflessly bless & protect others.

  • @AlteredState1123
    @AlteredState1123 Год назад

    Pavel was much more congenial than I expected. Greatest quote, “Oversharing is one of the problems of the modern world.” I like it that Pavel shared so much in this podcast. He is famous for turning what most experts would share in paragraph into a fluffy $26 book. He must be a millionaire many times over. Happy for him.

  • @jordi0m
    @jordi0m 4 года назад +2

    32:00 - I never thought about it like this, but for a while I had a pull-up bar in the middle of my place and used to do a few every time I walked by and I was able to do way more than now. Interesting.

  • @Coach-MG
    @Coach-MG Год назад

    Such a Technical Podcast. Would have loved to see Pavel give video examples of some of these movements

  • @clandestinereactionary1842
    @clandestinereactionary1842 8 лет назад +2

    Incredible interview.

  • @siberianTiger639
    @siberianTiger639 5 лет назад +1

    Some usefull stuff. Thanks.

  • @osvaldoaponte
    @osvaldoaponte 8 лет назад +3

    He's the man!

  • @chtomlin
    @chtomlin Год назад

    Reminds me Arnold's training in Germany where he had to pace himself by not going to failure to early... they expected him to train all day in the military

  • @trailerfitter2
    @trailerfitter2 3 года назад +1

    Only just found out about Pavel. He has interesting to study.

  • @DBest1966
    @DBest1966 8 лет назад +66

    Can we get a transcript of this for deaf and hard of hearing? The auto captions are horrible.

    • @rayantraceur
      @rayantraceur 3 года назад +11

      Well it's been 4 years, but for the hard of hearing, deaf, or non-english speaking people who may still look for it, there's a transcript on Tim's website : tim.blog/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/55-pavel-tsatsouline.pdf
      There are transcripts for all the episodes.

    • @royjnrthomas2
      @royjnrthomas2 3 года назад

      @@rayantraceur qqqqq

    • @KameSennin2
      @KameSennin2 3 года назад

      @@rayantraceur wow, thank you!

  • @PaulLadendorf
    @PaulLadendorf 5 лет назад +10

    Did I miss the part where they were going to cover tricks to eating more food without fatigue?

  • @amemoore
    @amemoore 3 года назад +3

    Totally new to this world...this is fascinating. *order grippers from Ironmind*

  • @naikhanomtom7552
    @naikhanomtom7552 2 года назад +4

    Increased my pushups from failing at 20 to knocking out 30 well before failure within a week. Crazy.

    • @incorectulpolitic
      @incorectulpolitic Год назад

      What was your program? How did you do it?

    • @naikhanomtom7552
      @naikhanomtom7552 Год назад

      @@incorectulpolitic pushups every time I went to the bathroom at work or every time I went to get a drink in the kitchen at home etc. Not to failure, just enough to feel that you're getting close to failure. Maybe 6 reps before. Did same with pull-ups and went from 6-8 to 12-15 within a month

    • @incorectulpolitic
      @incorectulpolitic Год назад

      @@naikhanomtom7552 so basically you did a set of 12- 14 reps of push-ups followed by a set of 2- 3 reps of pull-ups every 2- 3 hours, every day?

    • @ezrsaidndone1718
      @ezrsaidndone1718 Год назад

      @@incorectulpolitic listen to the interview d%mb fu#k

  • @amemoore
    @amemoore 3 года назад +1

    "Not to over communicate".. brilliant. Quality not quantity communication? Much like his training sessions?

  • @deltatoofow
    @deltatoofow 8 лет назад +82

    I got my son a pull up bar,one rule= do one strict pull up all the way up chest touch bar, pause lower,has to do one every time he walks passed the bar no exceptions, it's outside his bedroom door,now he is ripped like Bruce Lee and can do 58 strict

    • @waldemarlemos1696
      @waldemarlemos1696 8 лет назад +15

      xcllent idea. Its good to have fathers that can give their sons advantages for their future.

    • @mattstazza
      @mattstazza 8 лет назад +10

      +deltatoofow get him to work on his squat, kids lose it overtime from sitting/lack of use. search ido portal squat 30/30

    • @waldemarlemos1696
      @waldemarlemos1696 8 лет назад +5

      mattstazza Thats funny you mentioned Ido because i have been following connor mcgregor ufc and he got Ido to teach him fluid body movements. Yes Ido is an incredible master of body movements for sure and strength for longevity.

    • @kc1973able
      @kc1973able 6 лет назад +12

      Farther's should also do it to :)

    • @nataliavgarcia8108
      @nataliavgarcia8108 4 года назад +1

      Luv the idea...my son will be starting this weekend. Tnx!

  • @AB-nb2ic
    @AB-nb2ic Год назад

    Surprised he didn't mention jaw clenching to increase power, along with glutes and abs. As a ground fighter you're not always in a position where an ab or glute squeeze is possible, but I've increased my power tremendously by learning to clench my jaw when necessary and feeling the power migrate to the whole body just as he described.

  • @bobadler3097
    @bobadler3097 6 лет назад +9

    Hydrogen ions and lactic acid are not identical but their effects will be the same. Acids produce free hydrogen ions in water (blood). So lactic acid will produce hydrogen ions. It's talked about at 01:04:00.

  • @markm5772
    @markm5772 8 лет назад +720

    Joe Rogan brought me here.

    • @Themindofreyrey
      @Themindofreyrey 8 лет назад +14

      I think he brought everyone here. ~ReyRey

    • @mihajlojeremic2895
      @mihajlojeremic2895 5 лет назад +11

      fuck joe rogan

    • @AngryOscillator
      @AngryOscillator 5 лет назад +3

      @Conspiracies by Hans 4 Come on man, sheep can't use the internets, don't be a douche
      Rogan kinda brought me here too, I'm interested to see how this lines up against Jeff Cavaliere's strength concepts.... baaaaa

    • @cryptocreep906
      @cryptocreep906 4 года назад +14

      This is a much better episode than Rogan’s is.

    • @dula4552
      @dula4552 4 года назад

      Pronounced "ZOE HOGAN"!

  • @tomas6869
    @tomas6869 2 месяца назад

    Im here because of your book and the coffee sound check😂😂😂

  • @Swordifsh1
    @Swordifsh1 3 года назад +2

    26:00 where he's talking about greasing the groove, how many times a day do you do so?

  • @Redhotlugnut
    @Redhotlugnut 8 лет назад +8

    39:05. So many people get this wrong. Lift heavy get bulky, go light to get lean. Wrong.

  • @19grand
    @19grand 7 лет назад +4

    pearl after pearl :)

  • @jaimanlive
    @jaimanlive 4 года назад +1

    Tim, this guy is a Bad Ass, I have been a security officer in a past life. I have worked with some of the most bad ass marines in the world and this group you speak of the "Spetnaz" is serous and highly regarded as some of the best in the world. Way to go on getting this guy on your show. 🏳🏳🚫Don't have him practice any moves on you bro!! It's not like the UFC, there is no option to tap out!!🛇🏳🏳
    🍻Cheers to bring on the deadliest guest on your show🍻

  • @MemoTraining
    @MemoTraining 5 лет назад +6

    My experience with GTG - I used to be able to do 10 HSPU on the floor with ease at a bodyweight of 77KG, 15 when pushing to limit, and around 6 full ROM. around ten years ago. Over the years injuries and two big shoulder injuries didn't allow me to do them and recently it's been hard to get them back. within 3 weeks of greasing the groove I went from 1 on my warmup (harder now weighing 85kg) to doing sets of 5. Not much and haven't tested max but will go till I reach 7-8 then start doing FULL ROM.
    I find also if I eat a big meal of carbs such as pasta I don't get a crash, assuming that my muscle is constantly trying to absorb glucose to refuel.

    • @v3n481
      @v3n481 5 лет назад +1

      Mehmetron how many it is now ?

  • @aasti3000
    @aasti3000 4 года назад +47

    Thank you for guiding me here Joe Rogan

  • @celebmrk9
    @celebmrk9 5 лет назад +1

    Very well said...Las Vegas version of America

  • @mrmurphyzone
    @mrmurphyzone 7 лет назад +57

    Anyone reading TFT? and had to hear the "Sound check. Breakfast. Coffee". Lol

  • @MarkTheTrainer
    @MarkTheTrainer 2 года назад

    Can super setting different muscle groups be effectively used in conjunction with the grease-the-groove technique? For instance, does it work do a set of push ups immediately followed by a set of pull ups, then rest for 15 minutes before repeating multiple times? Or, should only single sets be used?

  • @damonarmstrong1676
    @damonarmstrong1676 5 лет назад +6

    I do 20 push ups at a time. Every hour of the day. For around 15 Sets a day. Gonna start implementing 5 pull ups and 20 sit ups as well, every hour a day for 15 Sets.

  • @christopherarmstrong2710
    @christopherarmstrong2710 5 лет назад +5

    Pavel is the man - true performance training scientist right here! Strength and health first...all of the meatheads our there who look like they should be wearing a Bane mask are ‘strongly’ misguided! (Ego lifting)
    P.S. love how he reads a newspaper in the AM vs. going on the Internet, such a contrarian.

  • @ReRaze_Over9000
    @ReRaze_Over9000 4 года назад +1

    Does Pavel still speak on his system? Or is all his works still practical?

  • @MrFrf1
    @MrFrf1 8 лет назад +12

    20:23 Max SHANK I think you mean Tim ??

  • @jordantheokay3168
    @jordantheokay3168 Год назад

    Took me 3 weeks of consistent work after herring this, but I got my suspended side splits.

  • @moonkim713
    @moonkim713 8 лет назад +5

    Does anyone know who are the Russian strength coaches that Pavel mentions in this podcast? I would like to read more about their methods.

    • @moonkim713
      @moonkim713 7 лет назад

      +40BelowTr00per
      I've heard of verkoshansky but not the other guy. I wish someone could translate his stuff

  • @jonny1943
    @jonny1943 4 года назад +1

    This method would probably work when you try to overcome a old injury?

  • @Robdobalina
    @Robdobalina 2 года назад +2

    51:44 💪

  • @4NG3LH34RT2
    @4NG3LH34RT2 2 года назад

    how to spell the two russian names of trainers that pavel mentions?? sounds like prochavskava and tsilianov or something like this??

  • @MMOscar
    @MMOscar 2 года назад

    Somebody know what number is this podcast on Spotify??

  • @mayukhsen8195
    @mayukhsen8195 4 года назад +14

    *Pavels hypothesis on the science behind hypertrophy is EXACTLY WHAT INMATES DO IN PRISON TO GET BIG AS FUCK, I have a bunch of mechanic friends to take care of my bikes and some of them are huge inmates*
    They do it every other day for each muscle group, but they do 2-3 sessions a day, and these guys eat a minimum of a kilo of carbs a day, that's the macro.
    They do an exercise they can do 10-30 reps with non stop before failure, resting more than a second between reps in a set DOES NOT COUNT, perfect form.
    They do half their maximum reps on each set which is the *rep goal*, 1-2 minutes between sets, they keep doing sets until they REACH THAT SET where they fail before reaching that rep goal.
    Every 3-4 weeks they would do a set to failure to see if they have increased their max reps.
    Then they would set the new *rep goal* per set based on that new max.
    They train each body part every other day, so basically upper body pressing, upper body pulling, and pistol squats. However they do those squats only twice a week. Squats are harder to recover from because we humans walk around all day everyday, legs get minimal rest.
    Exercises they use are push up variations(diamond push ups, archer push ups, one arm push up feet shoulder width, one arm one leg push ups, deep handstand push ups, archer handstand push ups and I have heard some can also do one arm deep handstand push ups).... And obviously, the feet elevated variations of all push up variations to fail before reaching 50 nonstop reps.
    For pulling they do kipping pull ups, strict pull ups, archer pull ups, negative one arm pull ups, one arm pull ups......
    Guys I know have 21 inch arms with flat abs, everyone is 250-260lbs.
    Now, according to them, there are lots of guys who got 20 inch guns from one arm push ups alone, also there are lots of them who can do one arm pull ups and one arm one leg push ups for 50+ reps but their arms are below 20 inches.
    According to them everything depends upon how heavy some one is, a 270lbs guy who can do 25 pull ups will be far more ripped and jacked than the guy who is 160lbs and can do 50 pull ups...
    But yeah, volume is key, volume is money, I have been doing this with pronated dips and chin ups and put on 5lbs of lean mass in 4 weeks..... *THATS A LOT*
    Like Pavel says, forget about the number of sets, just keep doing them, recover between sessions, you will get big if you eat enough.

  • @AndJusTIceForRob
    @AndJusTIceForRob Год назад

    1:25:40 does anyone know if Pavel ended up publishing this book?

  • @MH401QMNT
    @MH401QMNT 4 года назад +1

    What is the name Pavel says at 57:03?

  • @badacob
    @badacob 4 года назад

    can we please get video?

  • @stefanq5547
    @stefanq5547 3 года назад

    Thats the most sovjet russian soundcheck ever made. 😂 had me howlin

  • @boxerfencer
    @boxerfencer 5 лет назад +4

    60-70%1RM with sets of 5-6 reps? 60%1RM with 5RM is 5@10RIR! And 9RIR with 6 rep sets! That's really light!

    • @jonathanerickson1543
      @jonathanerickson1543 5 лет назад +2

      boxerfencer it works tho. He really focuses on technique. I can attest to his training. It’s a bit of a what the F**** factor. Because you go for a 2 or 1 RM and it’s far exceeding of expectations.

    • @boxerfencer
      @boxerfencer 4 года назад +1

      @@jonathanerickson1543 oh, I can believe it.