Dino Gym Spring RD

By Al Myers

MEET ANNOUNCEMENT –

DINO GYM SPRING RECORD DAY

We are going to host a record day at the Dino Gym on May 4th to celebrate a big day for one of the Dino Gym’s most distinguished members. LaVerne is turning 75 years old and we are going to have a combination record day/birthday party for him. This will be his first opportunity to set USAWA records in a new age division.

The record day will start in the morning.  Afterwards I do plan to host a supper/party for him so everyone is welcome to stay for the after-meet festivities.  However, this record day is a “come and go” affair so if you if you need to come early and leave early that is ok.  Plus if you just want to arrive in the afternoon and do your lifts  then that is fine as well.  It always works better if everyone is not trying to do their record day lifts at the same time.

My goal for this event is to have at least 75 records set (which means at least 15 lifters need to show and set their max 5 records) to recognize LaVerne’s 75th birthday.  Hope to see everyone there!

MEET DETAILS:

Meet Director: Al Myers and the Dino Gym

Meet Date: Saturday, May 4th, 2019, 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM

Location: Dino Gym, Abilene, Kansas

Sanction: USAWA

Entry Form: None – just show up – but if possible please let me know ahead of time so I can prepare

Entry Fee: None, but gag birthday presents for LaVerne are encouraged.  There will be a roast to him before the evening meal so please come prepared with your roast speech

Lifts: Record Day – Pick any lifts you can set a USAWA record in (up to the 5 lift max)

Contact me at amyers@usawa.com if you have any questions

Australian Update

By Al Myers

There has been alot of new activity from the All Rounds in Australia.  For those USAWA lifters who are not familiar with the Australian branch of IAWA weightlifters, today I want to give a little update on the latest activity from Australia. Australia has been one of the affiliated organizations of the International All Round Weightlifting Association since the beginning.

But recently there have been some BIG CHANGES! First of all, the Western Australians in Perth have relocated to a new facility.  They had been centered out of the Belmont Sports and Recreation Club for many years, and have hosted many International events there.  They have now moved to the Lambda Academy in Mundaring, ran by Kat Becker. I am looking forward to seeing this new facility.

Also – now this is really big news – the All Rounds in Australia is growing with the addition of a new club in Ballina, NSW.  This expansion of All Round lifting from just one club will be leading to a new name for the Australian All Rounds – the ARWFA (All Round Weightlifting Federation of Australia). This will be implemented soon.

2019 will be a big year for the Australians as they will be hosting the 2019 IAWA Gold Cup. It will be held on Sunday November 3rd, promoted by Peter Phillips.  The day before will be the Australian Championships which will make a very big and exciting weekend! If you have not been to an IAWA event in Australia please think about attending and representing the USAWA.  I promise you that you will not be disappointed.  The entry form and announcement will be available soon.

There is some sad news to report from Western Australia which I just seen recently on Facebook.  Frank Lamp has passed away.   Frank was a pioneer in getting the All Rounds established in Australia.  John Mahon summed up it pretty well when he said:

We have received the sad news that Frank Lamp has passed away. Frank has had a significant role in strength sports in WA with most noting his contributions to powerlifting and Weightlifting. For ARWLWA we would not even exist if it was not for Frank Lamp. His contribution to ARWLWA has been unmatched and we will be forever grateful for what he has done for this sport. We pass on our deepest condolences to Franks family and may All-Round Weightlifting in Australia live on in Frank’s memory.

Recently the Australians published a newsletter which highlighted all of the activity from their organization – The All-Round Strenght Athlete Issue 1 (1)

The second annual IAWA OTSM World Championships Postal will be held again this year in July.  Australian John Mahon and I are working on getting the details set for it at this moment, so expect it to be announced soon.

Me and Bill Pearl

by Thom Van Vleck

One of my favorite Bill Pearl photos.  He was in his 40's in this photo and as a teenager that was OLD!  It inspired me to be fit but also fit for life.

One of my favorite Bill Pearl photos. He was in his 40’s in this photo and as a teenager that was OLD! It inspired me to be fit but also fit for life.

If you don’t know who Bill Pearl is then you don’t know weightlifting history and you should drop everything and look him up and learn about the greatest bodybuilder of all time.

There have been countless stories written about Pearl by guys that know much more than me.  This is a story about my relationship with Pearl.

When I first got interested in weightlifting when I was around 14 years old my Uncle Phil took me under his wing and taught me about lifting, lifters, and all the history, types of strength, and just about everything you’d want to know about weightlifting.  My Uncle Phil would tell me, “I’ve forgotten more than you’ll every know”.  He was my guru whereas my Uncle Wayne, his brother, was my training partner.  Wayne didn’t talk much about lifting.  He just did it and with great success.  Phil became a student of the sport, opened a gym, and became a great trainer.

The guy my Uncle Phil first told me about was Bill Pearl.  Pearl was the epitome of size and strength according to Phil. Pearl was a 1 time amateur Mr. Universe and 4 time Pro Mr. Universe.  He first won in 1953 and his last win was in 1971.  This would have been 1977 when I first learned about Pearl so not too long after his last win.  The amazing thing is Pearl never lost.  Theoretically he could have won every year in between but chose to come “down from the mountain” every so often to reclaim the title.

My Uncle Phil had a 3 ring binder that included just about ever photo of Bill Pearl out there.  He “loaned” it to me (40 years later I still have it).  There wasn’t much on lifting out there and I would peruse that binder for inspiration while lifting.

My Uncle Phil met Bill Pearl in the 60’s.  Right after he won the 1967 Mr. Universe.  My Uncle was stationed in Alabama in the Air Force and found out about Pearl appearing at a nearby gym.  Phil went and listened to his seminar.  He said Pearl was wearing street clothes but stripped off his shirt and loaded a barbell to 300lbs.  With no warm up he powercleaned the barbell and pressed it overhead then pressed it behind the neck twice.

Pearl also did feats of strength that inspired me.  He would rip decks of cards in half, tear license plates in half, and blow up hot water bottles.  I learned how to do all of these things because of Pearl.

Then about 15 years ago I got to thinking.  Pearl was still very much alive.  My Uncle Phil was struggling with some health issues and needed some inspiration.  Maybe I could call Pearl and arrange for them to talk on the phone.

After a couple of phone calls I reached Bill!  It seemed weird talking to someone you’d grown up reading about.  The amazing part is he claimed he knew me!  I had been writing articles for Milo, a strength journal, and Bill was a fan.  He love Milo and recognized my name and even quoted a couple of articles he remembered.  Well, that made my day.

I arranged for my Uncle Phil to talk with Pearl.  Phil said they talked for 3 hours!  It had been nearly 40 years in the interim.  Pearl was as friendly as they come.

Over the years I’ve kept in touch with Pearl.  I once had plans to go to Oregon where he lives but he was called away last minute.  I really need to go.  He promised me a workout!

Liar, Liar, Pants on Fire

by Thom Van Vleck

Weightlifters are generally liars.  My Uncle Phil once told me that everyone was a liar, it’s just that some do it to a low degree while others to a high degree.  He would often would describe someone as a 5% liar (which was someone that most would feel was really honest) or maybe an 85% liar (which was someone that was full of crap).  Everyone had a number.

Weightlifters lie for lots of reasons but I think the number one reason is ego.  I’ll admit to it myself.  When I was young I would often add 10% to my best lift to inflate my ego.  I would reason that “on a good day” I could make that lift or that I would soon be able to if I kept training so it really wasn’t a lie.

Another reason weightlifters lie is because they are greedy.  They will lie about their workout routines to hide their secrets or to sell workouts.  I bought a leg training manual from a bodybuilder back in the 80s.  He had the best legs out there.  I followed that routine to the “T”.  Only to have him come out years later and admit that it was a fraud.  He was blessed with great genes and his legs didn’t require as much effort to look fantastic.  He said he was afraid nobody would believe him if he told the truth.  He was probably more concerned nobody would buy his training manual!

Weightlifters lie about two things.  Weights and measurements.  How much can you squat?  Oh, 5 plates.  I guess I didn’t ask if those plates were 45’s or 25’s so he could be telling the truth.  I had a high school buddy I would run into every year or so for some time.  Every time he would ask me what I was benching.  By some miracle he would always be benching 5 or 10lbs more.  Finally I asked him to do a bench workout with me (which was really me asking him to prove it or shut up).  He never showed up.  The truth is the numbers I gave him were probably 5 or 10 pounds more than I could actually do.  So we were both liars.  I was just a 5% whereas he was more like 20%.

Measurements are also a topic of exaggeration.  I remember there was a weightlifting historian by the name of David Willoughby.  He would show up with a steel tape and ask to measure strongmen, weightlifters, and body builders.  Most of the time he would get turned down.  When he was allowed the proclaimed measurements usually came up short.  Then the excuses would come.  I don’t recall him once saying he found a measurement that was bigger than stated.

Another measurement is distance.  Like a shot putter or highland gamer.  What’s your best put?  You always round up or you give your personal best from 10 years ago.

My Uncle Phil said that my Uncle Wayne was the only 100% honest weightlifter he knew.  I remember asking my Uncle Wayne about his lifts and never once did he exaggerate.  NOT ONCE.  He would not only give his best lift to the pound he would also tell you when he did it and that he couldn’t do that much now.

It all comes down to ego.  If you have a strong ego you tend to exaggerate less.  Doesn’t matter how strong you are, if you have a weak ego the lying will come!  I notice as I get older I lie less.  Maybe my ego is stronger. Have I mentioned I have 20 inch arms and I can bench 500?!

Ultra High Rep Training

by Thom Van Vleck

Albert Beckles:  One of the great bodybuilders from the 60's to the 90's who used ultra high rep training.

Albert Beckles: One of the great bodybuilders from the 60’s to the 90’s who used ultra high rep training.

So I was talking training with Al Myers the other night and he asked me if I did a particular exercise.  I said I did.  Then he asked me what kind of weight I used.  I said bodyweight.  He then asked if I didn’t use weight how was it progressive resistance.  Was it reps?  I jokingly said I was up to a 1000 reps.

That got me to thinking about Ultra High reps. Usually strength training falls in the 1 to 10 rep range.  Body building 10 to 20 reps.  But what about high rep training.

My Uncle Phil was a bodybuilder but he had to travel a lot for his job.  Back in the 60’s and 70’s there weren’t many gyms he could find so he developed a routine where he would do 100 reps on bodyweight exercises.  Such as push ups, sit ups, leg raises, etc.  He weighed around 220lbs so doing 100 perfect push ups was a real challenge.  And believe me, he did them strict and non stop.

Bill Clark once wrote about doing something similar.  As a baseball scout he spent much of his time on the road.  He did a “Deck of Cards” workout.  He would shuffle a deck of cards, pick a bodyweight exercise, draw the card and do however many reps the card represented like in black jack.  This would amount to several hundred reps in one workout.

But what about weight training with high reps?

When I was a kid and just starting training I would peruse the weightlifting magazine collection my Uncles and grandfather had.  They went back to the 1930’s.  There was one magazine that had an article by Albert Beckles.  Beckles was a bodybuilder that placed as high as 2nd in the Mr. Olympia and won a pro event at age 61.  He competed at a high level from the 1960s to the 1990s.

This particular article he was pushing single sets of 32 reps.  This seems absurd and to be honest back in the day lifters would lie in articles about training as they wanted to keep their routines secret.  I read later articles on his training and it was more conventional.

But I tried it.  Talk about a pump!  I could see where as a bodybuilder that might be an effective routine to cycle in every once in awhile.  I don’t see how you could maintain that for very long but it might be good to “blow the cob webs out” every once in awhile.  Why 32?  Beckles just said that he originally would do them to failure and 32 was where he would usually end up.

I have a set and rep system I call “Hundred’s”.  I usually use it on calves and forearms that you need higher reps to get anything out of them.  If I use it on another body part it’s usually with an assistance exercise.  But I’ve used this set and reps program on the Bench Press before.  Believe it or not I started with 205 for 30 reps.  By the last set I was barely able to do 135 for 10 reps.

So sets and reps go like this:

First set:  30 reps

Second set: 25 reps

Third set: 20 reps

Fourth set: 15 reps

Fifth set: 10 reps

These total 100 reps.  I usually do them as quickly as I can.  The hump always seems to be the third set.  The final set I usually do slow and deliberately really squeezing the muscle.  What I like about the scheme is I feel confident I can do 5 less reps with each set although by the third set it becomes a real struggle.  I have to admit that 100 is a nice, round number.  I just adjust the weight until 100 reps is all I can do.

Will Ultra High reps build a lot of strength and power?  Probably not but they will build endurance which will in turn help with the lower rep exercises with the added conditioning.  If you try it share your results.

1 117 118 119 120 121 483