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Practical Programming for Strength Training Kindle Edition
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There is a difference between Exercise and Training. Exercise is physical activity for its own sake, a workout done for the effect it produces today, during the workout or right after you're through. Training is physical activity done with a longer-term goal in mind, the constituent workouts of which are specifically designed to produce that goal. Training is how athletes prepare to win, and how all motivated people approach physical preparation.
Practical Programming for Strength Training 3rd Edition addresses the topic of Training. It details the mechanics of the process, from the basic physiology of adaptation to the specific programs that apply these principles to novice, intermediate, and advanced lifters.
--Each chapter completely updated
--New illustrations and graphics
--Better explanations of the proven programs that have been helping hundreds of thousands of lifters get stronger more efficiently
--Expanded Novice chapter with the details of 3 different approaches to the problem of getting stuck and special approaches for the underweight and overweight trainee
--Expanded Intermediate chapter with 18 separate programs and 11 detailed examples
--Expanded Advanced chapter with detailed examples of 9 different programs
--Expanded Special Populations chapter with example programs for women and masters lifters training through their 50s, 60s, 70s, and 80s
--Day-to-day, workout-to-workout, week-by-week detailed programs for every level of training advancement
--The most comprehensive book on the theory and practice of programming for strength training in print
Printed in a new larger format for better display of the programs, PPST3 will be an important addition to your training library.
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication date6 Mar. 2014
- File size5379 KB
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Workouts should consist of three to five exercises, with the most emphasis placed on basic exercises, and any assistance exercises done at the end of the workout.Highlighted by 1,529 Kindle readers
If strength gains are the primary training objective, rests of greater than 2 minutes are not only okay, but quite necessary.Highlighted by 1,509 Kindle readers
Overtraining occurs when performance does not recover within one reduced-load training cycle.Highlighted by 1,285 Kindle readers
Product details
- ASIN : B00IU8YETW
- Publisher : The Aasgaard Company; 3rd edition (6 Mar. 2014)
- Language : English
- File size : 5379 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 462 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: 159,024 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- 148 in Sports Training
- 1,054 in Exercise & Fitness (Kindle Store)
- 1,103 in Fitness Training
- Customer reviews:
About the authors

Mark Rippetoe is the author of Starting Strength: Basic Barbell Training, Practical Programming for Strength Training, Strong Enough?, Mean Ol' Mr. Gravity, and numerous journal, magazine and internet articles. He has worked in the fitness industry since 1978, and has been the owner of the Wichita Falls Athletic Club since 1984. He graduated from Midwestern State University in 1983 with a Bachelor of Science in geology and a minor in anthropology. He was in the first group certified by the National Strength and Conditioning Association as a CSCS in 1985, and the first to formally relinquish that credential in 2009. Rip was a competitive powerlifter for ten years. He won the 198-pound weight class at the Greater Texas Classic in 1982, and placed in state- and regional-level meets for the next 6 years, retiring from competition in 1988. For the next 10 years Rip announced most of the powerlifting meets in North Texas, including the 1995 APF Nationals in Dallas. He retired from powerlifting altogether in 1997, to focus more on Olympic weightlifting.
Rip acquired a solid background in coaching the Olympic lifts as a result of his coach, Bill Starr, using them in his powerlifting training. Further experience with the Olympic lifts came with exposure to the coaching of Tommy Suggs, Jim Moser, Dr. Lon Kilgore, Angel Spassov, Istvan Javorek, Harvey Newton, Mike Conroy, John Thrush, and many fellow lifters. Rip obtained his USWF Level III certification in 1988 at the USOC’s Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs with Mike Stone, Harvey Newton, and Angel Spassov on faculty. His USAW Senior Coach certification was achieved in 1999 at the OTC with Lyn Jones, John Thrush, and Mike Conroy. He was invited, as an Olympic weightlifting coach, to the Olympic Solidarity course at the OTC in 2000. He taught both the USAW Club Coach course and the Sports Performance Coach course with Dr. Kilgore from 1999 through 2005. Rip served as the president of the North Texas Local Weightlifting Committee of USAW from 2004-2011. He coached and participated in the coaching of James Moser, Glenn Pendlay, Dr. Kilgore, Josh Wells (Junior World Team 2004) most of the national and international-level athletes on the Wichita Falls Weightlifting team, which was hosted and coached at WFAC from 1999 through 2006, as well as the collegiate weightlifting team from Midwestern State University through 2010. Rip still actively coaches the sport on a daily basis at WFAC, and the power clean and power snatch at our seminars around the country every month.
The Starting Strength method of training novices is a distillation of Rip’s experiences over three and a half decades as a competitive powerlifter, Olympic weightlifting coach, and gym owner. From its inception in 1984, every new member at WFAC was taught the basic barbell lifts as a part of their membership at the gym, and the application of the basics of powerlifting and Olympic weightlifting to efficiently meet the needs of the general public form the basis of the Starting Strength method, as detailed in Starting Strength: Basic Barbell Training and Practical Programming for Strength Training.

FREE Articles & Downloadable Strength Training Programs www.AndyBaker.com
With over 15 years of dedicated experience as a personal trainer and strength coach, Andy Baker is one of the most sought after strength and fitness experts in the industry. Andy has provided strength & conditioning coaching to hundreds of elite athletes, as well as high achieving adult fitness clients who want to change their lives through his methods.
Andy has owned Kingwood Strength & Conditioning since 2007 - a private gym and personal training facility dedicated to strength training. Andy has coached a wide variety of clientele, from Division I college athletes to adults in their 80s
In addition to opening Kingwood Strength & Conditioning in 2007, Andy has been a featured speaker at many prominent industry events, and is the co-author of the best-selling Practical Programming for Strength Training with industry icon Mark Rippetoe.
In 2016, Andy released "The Barbell Prescription: Strength Training for Life After 40" with Dr. Jonathan Sullivan.
In addition to training his private clients, Andy operates a strength training blog www.AndyBaker.com Among the free articles and videos provided there is also a range of online products and services that can be purchased.
Prior to opening his gym, Andy was a member of the U.S. Marine Corps where he served served 2 deployments as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom between 2003 and 2007.
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As well as being strong, the Author has strong opinions too - and I would say he is right. On one level his rants at the various fools not understanding his method are a little grating and if he wants to pile in with supporting scientific facts (as he does) he really should quote his references, as in this presentation we are really only left with his opinion - that we must trust. On the other hand, it is quite amusing and self evidentially he is correct in his main assertions. Despite my pedantic observations, this has to be the definitive text on how to programme your cunning plan to get strong. Best self help book I have read since Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance (which doesn't have decent references either).
I'm 76, and bought this as a companion book for the barbell prescription.another good book I would recommend for the older weght trainers
This would be a great way especially for anyone new to the gym, to build up an understanding of how to progress.
There's even a section at the end for older people, or people with injuries, and the adjustments they ought to make to get the most out of their training. Really like this book. Bought as a gift, but had a good flick through and thinking of getting myself a copy.





