How to Bench Press 500 Easy

Tryn2

New member
Taken from wbc.....
How to Bench Press 500 Easy
By: Louie Simmons

Everyone strives for a goal, one of which may be a 500 bench. The problem is how do you achieve it? For me it was a mystery until I discovered a method of training known as the conjugate method. This is done along with the dynamic method with submaximal weights on a second day, 72 hours later. Today we have 29 people who have done at least 500, four who have done over 600, and the youngest person ever to bench 700. Here's how.
On Sunday we use the dynamic method. The weight is 55% of a contest max with a shirt. If for some reason you compete without a shirt, 60% is used. We do 8-10 sets of 3 reps. It's best to use three or more grips In a workout. Most of the sets are done with a grip inside the power rings on the bar, that is, with the little finger inside the ring. Using grips inside the rings will aid greatly in triceps and anterior delt development.
The reps must be very explosive. Lower the bar quickly, but under control. Lowering contributes to raising, or concentric, strength. Lowering a bar slowly will
build muscle mass but not strength. Please, I beg you, stop reading bodybuilding magazines. They have contributed greatly to ruining strength training in the United
States. After all, plyometrics is the energy gained by the body dropping and then responding to that dropping with reversal, or explosive, strength.
The bar should be pushed back up in a straight line, not back over the face. This requires strong triceps. This path is a shorter distance and requires no shoulder rotation,
which is also much safer. The barbell will always seek the strongest muscle group; that's why most push the bar over the face. Their delts are stronger than their triceps. But it should be the reverse. One sees a lot of shoulder and pec injuries, but seldom do you see a triceps injury. Why? The triceps have never been pushed to their maximum, potential.
We do approximately 20 reps out of 200 above our training weight. We may add only 30-50 pounds to the bar, mainly to check that bar speed remains high. If your bar
speed, or reversal strength slows, you have a problem. After all, this would still be a very submaximal weight if you bench press 500 and train with 275, or 55%. You could
also do a few singles, but not with more than 90% and not very often. We found this interferes with the max effort day three days later.

After bench pressing, go first to triceps work. Basically 60 total reps are done with dumbbells, broken down into 5 sets of 10 reps or possibly 7 sets of 8 reps. The palms should be facing inward, toward the body, when dumbbells are used for extensions. When a barbell is used, 40 reps should be done, bringing the bar to the forehead, chin or throat.
Paul Dicks presses with a regular bar or a Safety Squat Bar can be done.
We do a lot of J.M. presses, named after J. M. Blakely: with a close grip, lower the bar to 4-5 inches off the chest above the nipples, hold for a split second, and press back up. This is a very effective exercise.
After triceps, do front raises with a bar, plate, or dumbbells. Heavy weights used. Also do side delts with dumbbells or a cable, rear delts, 4 or 5 sets of lats, a few hammer curls. Do delt and lat work by feel, but continuously do more and heavier weight.





This workout is done on Sunday and should last no longer than 1 hour and 10 minutes.
On Wednesday, the workout is called the maximum effort method day. When using a barbell, do singles. Naturally, work up slowly, but always try a new max.
To become very strong, you must lift a very heavy weight on this day. It may take a second and a half or so to complete the lift, but this is how a muscle contracts maximally, which builds absolute strength.
We do many exercises on this day that resemble the bench press but are not regular bench presses. This is known as conjugate training. After doing an exercise with weights over 90% for 5 or 6 weeks, your strength will regress. We train at 100%+ all year long by changing a barbell exercise every 2 or 3 weeks.
The major barbell exercises that we perform are as follows.
Floor Presses: Lower the bar until the triceps are completely on the floor and relaxed before pressing the bar up. By relaxing the arms you break up the eccentric/concentric chain. This will build explosive strength as well as the bottom
part of the bench press.
Board Press: Board presses will build the middle part of the bench press. Lay two or three 2 x 6's on your chest, bring the bar down to the boards, and press back up. This is much different from a rack press because the weight is transferred into the chest, shoulders, and arms. When using three boards, use a close grip, with the index finger just
touching the smooth part of the bar. With two boards, place your little fingers on the power rings.
Rack Lock-Outs: We use six pin positions, all at the top. The bar will move 4-5 inches on the top pin and 10-12 inches on the lowest pin. Always use a close grip. Never lower the weight. Instead, press the bar off pins concentrically.
Steep Incline with a Close Grip: Here we will do a max single and then drop down to a 5-rep record. This is only done on the incline.
Seated Press: We do these off pins set at chin level up to 2-3 inches above the head. Again, do singles. Grip width can vary. This exercise is done after one of the other exercises, about 7 out of 10 workouts, for instance, after board or floor press.
The following exercises are done for higher reps, for a rep record. When dumbbells are used for incline, decline, floor, seated, or regular presses, after a warm-up, go to a heavy weight, for example, 110's, and try a rep record. The rep range should be 15-20. This is known as the repetition method. You must go to failure.
Weighted pushups with the feet higher or lower than the hands are done the same way. Warm up and max out with a 25, 45, or 100 pound plate on your upper back or
have a training partner sit on your shoulders facing the same direction. Dumbbells and pushups also act as a hypertrophy aid.
Illegally wide bench presses, an inch or so outside the power rings, will act as a strength and muscle builder when a 6-rep max is established for a 2-3 week minicycle.
Always keep the elbows tucked in. Note: a 6-rep max means the most weight one can get for 6 reps after a warm-up.
Do one core (above) exercise per week, followed by four or five special exercises, total, for the triceps, delts, upper back, and lats. Always push up your special exercises.
Key Notes: It is not necessary to do a max bench press to develop absolute strength. All that is required is to place the muscles in a situation that involves strong contraction for a period of time that duplicates the time in which a max bench press is performed. This works best through maximizing a certain portion of the lift (bottom, midway, or top) using the maximum effort method.
Fast lowering, or the eccentric phase, of a bench press will produce momentum that is converted into kinetic energy that aids in raising the bar back to arms length.
Floor presses, like box squatting, will build explosive strength by overcoming a static position through active, or dynamic, work.
Don't pause the bench press in training; this builds mainly static strength. The stretch reflex lasts up to 2 full seconds, much longer than a legal pause. However, do pause when doing floor presses and board presses.
When doing rack presses, remember to press off a prescribed pin setting. This requires you to overcome inertia.
As your triceps get stronger, add chains to the bar for bench pressing. Use 5/8 chains that are 5 feet long, looped through a 1/2 chain that is fixed around the Olympic bar sleeve. Half of the 5/8 chain should be resting on the floor to start. When the bar is on the chest, all the chain should be on the floor. At this position, you have your original 55-60% of your 1 rep max on the bar, which is critical.
This program works. Six years ago, I did 530 at 242 by training with 365 for 8 sets of 3 reps. That was 70%. After a comeback from a serious injury, at age 49, I recently did 535 at 242 by training at 285 for 8 sets of 3 reps. That's 55% with 30 pounds of chain at the top. That's progress through sports science.
 
Yeah no prob bro, though Im sure when the day comes 500 is eazy Ill fukn be able to float. Works work ...:)
 
i disagree with about half that article. how many west side guys are winning bench meets? 1 or 2, maybe. halbert and patterson are about it.
 
Im not putting up this as law. I want debate so we can see what actually works and weed out what doesnt. I like dissagreement & I know you know what your talking about....But I think debates like this are a good source to help people break through sticking points...
225
250
315
405
500 & so on.....
 
actually lifting help people break thru sticking points not debates. =0)

so post some more benching methods. metal miltia style has most of the big benchers.
 
a lot of guys who been in the game a while and have tried these differnt types of routines normally end up with some kinda hybread routine. after messing with it for severla years i have one that works for me when getting ready for a competition. when not training for competition i have few other routines that work well too. training for a shirted bench is totally different than training for a raw bench. its like two completely differnt lifts. MM and WSB are primarly aimed at shirted benching. the problem with heavy raw benching is that in the end most guys end up with bad shoulders. thats why rack work, board work and the like are important to implement for raw benchers. these movements take a lot of stress off of the shoulders. in fact when i am struggling with shoulder probs i do primarily rack work. you get a nice chest and tri workout that is shoulder friendly.
 
pullinbig said:
a lot of guys who been in the game a while and have tried these differnt types of routines normally end up with some kinda hybread routine. after messing with it for severla years i have one that works for me when getting ready for a competition. when not training for competition i have few other routines that work well too. training for a shirted bench is totally different than training for a raw bench. its like two completely differnt lifts. MM and WSB are primarly aimed at shirted benching. the problem with heavy raw benching is that in the end most guys end up with bad shoulders. thats why rack work, board work and the like are important to implement for raw benchers. these movements take a lot of stress off of the shoulders. in fact when i am struggling with shoulder probs i do primarily rack work. you get a nice chest and tri workout that is shoulder friendly.
agreed some dumbasses like me keep trying to bench heavy raw and screw up their shoulders for good . thats how i ended up switching over to reverse grip , when benching 225 conventional hurts so bad it brings tears to your eyes its time to make a change so i did . back when i made all my mistakes we didnt have all the knowledge and different routines we do today it was just lift as heavy as possible week in and week out damn the consequences .
 
pullinbig said:
i disagree with about half that article. how many west side guys are winning bench meets? 1 or 2, maybe. halbert and patterson are about it.


I wasn't even going to open my mouth, thank you ex...
 
Now wait just one minute, the only way to bench is raw, and I hate to say it Flat Bench causes the most rotator injuries I have seen in my days of gym pounding.


Sorry, had to say the raw thing cause never tried a shirt, sorry...
 
In-Human said:
Now wait just one minute, the only way to bench is raw, and I hate to say it Flat Bench causes the most rotator injuries I have seen in my days of gym pounding.


Sorry, had to say the raw thing cause never tried a shirt, sorry...

of all the guys i know you are the one who should be in a shirt. youd be hitting 7 in no time.
:spank:
 
pullinbig said:
of all the guys i know you are the one who should be in a shirt. youd be hitting 7 in no time.
:spank:


I know and I hear that from you all the time, thank you, I just need to try the damn thing for a year and see what happens...
 
PB, I was training a client the other day and he wanted me to do Declines with him, and I have not done BB Declines in maybe two months, so after a few warm ups got 495x10 no spot, felt real good, no rotator pains and hell I am down to 270, I know lb for lb it ain't much but damn it felt good...
 
In-Human said:
PB, I was training a client the other day and he wanted me to do Declines with him, and I have not done BB Declines in maybe two months, so after a few warm ups got 495x10 no spot, felt real good, no rotator pains and hell I am down to 270, I know lb for lb it ain't much but damn it felt good...

495x10. you fucking dumbass you are wasting your talents by not competing in PLing. thats prolly a 575 on raw flat bench or more. the big boys are only hittin 6 or so raw. couple are in the high 6s low sevens but these are the high 8-9 shirted benchers. we have a guy here that benches high 8s shirted and only hits 6 or so raw. the 275 record is 827. you have the potential to break that as an old fart on top of that. get your ass to the LA lifting club and start training in a shirt. most of the guys with the big benches are lifting bench only. hell mendy was training at LA lifting club for a while. hes back east now. they still got some good lifters in southern ca.

did the weanie boys see the bench. you know the bowed up wanna be strong men at your gym.
:cum:
 
PB, I just love the way you are so nice to me, you bastard, you have a point, I have so many guys tell me I am a dumbass not doing powerlifting, but man after 25 years of training like a PowerBuilder its tough to teach an old dog new tricks, and yea when I finished the set you could here a pin drop, but I was not in my regular gym, it was one of those 24 hour clubs, not a real gym, I guess they weren't used to someone who benches more than a few plates I guess...
 
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