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Follow our free strength training program, or make your own routine. StrongLifts is the simplest weight lifting tracker to get stronger. +50k five stars reviews in the USA, and 4.9 rating. Best-rated weight lifting tracker since 2011. I do, however, believe it is limited and prefer the Starting Strength novice progression for my clients.As featured by Apple. Stronglifts and Starting Strength share most of crucial details of a novice training program. Finally, I would be remiss if I did not say that I think Stronglifts 5x5 is a fine program. If you are struggling to make progress on Stronglifts 5x5, consider reducing the reps to 3x5 and see if that helps. Redundancy and inefficiencies should be eliminated wherever they are found. Additionally, the deadlift does not need to be alternated with the barbell row, because you can make progress on the deadlift every workout. Since that’s where you’re going to end up anyway, you might as well just start there. The problem in the beginning for a novice is not a lack of stress - 3x5 is more than enough stress for a long time. The Stronglifts program actually calls for a switch to 3x5 after progress stops working and then reducing to 3x3, but 5x5 is unnecessary to start with. He advanced for another two and a half months until he squatted 320lb for a single. We ran out the novice phase then moved to a weekly program, and gave him a reset. Throughout the next month, I had him progress on his squat linearly until he surpassed his old personal record and plateaued at 275lb for a set of five. Technique had to be corrected, the total reps had to be reduced, and he had to be encouraged to eat more protein. He came in and advanced as a fairly typical case. He was stuck at a 245lb squat after multiple resets (reducing the weight and ramping back up). When Scott emailed me four months ago, he had been doing Stronglifts 5x5. Even if they had coaching in the past, technique drifts over time which is why all trainees should have a coach (or at least video tape their lifts). I've never seen someone come in for help with flawless technique. It also gives me time to fix their technique before the weight gets heavy again. This dissipates any accumulated volume that is plaguing the trainee. At the same time, the number of total reps is not so low that the stress is insufficient to drive progressĢ) I reset (decrease) the weight on their lifts This helps because the total reps is more appropriate for a novice's current ability to recover from stress. When a lifter who has been stalling on Stronglifts comes to me, I apply two changes.ġ) I switch them to the Starting Strength noivce progression - Starting Strength is similar to Stronglifts except that it uses 3x5 instead of 5x5 for the squat, press, and bench. This is not overtraining, but rather too much stress for the trainee to recover from.įortunately, there is an easy solution. This is readily apparent in the way the trainee talks about their training: The main cause of this is the inability to recovery from the stress imposed on the trainee by the 25 heavy reps. I have not ever heard of someone (in real life) making progress on Stronglifts longer than three months unless they started at extremely-artificially low weights. Stronglifts plateaus in one to three months. These workouts alternate for three workouts per week and adding weight each workout. If you are unfamiliar with Stronglifts 5x5, the idea is to squat 5x5 (five sets of five reps), bench 5x5, barbell row 5x5 on the first session, then squat 5x5, press 5x5, and deadlift 1x5 on the second workout two days later.