J-Madd wrote:I have been tempted by
Grey Hair Black Iron for a while, but the $80 price deters me!
I've heard that Kubik likes higher intensity circuit workouts for older athletes. Is that right? Interestingly, that's what MacCallum recommends for older guys, and that's how DeFranco structures the accessory work in "Built to Last":
https://www.defrancostraining.com/built ... s-arrived/
I actually run at least one cycle of B2L/year (since the fall of 2014), and I get great results, especially as a first continuation cycle after my big summertime endurance beatdown. In fact, I'm doing it right now. He only loads your back once/week (which I think is a very good idea for a 40-something, washed up meathead like myself), there is a lot of emphasis on unilateral movements (Bulgarian split squats play a big roll) that help with imbalances, and he ramps up the barbell weight very slowly over the course of the ten weeks (you start at 70% in week 1, and end with a 1RM attempt in week 10), which is great for me after after being away from barbells for three months. The "strength capacity circuits" are killers. They give you a little hypertrophy and the are very "anaerobic" -- I'm usually huffing and puffing and completely pumped. In short, I think B2L is a fabulous program for us Elder Statesmen. It's a bit pricy (I think I paid $50 bak in 2014), but I also think it's worth it. I'll do a cycle or two to muscle back up and get used to moving some heavy weights, and then transition to Operator for the rest of the winter/spring.
Hi J-Madd, yes I think so. Overall, the book is well written and contains valuable information. But .. probably nothing new for the life-long lifter. There is some redundancy, too. Not sure myself that it worth the high price. But still very good book that can help.
I've done program similar to B2L with Eric Cressey's "High Performance Handbook". It does incorporate prehab movements and mobility drills into the lifting program. It has compounds as a foundation and uses unilateral movements on super-set circuits. Goblet KB Bulgarians left me humble as a baby and a lot of anti-rotation core drills was a pleasant surprise. It also has a optional conditioning sets, KB movements and self-evaluation protocol. Still not the cheapest on the market.
http://highperformancehandbook.com/?hop=ecressey
The general rules for getting older under iron are quite simple as far as I know. The trick is to make it personal and to make it work for you at the right time
- More attention to warm-up
- Mobility, stretching
- Going easy on your back
- Different variations for Big3 such as Block pulls/RDLs, Swiss bar pressing, Landmine pressing, Front Squat.
- Incorporating more unilateral work
- More cardio and conditioning
And just keep consistently pushing