Starting weight training for boxing-advice
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Squats, deadlifts, bench, and military press are necessities. Compound movements are what you should be looking for. Aim for the 1-5 rep range for strength and explosiveness.
As for a specific routine, Starting Strength is a perfect routine and organizes these exercises well.
Workout A
Squats 3x5
Bench Press 3x5
Deadlifts 1x5
Workout B
Squats 3x5
Military Press 3x5
Power Cleans 5x3. If you don't have a coach to teach proper technique on these, substitute it with pendlay/bent over rows.
Do this 3 non-consecutive days of the week alternating workouts (Week 1 ABA, Week 2 BAB, etc.) Learning proper form on these exercises may take a while or you can learn them quickly. Depends on you.
This has some sections on proper technique.
Technique always takes first importance I know, I pick up techniques quite fast in boxing so I should be able to pick up this quickly.
Also I was wondering how do I determine how much weight to use?Comment
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Squats, deadlifts, bench, and military press are necessities. Compound movements are what you should be looking for. Aim for the 1-5 rep range for strength and explosiveness.
As for a specific routine, Starting Strength is a perfect routine and organizes these exercises well.
Workout A
Squats 3x5
Bench Press 3x5
Deadlifts 1x5
Workout B
Squats 3x5
Military Press 3x5
Power Cleans 5x3. If you don't have a coach to teach proper technique on these, substitute it with pendlay/bent over rows.
Do this 3 non-consecutive days of the week alternating workouts (Week 1 ABA, Week 2 BAB, etc.) Learning proper form on these exercises may take a while or you can learn them quickly. Depends on you.
This has some sections on proper technique.Comment
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Forgot to ask, how much weight will you have access to?
For your first workout, just make some good estimates based on warm up sets. If it ends up being too easy, just increase it more next workout. Shouldn't be rushed.
As for rest times, you start your next set when your ready. For beginners, a good guideline 2-3 minutes. Once you start getting into heavier weights, you may need 4-5 minutes to recuperate for next set. For maximum strength and explosiveness, you should be near fully recovered for the next set.
Lift on separate sessions (ex. lift in morning, boxing at night). If you can't, then it's up to you if it's worth it spending some time on lifting. Twice a week is fine, too.Last edited by karategan; 08-21-2010, 08:57 PM.Comment
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Forgot to ask, how much weight will you have access to?
For your first workout, just make some good estimates based on warm up sets. If it ends up being too easy, just increase it more next workout. Shouldn't be rushed.
As for rest times, you start your next set when your ready. For beginners, a good guideline 2-3 minutes. Once you start getting into heavier weights, you may need 4-5 minutes to recuperate for next set. For maximum strength and explosiveness, you should be near fully recovered for the next set.
Lift on separate sessions (ex. lift in morning, boxing at night). If you can't, then it's up to you if it's worth it spending some time on lifting. Twice a week is fine, too.
Ok thanks for the advice. I think I'll have access to about 60-80kg (132-178lbs) worth of weights to attach to the barbellComment
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Rounding up to 180 lbs, you'll have access to 225 lbs total including the bar (assuming it's an olympic barbell). Those will last you 1-3 months so if you're still interested in strength training, you'll be needing to buy more soon.Comment
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Although, to be honest, if you had a really demanding set, you can take some time to recoupComment
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More advice needed guys.
So I only just got the stuff LOL. But yeah, I was wondering whether say my rep shceme is 5x5, should it be till failure, like should I be struggling to push the last rep out, or just ordinary pushing, like feeling the burn but not really struggling.
ThANKS.Comment
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