Read Beyond 5/3/1: Simple Training for Extraordinary Results Online
Authors: Jim Wendler
• 12, 40-yard sprints with 90 added pounds, 60 seconds rest
between sprints. Day Two
• 8, 40-yard sprints with 140 added pounds, 90 seconds rest
between sprints Day Three
• 6, 40-yard sprints with 180 added pounds, Do not time rest periods.
• Rest 5-10 minutes.
• 4, 40-yard sprints with 90 added pounds, 60 seconds rest between
sprints.
Week 7
Day One
• 12, 40-yard sprints with 90 added pounds, 60 seconds rest
between sprints. Day Two
• 6, 40-yard sprints with 140 added pounds, 60 seconds rest between
sprints.
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Rest 5-10 minutes.
• 6, 40-yard sprints, with 90 added pounds, 60 seconds rest
between sprints. Day Three
• 4, 40-yard sprints with 180 added pounds, 90 seconds rest
between sprints Rest 5-10 minutes.
• 4, 40-yard sprints with 90 added pounds, 60 seconds rest between
sprints.
Week 8
Day One
• 12, 40-yard sprints with 90 added pounds, 60 seconds rest
between sprints. Day Two
• 6, 40-yard sprints with 140 added pounds, 60 seconds rest between
sprints.
• Rest 5-10 minutes.
• 8, 40-yard sprints, with 90 added pounds, 60 seconds rest between
sprints. Day Three
• 6, 40-yard sprints with 180 added pounds, 90 seconds rest between
sprints
• Rest 5-10 minutes.
• 4, 40-yard sprints with 90 added pounds, 60 seconds rest between
sprints.
Prowler Challenge – Conditioning for Weeks 9--‐12
Week 9
Day One
• 15, 40-yard sprints with 90 added pounds, 60 seconds rest
between sprints. Day Two
• 8, 40-yard sprints with 140 added pounds, 60 seconds rest
between sprints. Rest 5-10 minutes.
• 6, 40-yard sprints, with 90 added pounds, 60 seconds rest between
sprints.
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Day Three
• 6, 40-yard sprints with 180 added pounds, 90 seconds rest between
sprints
• Rest 5-10 minutes.
• 6, 40-yard sprints with 90 added pounds, 60 seconds rest between
sprints.
Week 10
Day One
• 15, 40-yard sprints with 90 added pounds, 60 seconds rest between
sprints. Day Two
• 10, 40-yard sprints with 140 added pounds, 60 seconds rest between
sprints. Day Three
• 6, 40-yard sprints with 180 added pounds, 90 seconds rest between
sprints
• Rest 5-10 minutes.
• 4, 40-yard sprints with 140 added pounds, 60 seconds rest between
sprints.
Week 11
Day One
• 15, 40-yard sprints with 90 added pounds, 60 seconds rest
between sprints. Day Two
• 10, 40-yard sprints with 140 added pounds, 60 seconds rest between
sprints. Day Three
• 8, 40-yard sprints with 180 added pounds, 90 seconds rest between
sprints
• Rest 5-10 minutes.
• 4, 40-yard sprints with 140 added pounds, 60 seconds rest between
sprints.
Week 12
Cut out the lifting this week – we are completely focused on hitting the
goal. Day One
• 12, 40-yard sprints with 90 added pounds, 60 seconds rest between
sprints.
Day Two
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• 12, 40-yard sprints with 90 added pounds, 60 seconds rest
between sprints. Day Three - Conditioning Test
• 10, 40-yard sprints with 180 added pounds with 60 seconds rest
between
sprints.
100 Rep Challenge
I love challenges – even if they are somewhat pointless or don’t really mean
anything. There is something amazing about setting out on the hard path,
struggling like mad and reaching the final destination. Many people shake
their heads at those that do that and continually ask why anyone would
subject themselves to such “trivial” things. But the work and the
perseverance to reach the goal is what really matters – these things harden
the body and the mind. They teach you resolve and how to fight through
mental and physical pain.
Challenges also give you the opportunity to test your limits. How far are you
willing to go? Do you have what it takes when you can’t see the light at
the end of the tunnel? More importantly, these challenges, if hard enough,
teach you that anything can be possible. I’m not ignorant enough to think
that one day I’ll grow wings and
fly – but sometimes when an obstacle seems too tall to climb over, you can draw
on
the strength built over these “trivial” challenges. In other words, these things
can
carry over to real life.
The performance goal of the 100 Rep Challenge is simple – complete all the
workouts listed below. Not a day or rep missed. We are not looking to
“Increase Your Bench Press 30 Pounds in Two Weeks!” or “Add a Half Inch
to Your Arms in
One Workout!” What we are training is hard work, mental fortitude and work
ethic.
This workout is not haphazardly put together. I’ve combined strength work,
conditioning work and hypertrophy work in a manner that allows you to
build each over a 6-week period. I’ve used many of these 100-rep exercises
in this manner during my rehab and over the years. It wasn’t until Paul
Carter and I took the time to brainstorm about how to incorporate them into a
proper training program that this workout was shaped. There are numerous
ways to do this but the 100-Rep Challenge is something special. The strength
work comes with the heavy barbell lifts. The conditioning work comes with
Prowler pushes and the 100-rep work. The hypertrophy work comes with the
100-rep work. Each is given attention and each
has the proper attention given.
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You will be outrageously sore during this time. Expect it and embrace it. It’s
only six weeks – hardly a life time and something you SHOULD demand from
yourself. If you are unfamiliar with simple recovery methods, TNation has
dozens of articles to help you. This is not a time to cut out sleep, stretching
or mobility work. This is not a time to be “cutting.” Cutting is for people
who don’t have the discipline to eat right the majority of the time.
This training will allow you to earn the right to eat hearty. It will force
you to learn
about recovery.
The 100-Rep Work is great for hypertrophy – you will be tapping into a
rep range most never venture into. It is also terrific for strengthening your
tendons (and give you an outrageous pump!) You body will change in
these six weeks – your arms, traps and hamstrings will grow, and your
conditioning will also improve.
Enough with the small talk, let’s get to the training.
Training Week – Overview
• Monday – Lower Body Weight Training
• Tuesday – Lower Body 100
• Wednesday – Prowler Walk
• Thursday – Upper Body Weight Training
• Friday – Upper Body 100
• Saturday – Prowler Walk
Notice that there are two days devoted to strength, two days devoted to
conditioning and two days devoted to hypertrophy.
100--‐Rep Work
The following exercises will be used exclusively for the 100-rep work. It’s
not hard to do; just do 100 reps in one set. There are only three exercises
per day and trust me, this is all you will need. Don’t feel the need to add more
exercises; just do them as prescribed. If you feel any of the weights are too
heavy for your current level, simply do less. The weights listed are what
most people who have five or more years of training can handle. They are
not easy but they are doable. And if you have
any doubts, stop it. You must expect more from yourself.
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Upper Body 100
• Front Plate Raise – this is done with a full range of motion, until the
hands/plate are over the head. Using this range of motion greatly
taxes the upper back and shoulders. Weight used = 25-pound plate
• Barbell Curls – Weight used = 45-lb barbel
• Kirk Karwoski Rows – Weight used = Barbell with 135 pounds.
Straps are
not allowed.
Lower Body 100
• One Leg Squat – this is also known as a Bulgarian squat. This is
done with one leg in front and the other foot on a bench. Only your
bodyweight is used. Finish all the reps on one side before switching.
You will do 100 TOTAL reps
– meaning you will do 50 reps PER LEG.
• Hamstring Curl – this is done with 10 to 20- pound ankle weights. Lay
on the
floor or on the bench. Do both legs at the same time.
• Sit-ups – lock your feet under something stable, cross your arms on your
chest and do a sit-up.
100 Rep Notes
You are free to substitute any exercise you wish, but I can only
approve of the ones listed above. These were picked for a variety of
reasons, namely to target weak points, target areas people want and need
to develop, ease of performing 100 reps with, mobility and the simple
challenge of getting better.
You can rest during the 100-rep set but you cannot put bar down and you
cannot make the exercise “easier” during this time, i.e. laying down during a
rest period during a sit-up. If you are in doubt of what constitutes rest,
you are probably doing it wrong.
At the top of the front plate raise, squeeze your traps and upper back. Use as
straight of arms as possible.
Karwoski Rows are explained in the Yoke article I wrote on TNation earlier this
year.
Your form will probably get sloppy, which is to be expected. You must try to
maintain some integrity during the set. The weight is light enough that you
will not get hurt but the point of the doing the exercise is to exhaust
and annihilate the
muscle, not to just get the reps.
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You will be sore – expect it.
You can rest as much as you want between exercises. Don’t bring a stop
watch – we
are in the weight room, not on a track.
You must learn how to relax your mind during these sets – don’t focus on the
pain. You have to learn to disassociate yourself from reality.
I usually attack the first 50-60 reps without stopping. I take a short break and