Pack on Slabs of Muscle with the Deadlift

Above, Bill âPeanutsâ West doing modified ârackâ pulls while training with his crew in his garage!
I have found the deadlift to be a tremendous exercise for developing overall strength and packing muscle onto your entire body which can only rival the benefits of the squat.
I have experimented with many set â rep variables as well as frequency of deadlifting.
I have found that when deadlifting, I go back to the less is more principle.
A few good sets of no more than 5 reps per set.
Once in a while Iâll crank out high rep deads with 225 lbs for 2 â 3 sets, but once again, less is more.
Sure I can do 5 sets of 20 reps but instead, with the deadlift, I hit it just hard enough, no more, no less.
I suggest you do the same. Experiment and find what works best for you.
You can deadlift once a week to get the technique down, one week go heavy, next week go lighter and use submaximal effort.
Every 4 weeks take a week off from the deadlifts to allow the lower back to recover.

Rather than always utilizing the bent knee deadlift, you can also perform the Romanian Deadlift (RDL), the Sumo Deadlift and rack pulls as well.
No matter which deadlift you use, make sure your technique is text book perfect, no exceptions.
Be ready to start slapping on slabs of rock hard muscle on every ounce of your body with the deadlift!
And if you Really wanna take your strength and muscle building to the next level, then train like a Gladiator and add
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Categories: Zach Even-Esh Tags: strength, strongman training, underground strength, Zach Even-Esh
Squats to Skyrocket Your Muscle Growth and Fat Loss

Heavy squats are numero uno for helping your entire body gain muscle at warp speed as well as a great way to skyrocket your fat loss around the clock and speed up your metabolism.
Heavy leg work causes a surge in the release of your growth hormones like no other exercise can. The heavy weights sitting on your back tax the entire body intensely. Your legs and entire back side support the load unlike any other exercise.
You can squat with high reps or low reps, heavy weight or light weight. You can squat with various tools in various positions. A barbell or a heavy sandbag on your back is awesome for building muscle.

Muscle being added to your quads, hips, glutes, hamstrings, lats and lower back cover a large area of your body. The more muscle you have, the faster your metabolism revs, even when you are NOT training, helping you burn more calories around the clock compared to a weak, skinny individual (or fat and weak individual).
I have performed heavy barbell squats for heavy singles or up to 5 reps, I have also performed high rep back squats up to 50 reps! Talk about brutal!
Try throwing a sandbag on your back, walk 10 yards and squat 2 reps, repeat until you can no longer walk or until you squatted 20 reps.
This workout is not for sissies, only the strong and mentally tough will survive.
Try squats for heavy sets of 3, or several sets of 10, or 1 gut busting set of 20 â 30 reps. The high rep squats will leave you exhausted and wiped out on the floor for a good 10 minutes afterwards.
The question is, how badly do you want to pack on rugged muscle and transform yourself into a ripped and rugged beast?
If you want it badly enough, then I have the answer for you below.
Get the 12 Month Beast Training Program and Follow the Underground Blue Print for Packing on Mounds of Rugged Muscle and Serious Strength. Click HERE for Details.
Categories: Zach Even-Esh Tags: strength, strongman training, underground strength, Zach Even-Esh
Ultimate Garage Workouts
People think Underground training has nothing to do with barbells and dumbbells.
Very Wrong.
Underground training means going against the grain, breaking the rules and straying from the chrome and shiny bunny training methods.
It means heavy dumbbells and barbells.
Water filled kegs and heavy, awkward sandbags.
Thick ropes and stones.
Who knows what else? Itâs up to you.
When I first began training in my garage the workouts were amazing.
I had a 300 lb barbell, a utility bench, a pair of 50 and 100 lb dumbbells and a LOUD Stereo! NO Heat â and man that got brutal during the winter! My garage was colder than the outdoors.
I had 2 space heaters, but, the problem was if I turned BOTH of them on the entire electric shorted in the house. My Dad NEVER liked that, so I was stuck with one space heater, which did absolutely nothing for keeping me warm!
Workouts consisted of squats, deadlifts, rows, presses and cleans. Cheat curls with 100 lb dumbbells even!

It wasnât pretty, but the results were amazing, unlike anything I ever experienced before.
On the weekend I would take a trip to a new gym and get a workout in. I did respect the heat thatâs for sure
But the muscle I packed on from my powerbuilding workouts were amazing. The strength was certainly freakish as well.
Stop following the rules and start training like a beast. A barbell, a few dumbbells, a sandbag and a heavy stone and you will build a physique that rivals what is seen in the comic books.
Of course, you need to be ready to put in the work?
Are you ready to transform your body? Then combine your free weights with some Underground Strength by clicking HERE. You wonât be disappointed, just look at all the testimonials!
Categories: Zach Even-Esh Tags: strength, strongman training, underground strength, Zach Even-Esh
Power-Building for Strength and Mass
Bill Pearl was a bodybuilder back during the 50âs â through the early 70âs. The man was built like a tank and ripped. Not only did he look strong, he was strong!
Billâs training program was a heavy volume workout with lots of exercises, lots of sets and a wide variety of rep ranges. You would find barbells, dumbbells, machines, cables, bodyweight and more in his programs.
Bill NEVER trained to failure, he was smart, and always left a rep or two in the tank and left the gym feeling like he had a great workout, but not a workout that left him spent all day.




Bodybuilding is great, but, if you want to incorporate Power-Building, where you mix movements like those you see above with some strongman type work you will no doubt develop a physique that is ALL Show and ALL Go!
Try The Underground Strength System with some of your bodybuilding/ / gym workouts and you will develop a rock hard physique like no other.
Click HERE for more information


Categories: Zach Even-Esh Tags: strength, strongman training, underground strength, Zach Even-Esh
Time Under Tension for MMA Fighters & Grapplers – Part II
I still get goose bumps when I think of how John Smith, 2 X Olympic Wrestling Gold Medalist, was training when I attended his intensive wrestling camps. He always brought two nationally ranked D 1 wrestlers with him to assist in the camp and to train with. He drilled so aggressively and so intensely that the two best collegiate wrestlers in the country couldnât keep up with him!

They were sweating bullets and breathing like they just finished a deep water dive with out oxygen! What Smith did during all his drilling was pushing himself so intensely it looked as if it were a wrestling match. His high speed, high intensity drilling was very likely his best form of conditioning, not running or jumping rope or any of the other methods he used.
One thing John did on many of his drills was to incorporate some form of lifting in most of his take down drills. He would shoot his low single or high crotch but for the finish he would throw them over his shoulder or lift them off the ground and then bring them to the mat. Coach Ethan Reeve told me a similar form of conditioning for his wrestlers when he was coaching. He had them perform hundreds of lifts during the takedown drills to improve their strength and power endurance for when they competed.
These lifts represent a squatting and dead lifting motion mixed in with rotational movements. If your partner weighs 175 lbs and you perform 200 takedowns with each drill that is one hell of a work out!

When I spoke to Louie Simmons about conditioning he spoke about time under tension with weights and drilling mixed in. I would be an idiot not to listen, so I began mixing in some wrestling and strength training for time. The result? I have watched these grapplers increase toughness big time (they fight like deadly Gladiators out on the mat) and their âmat conditioningâ has soared!
I watched one of our guys have a few close matches through first and second periods and then during third period he simply out conditions his opponents and scores again and again. This improved conditioning is a by product of the SPP (Specialized Physical Preparation) we have incorporated into the program in an effort to prepare him for the big tournaments that he was entering.
Letâs get to the real meat of the training and see how I used loaded conditioning and time under tension to prep these grapplers for tournaments.
We head to a field with dragging sleds & kettlebells. The group is often 3 â 5 athletes together. Performing various dragging, rowing and pressing movements for about 2 minutes they immediately go and perform what we call sumo or brawling drills and some take down drills.

They work on hand fighting, head and neck control, snap down drills as well as shooting high singles while their partner uses a defensive move to get out of the single. The pace here is very hard fought and intense. It is a complete stray from the normal theory of conditioning, which is that of performing a movement such as sprints, jogging, jumping rope, etc.
This goes on for an explosive bout of 1 – 2 minutes, give or take 15 seconds or so. From the brawling drill they move immediately into some kettlebell training using a simple exercise such as 2 hand swings, the clean and press and sometimes snatches. This will be performed for 5 â 10 reps per hand when doing single handed movements, or 10 â 15 reps on the swing.
What weâve done is mix in some âloaded conditioningâ with the weights as well as some actual wrestling training. This style of training can be implemented in a dojo or MMA school where the athletes can use the heavy bags or sand bags for exercises such as Turkish get ups, squats, rows, presses & lunges. What I would NOT do is perform the conditioning before actual training. The intense drilling of takedowns or stand up fighting will serve as a form of conditioning first of all. Secondly, performing the conditioning first can fatigue the grappler or fighter too much to a point where they begin drilling with poor technique, or, they get injured due to the muscular fatigue.

So, either perform the loaded conditioning after technique work or as a separate work out altogether. If you have absolutely NO equipment for loaded conditioning, try performing loaded conditioning by lifting on EVERY take down for a time that simulates your rounds.
Choosing a list of my favorite indoor tools that can be used for loaded conditioning would be the following:
- The Grappler (Louie Simmons has fighters use the grappler for 5 â 10 minutes non stop, performing various movements with the empty bars, and, he also uses it himself for GPP work)
- Kettlebells and / or Dumbbells
- Rope climbing
- Sandbags and / or heavy bags (sand bags will be more versatile)
- Bodyweight exercises (pull ups, push ups, burpees, squats, lunges, etc.)

Sample indoor loaded conditioning work out (tweak the specific drills for your sport, whether it be Grappling, MMA, or Muay Thai):
1. Takedowns with and with out lifts and submissions for 4 minutes
2. Sandbag Turkish get ups x 1 minute
3. Sandbag Squat x 1 minute
4. Pull ups with towel x 5 reps
5. Repeat skills / drills for 3 â 5 minutes (takedowns, stand up, etc.)
Repeat the above loaded conditioning as you feel is needed, or, repeat for the same amount of time your fight / match will last for. Add an over time round to really step it up, and change the exercises every round.
For outdoor loaded conditioning:
* Sleds
* Kettlebells
* Sand Bags
* Stones (You heard me correctly! You can carry stones, perform rows, dead lifts and much more!)
* Ropes (performing hand over hand pulls with the sled)
Remember, this is one variation / option you have for using a form of conditioning. I always emphasize tweaking things to best suit yourself or your own clients / athletes. Donât be afraid to think outside the box to take your conditioning to the next level!
Want to know the secrets of developing brute strength and steel-forged muscles? Itâs time to ditch your money wasting gym membership and start training Underground! Click HERE to get started!
Categories: Zach Even-Esh Tags: strength, strongman training, underground strength, Zach Even-Esh
Time Under Tension for MMA Fighters & Grapplers – Part I
Fighters and grapplers need to be incredibly fit all around. They need it all; great aerobic and anaerobic endurance, great strength endurance, power endurance and extreme mental toughness. There is a lot of confusion on how a fighter or grappler should train. Managing their time between training in the ring / mat and in the gym (or out of the gym) becomes important.
With all the time these athletes spend in actual skill and live training sessions their energy levels and the amount of recuperation is much less than the average athlete. A lot of their sparring is strength training per se. They are constantly pushing, pulling, lifting, rotating and more. Due to all of their time spent training we want to make sure we do not overdo it by pushing them more and more to the point where overuse injuries, mental and physical burn out become a side effect of the training.

Above, Fedor Emalianenko, the greatest heavyweight fighter of all time, stands amongst various size and shape Kettlebells.
We use a variety of methods for training our grapplers but there is one way that has worked very effectively and you can use it or tweak it to see how it works. The art of coaching is key here so learning how to taper or apply training methods for each individual comes into play.
The problem with fighters is they have the mentality of âout workingâ their opponents. The philosophy of training smart equates to harder training for most fighters. This is where you need to understand their body while communicating with your fighters constantly. Asking about current injuries, emotional and physical state will be a huge step towards learning what works best for your fighters and grapplers.
We always start our work outs with a thorough warm up. We take some from the Parisi warm up, and also added some other calisthenics and band work using the Jump Stretch bands. We may also incorporate some light reverse hypers and kettlebell swings before we start the grunt of the work out. Sometimes this warm up is slightly extended to get the athlete mentally warmed up.
After working or going to school for half a day, then training at their dojo or club and then coming to strength train can be a long day. A good warm up with some pumping tunes might be all your athlete needs. As mentioned before, incorporate the âart of coachingâ and determine if your athlete can go through a tough training session or if they need a lighter more recuperative day.

We will often start with a max effort exercise using short rest periods and reps in the range of 3 â 5 on our heavy sets. The warm up sets as we build up have a rep range of 5 â 10. Some examples of our max effort exercises might be:
- Flat / Incline barbell or dumbbell bench press
- Deadlifts (all variations: trap bar, straight bar, bent knee, sumo, RDL, and sometimes we add chains to the DL movement)
- Heavy Rowing motion: 1 arm rows, bent over barbell rows, t bar rows on the grappler
- 1 arm or 2 arm clean and press or military press: Kettlebells, dumbbells or sand bags
- Squats of all variations: box squat, sand bag squat (sandbag held in front or on shoulders), kettlebell squats
After the athlete performs a good 4 â 6 hard sets (on average, sometimes less & sometimes more) in the 3 â 5 rep range we move on to our time under tension training using various tools. The time under tension (TUT) builds great strength endurance as well as mental toughness.
The tools for time under tension can be almost anything, but here is a list of tools me way use for TUT:
- Sandbags
- Barbells
- Dumbbells
- Kettlebells
- Sleds
- Sledge Hammer
- Bodyweight
- Tree Logs
For example, letâs say that the first lift was the bent knee dead lift with a straight bar, after the heavy sets we might move on to using a 50 â 70 lb sandbag for 5 minutes with out ever placing it on the floor! Five minutes represents some of the time frames for a round used in MMA fights or Grappling tournaments. Below is a list of exercises with reps that we will use with the sand bag for 5 minutes, repeating until the 5 minute âtraining roundâ has ended.

Sandbag / 5 minutes:
- Clean & press x 5
- Zercher squat x 5
- Good morning / RDL hybrid (hold bag in zercher position tightly against chest) x 5
- Reverse lunges x 10
- Turkish get up x 5 (holding sandbag against chest or w/arms extended)
The above TUT round is an ass kicker no doubt about it. After this round we may perform some shorter rounds of 2 â 3 minutes using kettlebells or a barbell. There are a lot of variations for TUT training and I have also spoken to Louie Simmons regarding this method. I asked him about how he trained MMA Fighter, Kevin Randleman. Louie would have him perform a 10 minute round of a 205 lb barbell complex that worked like this:
- Power clean from ground x 1 rep
- hang clean x 1 rep
- hang clean and press or jerk x 1 rep
After the 3 rep complex above, Kevin rested 30 seconds and would keep repeating for 10 minutes. This complex represented an explosive bout that may happen during a fight. Notice I said âMay happen.â

Every program has flaws and nothing is perfect. There may or may not be a 30 second explosive bout of action during a fight, who knows! The fight may not even last 30 seconds!
This is why I use a variety of TUT rounds such as 5 minute rounds like above, or one exercise for one rep done for 5 minutes such as a burpee, clean, squat & press combo with a barbell, kettlebells or sand bag. We might do this 1 rep combo followed by a 15 second rest period. The 15 second rest period can represent the time where the grappler is in the guard and working for good positioning but not exploding aggressively.
How can you create a work out that has carry over to your style of fighting or grappling? Perhaps you might perform exercise on your back to improve your ground game. You might perform floor presses and various sit up movements with kettlebells and only perform the bottom portion of Turkish get ups for a total of 5 â 10 minutes.
One last point I must drive home (which has led me to listen more and more to my athletes) is that of individualizing the program as much as possible to meet the level of GPP and overall conditioning that you or your athletes posses. Some athletes can handle a lot of volume and intensity while others reap great gains from short work outs that have a lower intensity level.
For example, I trained a high school wrestler with only time under tension variations during his in season once a week for no more than 20 minutes including his warm up! To me this seemed it wouldnât work but he kept stating things such as: âI feel so strong out there and I feel like I am never tiredâ.
I watched his performance improve through the entire season where as most kid burn out mentally and / or physically. In addition this athlete performs little if any max effort training. It worked because we listened to one another and found a time and intensity level that worked best for him!
Want to know the secrets of developing brute strength and steel-forged muscles? Itâs time to ditch your money wasting gym membership and start training Underground! Click HERE to get started!
Categories: Zach Even-Esh Tags: strength, strongman training, underground strength, Zach Even-Esh
Rules? There Are No Rules! Part 2
Iâve got another story for you, and it always brings back some of my favorite times in the gym. Actually, I have countless âfavorite timesâ in the gym but this one is special to me, but honestly, all these memories are special to me.
It was the summer of 1994, I was in Israel and I was staying there for about one month. My older bro was in the military there and he had told me about a small gym that was in town.
Before this time, my workouts in Israel consisted of going to a local park and doing 15 â 20 sets of pull ups every other day. When I found out there was a gym I was amped up! Not being able to lift was a tough ordeal to handle because I was seriously addicted to training. I used to cut school so I could get to the gym in the morning and then have my parents drive me there in the evening. I was addicted and still am.
This gym was not hard core. It was not meant for people like us, it was meant for the local people and there were no hard core lifters at all. It was a small place, less than 1,000 sq. ft. and it had some old equipment that seemed flimsy and weak. I have no idea how that equipment even held up.
The owner was cool as hell, a former member of a Special Forces unit called âGolaniâ and then became a trainer for all Special Forces units in the Israeli army. He certainly had a few screws loose. Ask him how to get big, âEat more and train heavier.â Ask him how to get ripped, âStop eating so much.â Talk about the science of training & nutrition! Jim Wendler would have liked this guy. He couldnât speak English unless he was cursing at us which reminded me of Ferruggia. That worked fine for motivation because you never wanted this guy to out do you in a training session. He was tough and he loved training heavy. It was war every time we went in there to train.
Anyway, let me back track a bit here. The first day I walked to the gym I saw a guy working out there, he was American and his name was Joe. He was in Israel trying to get into their elite military unit, the Seals, which is called âShayetetâ. He was one tough SOB and having two training partners like this simply couldnât make a vacation any better! That day that I walked in the gym Joe was benching 295 for reps. For most of our readers that sounds like nothing, but, this guy also swam 5 miles every other day, then ran 5 miles on the days he didnât swim. I emphasize the words âranâ as he was not jogging, he simply hauled ass. He was in phenomenal overall condition physically & mentally. When we all met and decided to train together it was a battle every time. There was always someone outdoing the other and the workouts seemed to last forever because no one wanted to tell Avner, the gym owner, that we were tired and wanted to stop working out.
During my stay, Avner had me coming to the gym twice a day, morning and evening. I didnât even think it was good for me or if he even felt it was good for me to train so much. I simply believe he wanted me there so he can train more because he too loved training. At that time Dorian Yates was getting tons of publicity regarding his short, heavy duty workouts that Mike Mentzer popularized. I was in quite a bit of a shock because I was used to doing two heavy sets per exercise when Avner had us doing 5 sets per exercise on average. I tried to explain to Avner what over training was and he always replied by saying, âF#ck Dorian Yates.â More science and words of wisdom.
As the days passed, every time I got to the gym to train Joe was already there. He already did his morning run or swim, and then he was found doing sit ups with his feet locked under a set of heavy dumbbells. I didnât pay much attention to it in the beginning. After our workouts when Avner has us working abs, Joe never mentioned the fact that he did 100 sit ups already. I slowly took notice to how Joe was always there before me to train. If we were scheduled for 9 am training, Joe was already there doing one of two things; flat benching and / or sit ups.
What else was odd was that after every long and brutal workout, Joe got the curl bar and placed a 45 on each side and always did 5 sets of 10 curls. After a while, Flex magazine got the best of me and I told Joe, âDude, why are you always doing curls, sit ups and benching, youâre gonna over train!â Joe replied these exact words, âShit brother, you think the fucking dudes in the pen think about over training? They do their sit ups, push ups, benching and curls every day!â He turned around and continued to do his curls.
I was shocked because I was 18 years young and too poisoned by the magazines to understand these concepts of âNo Rulesâ training. I simply could not think outside the box. I figured that I can find a way to make him eat his words. We had a leg workout the next day and I knew that it was my strongest body part. I had a goal of burying him during the workout and forcing him to push his training harder than ever before that day. My goal was to make him vomit and skip those daily curls. We squatted off of a flat benchâs catch racks. This was scary as all hell! The flat bench had those catch racks that would rise up high enough to look like those gun rack type squat racks. I was scared that the weights would topple over the bench so we piled 45âs on the flat bench to balance off the weights we used when we racked the weight.
Our workout consisted of endless sets of squats, front squats, barbell lunges, leg extension, leg curls and RDLâs. The work out was nauseating, filled with yelling, forced reps, drop sets on the leg curls and extensions, anything to set Joe straight. I was shot after that work out big time. Joe still got that dam curl bar and did his 5 sets of curls and finished with 100 sit ups!
When that 4 week âvacationâ ended I was bumming. To find two tough-as-nails training partners who knew no rules or limits was a gem! There was no sophisticated equipment, no power rack and certainly no loud pumping music. There were three guys, all from different walks of life with one goal, to train hard as all hell and to give nothing less than 100 %. We created our own atmosphere and we thrived in it!
Last time I trained in Israel Avner was still training like a mad man and he reminds of Louie in a way. He stays in the gym to train others but all through the day he is doing mini workouts in addition to his main workout and this was exactly why a man in his mid 40âs was having no problem burying us during our training sessions. Joe went on to become a SEAL in the states and the rest of his story in confidential my friends. I have learned a lot from the most âuneducatedâ lifters out there. I doubt they ever picked up a magazine and followed those workouts or read those programs. They trained six days a week and often times trained twice a day. If your philosophy is âF#ck Dorian Yatesâ I have a funny feeling youâll do alright out there! I always said Warriors and Gladiators are a dying breed, letâs do our part and keep them alive! Stay tough brothers.
Want to know the secrets of developing brute strength and steel-forged muscles? Itâs time to ditch your money wasting gym membership and start training Underground! Click HERE to get started!
Categories: Zach Even-Esh Tags: strength, strongman training, underground strength, Zach Even-Esh
Rules? There Are No Rules! Part I
I will never forget those days! I was 14 years old and it was the summer before sophomore year in high school. I was training at the YMCA in the neighboring town. I rode my bike there 5 or 6 days a week and was addicted to training. The place was a dark dungeon and I loved it.
There couldnât have been a better place to get stronger.. I visualized Dave Draper, Arnold, Franco and Ken Waller while I was there. I know that I am a little strange but I was obsessed with bodybuilding and wished I was actually in the Golden Era! I got all my routines straight out of FLEX magazine.

You know the routine, twenty sets of chest, supersets, drop sets, âfeel the muscleâ and all that other good stuff, or good shitâŚwhich is it anyway, stuff or shit?
The YMCA was a small dungeon, one of which todayâs Darksiders would have loved to have. But in 1994 they revamped the dungeon with pretty walls, carpeted floors and machines everywhere. I much rather see the brown rusted equipment and old York plates that scattered the gym floor. We had a small radio and always had some rock station on. I was the youngest and the guys liked the fact that I brought in tapes of Metallica and AC / DC.

I read Arnoldâs Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding every day and looked at the old black and white photos of training in the âGolden Eraâ to get me motivated. I rode my bike to the YMCA, 5 miles in each direction; most teens nowadays would need oxygen after this bike ride. Itâs sad that so many kids are out of shape, but thatâs an entirely different subject that I will delve into in a future article. Letâs talk about George. I think that was his name, it was almost 16 years ago so the name slips my mind but the training I enjoyed there seems like it was only yesterday!

Letâs take a trip back to 1990 shall we? Come on, you wont regret it and it might even motivate you to stop crying about your shitty gym and get you to create your own dungeon!
No doubt about it, Geroge was jacked! From my recollection he looked to be a solid 250 or 260. He didnât have a routine like most of us did. I supersetted chest and back, did legs alone and did shoulders followed by twenty supersets for arms. George obviously knew back then that routine was the enemy, and heavy free weights ruled if you wanted to pack on the size and strength needed to bust through your clothing. I donât recall him being all that redundant with the exercises he chose.

For the most part, George did one to three heavy lifts (spending 30 â 45 minutes on most exercises) followed by some lighter work with higher reps for about 10 minutes. His basic lifts were also way beyond the normal three or four sets that FLEX magazine described.
He would spend a minimum of thirty minutes on each exercise and often times it was more. It wasnât odd for me to complete an entire workout (which was usually a good 90 minutes) while only seeing George do the Flat Bench and Parallel Bar Dips with a 60 lb dumbbell. I would watch him do set after set with 315 lbs on the flat bench, ranging in reps from two to 8. I donât know if he had his own system floating around in the back of his head or he simply did what ever the hell he felt like doing. He also moved the weights faster than all hell.

What in the world is wrong with this guy anyway? The magazines and pros always said lower the weight slowly. I was ready to tell him how things should be done! He lowered the bar quickly and exploded the bar off his chest like it was gonna go through the ceiling!
After he spent a good hour on the flat bench killing the weights, resting as he felt, he cranked out heavy weighted dips in the same high speed fashion. His reps were in the 5 â 10 range. Up and down fast like a piston, His triceps were busting out his t-shirt. He had a 60 lb. dumbbell and hooked it to a belt and cranked out set after blistering set.

The rest of the gym members did dips with bodyweight, and watched George in awe. He finished this workout with cable pushdowns with the stack and a 45 lb plate attached to the front and the back of the weight stack. He did these with no problem and spent a good 15 minutes blasting away here.
The rest of the gym always watched George and dropped their jaws. No one was brave enough to get under heavy weights like George. Isolation exercises such as flys, laterals and concentration curls were way too common in that gym and Louie Simmons would have slapped us all silly if he saw this type of training going on. Back then, the information came from the magazines and unfortunately, I saw this style of training in a high school weight room last year. By the way, that football team holds a state record for most consecutive losses; 30 in a row. We didnât know any better back then and neither do a lot of young kids nowadays.

Another workout that stands clear in my mind is where George spent his workout doing RDLâs for set after set mixed in with heavy lying extensions. I remember the RDLâs were done with 315 and the lying extensions had 50 or 60 lbs on each side of the curl bar. It was as if he was doing some sort of active rest in between his heavy posterior work but he didnât even know it was active rest. To him it was all work and fitted in just fine with his âNo rulesâ philosophy of training.
Once again, the sets were endless and these two exercises lasted the duration of my full workout. Most of the time George was there before me and was still training after I was finished! He did 4 â 6 reps on the RDLâs and did 6 â 8 reps for the triceps. Very explosive and very fast, rep after rep, set after set.
George probably never picked up a magazine and was lucky enough to avoid the poison that filled our minds back then. He followed a simple rule, there are NO RULES! You can over analyze if you wish and demand that indeed there are rules to training.

Sure, training is a science and there are percentages and an optimal number of lifts to be performed per month as well. But the beauty behind these days in the dark dungeon of this YMCA was that George broke all the rules and he was light years ahead of any lifter in that small room as well as lifters outside that room!
In fact, I can safely assume he broke all the rules with regards to nutrition as well. While everyone was busy eating cans of tuna George was surely chowing down on steak and potatoes every single day of the week.

While we all did our 3 or 4 sets of 25 lb concentration curls George probably did 150 â 200 reps of dips with a minimum of 60 lbs strapped around his waist. While we wasted time doing the machine leg press George was busy doing RDLâs for 45 minutes, set after blistering set. While we were incline pressing 95 lbs. on the bar for incline benching, George was doing flat dumbbell benching with the 90âs pressing them up like they were cake for a half an hour. Once again, he moved the weights fast and explosively.
There is always a Darksider somewhere and George certainly was stuck in a different time zone. So the next time you start analyzing how to incorporate your optimal number of lifts per month on the bench and which bar you should use for each squat workout, it might be high time to take a trip way back and start simplifying your program. Iâm not telling you to do exactly as George did, but if you can use your creativity with the basic lifts youâll be back on the road to progress in no time.
Want to know the secrets of developing brute strength and steel-forged muscles? Itâs time to ditch your money wasting gym membership and start training Underground! Click HERE to get started!
Categories: Zach Even-Esh Tags: strength, strongman training, underground strength, Zach Even-Esh
Underground Strength Secrets with Coach Ethan Reeve Part III
4) What are some things in / out of the weight room that you would discourage football players / wrestlers to do? Are there any training methods / techniques that are used commonly today yet have no carry over to their sport?
Coach Reeve: We tell our athletes and sport coaches that there are many ways to become a champion. Some are more efficient and some are less efficient. We have found many ways to gain strength, power, speed, athleticism and size! We try to incorporate as much variety as possible without compromising our philosophy and efficiency while also delaying boredom.
Weight machines are not used by me or my two assistant strength coaches here at Wake Forest when working with our sport teams. This is part of our philosophy. We are not saying you cannot have success using machines. Of course you can! We just don’t train our athletes with machines during the team workouts. We don’t discourage our athletes from using machines during their personal “champion” workouts individually. We do have machines in our strength room, just not many.
We prefer training our athletes with total body lifts to develop strength, power and athleticism. In our opinion, using weight machines is less efficient in developing these qualities. Isolation of joints or muscle groups is a less efficient way of training athletes. If the athlete desires, during personal workouts, to do isolation work then we do not discourage this!
 
5 & 6) With regards to in season training for football players and wrestlers, are there any specific things you can advise them on or perhaps guidelines to follow? Especially w/regards to how so many high school athletes do strength training only in the off season and then completely stop during the in season?
Last but not least, give us a little insight to your thoughts on the “Champion’s Attitude”. Also, what does it take for an athlete to make it in a D 1 sport and be highly successful?
Coach Reeve: A major part of our philosophy is the “champion’s attitude”. A champion in any sport has to make a concrete decision to become a champion. A champion is different than other athletes. But there is a reason he is different.
He does things other athletes either refuse to do or don’t think of doing! He does the “extra” things it takes to become a champion. This is true in sport, music, the classroom, business, medicine, law, etc.
 A champion does both the extra work and works hard at it. The champion works hard and smart. He writes down his short and long term goals to give him direction. The champion finds a way to win.

The champion doesn’t want to waste time! The champion wrestler does the extra drilling of wrestling technique, runs extra bleachers, gets up early to workout before school, does extra pushups or chins before going to bed! He is the one that watches what he eats and gets adequate rest and sleep.
He stays flexible and in great condition! He has great control of his emotions in stressful situations. He comes to practice early and leaves late. He is the one that strives to get better and better each and every day.
The sport coach has the duty to encourage the “champion’s attitude”. “Did you do any extra workout today?” he will ask! The strength coach and sport coach must not design team workouts that will take every bit of energy out of the athletes. Leave some energy for the “champion” to do his extra workouts.
This way the champion can take some ownership in his success. The sport coach and strength coach should design the team workouts to make them difficult enough for the team to have success.
If the strength coach and sport coach designed workouts around the champion then he will find few athletes left to coach. I have had many of these types of champion athletes ask why I don’t push the whole team harder. My answer is “how many athletes would be willing to work like a champion?” Not many!!!
However, by encouraging the “champion’s attitude” maybe we can get more athletes doing their “champion” workouts. The key is to get the athlete to “want” to be champion not “pushed” into being a champion. We push our teams hard enough to win as a team while encouraging the champion’s attitude in those individuals that decide to be a champion.
7) As the head strength coach who works closely with the football coaches, how do the coaches at your university & other universities view the combine that high school football coaches compete at?
Do the coaches get swayed into recruiting a player if he does well on the combines?
Any other comments on the combine tests?
Coach Reeve: Our football coaching staff will look at results from the combine. However, most importantly, they get to know the football player, his family and his character to see if he fits Wake Forest University.
I can’t answer for other universities. I will tell you that combine results are of little value if the football player does not exhibit being a good football player on game day. From my experience, the NFL scouts feel the same way. They will look at tons of game film. If the player lets up on plays and doesn’t play all plays with his “hair on fire” then the scouts will not ask me much about him. We give the NFL scouts strength room results dealing with speed, agility, strength and power. These results don’t matter if the player doesn’t produce on game day!
Hopefully, this will be of some value to some of the high school football players to make sure they always play hard each and every play.
If you want more from Coach Reeve, check out The Underground Strength System for a uncut audio interrogation where Coach Reeve reveals some of the most powerful strength & conditioning information you will ever hear. Check it out HERE.
Categories: Guest Authors, Zach Even-Esh Tags: strength, strongman training, underground strength, Zach Even-Esh
Underground Strength Secrets with Coach Ethan Reeve Part II
2) With the experience & knowledge you have gained in the past years as the head strength coach at Wake Forest, what have you learned or implemented differently that you wish you would have done when you had wrestlers in your strength room (for those who don’t know, Wake Forest does not have a wrestling program) at your previous coaching positions?
Coach Reeve: We do not have a wrestling program here at Wake Forest. I wish we did! I’m not sure I would have trained wrestlers a whole lot differently than I did back in the 80′s.
I have a notebook for every one of my six years at UT Chattanooga. It is a detailed notebook with every practice’s lesson plan, minute by minute. It also has my observations of each workout.
Within the notebook, prior to the daily lesson plans, is a detailed Master Plan of the teaching progression and drills to incorporate for strength training and wrestling technique.
We had a philosophy the permeated every wrestling drill and competition we had. Everything we did was based on these three elements of our philosophy:
1. Pressure
2. Position
3. Motion
These words were said, by me, to our team maybe 100-200 times at each and every practice. I will explain what their meaning is!
1. Pressure. The wrestler must keep pressure on his opponent every split second of every match he wrestles. This is whether he is on top, bottom, or on his feet! Pressure, pressure, pressure! Unrelenting pressure must be applied. The wrestler must also be able to handle pressure mentally and physically when it is applied to him. Referees will make mistakes. The crowd will taunt him. The opposing coach will say negative things at times.
The wrestler must maintain his cool. He should never show emotion of any kind! Stone-face and stoic! When you show emotion in competition, the heat of battle, it is compared to a shark smelling blood! If you display emotion during the battle the shark will smell the blood and attack that weakness.
We taught our wrestlers to search for physical and mental weaknesses in their opponents and attack them! If you are to have success with pressure then you must put all three portions of the philosophy together. And it must be implemented into every drill and scrimmage during practice sessions. There is no way you will pressure in a match without practicing pressure in every drill in practice.
2. Position. If the wrestler applies pressure to his opponent while being in poor position he will surely not have good success. All strength is angle specific. A great wrestler puts himself into positions of strength. This is whether he is on his feet, bottom or top position.
Having good position is not just being in an athletic stance. It is his position in relation to his opponent. Cutting distance down so he can work his offensive technique and also be able to have a good defense when his opponent attacks is paramount.
This is true in all sport whether it is strong man competitions, Olympic weightlifting, Power lifting, tennis, golf, football, basketball or wrestling. In the lifting sports it is gravity, resistance and the object to be lifted that is your opponent.
The great wrestler continues putting himself into positions of strength in his sport. This is why being a strong strength room guy is not as important to him. The strength you receive from the strength room will only benefit the athlete if he has paid the price with technique of his sport.
There are a lot of wrestlers that don’t appear strong. However, they realize their strength potential in wrestling by putting themselves into positions of strength. Teaching a wrestler how to use his body with total body power and strength lifts will help him use his strength in wrestling.
Out of season we would focus on the power cleans, hang cleans, squats, standing presses, chins, dips, etc. In-season we placed more focus on lifting our partners within the technique of the wrestling drills. That way we hit two birds with one stone. We worked on our strength specific to the sport of wrestling! However, in-season, we still did our lifting two days per week.

3. Motion. A wrestler is not in good position if he cannot move. A wrestler cannot run as fast or move as fast on his knees, butt, back, sides etc. as he can while he is on his feet.
Shooting takedowns and staying on your knees will stop your motion. I am not saying you should not shoot to your knees. However, don’t stay there if you cannot finish quickly while there. Learn to hit on the knee and get off of it quickly or work on your takedown technique by not going to your knees.
We found we had more success by not allowing our wrestlers to go to their knees on double leg and single leg takedowns. Their technique for the setups and penetration was much better by doing this. We did allow them to go to their knees while doing fireman’s carries.
There is one other thing we did at UT Chattanooga that no other wrestling team did that I am aware of. We made our wrestlers bow as they entered and exited the wrestling room. This was not done as some religious sort of thing.
The only clothing we allowed our wrestlers to wear in the room was t-shirt, shorts, jock, socks and shoes! No sweats or rubber gear! We emphasized to our wrestlers that they need to come into every practice with the intent to leave the room in some way better than when they walked in.

Did they get better at technique, stronger, better condition, more mentally tough? Better and better everyday was our motto. A wrestler cannot get better if he knows everything. He must come in with an empty glass to learn and improve. If he walks in with a full glass, if he knows everything, he will not make changes needed to become a champion! Bowing as you enter and exit the room promotes humility. Humility allows the humble to learn and get better!
3) How would you go about training a high school football player who is heavy in body weight but lacks the strength & power for someone his weight? The reason I ask is that I find a good number of high school football players tend to carry extra weight yet are weak /deconditioned for their size.
Coach Reeve: That high school athlete, in our opinion, should work on all qualities of athleticism together: strength, power, speed, anaerobic-endurance, flexibility, balance, mental toughness, spatial and kinesthetic awareness.
By doing this the athlete will fit into his body naturally with some changes in his diet. I am not a certified dietician nor do I claim a vast knowledge of nutrition. I know enough to identify folks that need some help with their diet and try to direct them in the right place.
We believe the combination of Olympic lifts (hybrids), Powerlifts, bodyweight calisthenics, dumbbells, kettlebells, speed work twice a week, agility work twice a week, tumbling, plyometrics, static and dynamic stretching will benefit all athletes.

I remember one of our baseball coaches coming up to me at Ohio University telling me that a couple of the pitchers didn’t understand how the tumbling or agility ladders would help them as pitchers. I told him that the two pitchers he mentioned were not very good at ladders or tumbling. Also, I informed him to tell the pitchers when they get good at ladders and tumbling they’ll understand why we do them. They both went on to have their best seasons that spring.
Everything we do is based on the ability to move. The only way to get good at moving is to move everyday! As the athletes get stronger and more powerful in the strength room they will move faster and more explosively.
However, their flexibility or lack of flexibility will be a limiting factor if they don’t do both dynamic and static stretching each day. Static stretching should be done at the end of the workouts or after a dynamic warm-up. We feel it is more important for athletes to spend more time on dynamic flexibilty like: tumbling, hurdle flexibilty drills, form running drills, and agility drills.
What we are trying to develop are athletes that can move more efficiently for sport. They must spend the bulk of their training time working on the technique of their sport in order to be successful!
However, they must also work on being more well-rounded athletes. This is where strength coaches come in to play! The strength coach must also realize that strength and athletic development, by his prescription, is just a piece of the pie. This is why we stress that strength coaches train athletes to be better athletes on the field of competition. They should focus on making their athletes better athletes not so much on getting bigger lift numbers to be posted on the strength room board.
If you want more from Coach Reeve, check out The Underground Strength System for a uncut audio interrogation where Coach Reeve reveals some of the most powerful strength & conditioning information you will ever hear. Check it out HERE.




