When looking for the best chest workout routine you need to make sure that it hits the upper, lower and inner chest to get a full development of the pecs.
The chest is made up of the pectoralis major and the pectoralis minor which each have different functions. The pectoralis major adducts the arm and flexes the shoulder. The pectoralis minor depresses the scapula (shoulder blade) and downwardly rotates the scapula. All muscles of the body have an origin and an insertion point. It is very important to know these 2 points so that you can understand which movements will work which muscles. For a good chest workout you want to focus on the pectoralis major which originates from the sternum and inserts on the bicipital groove of the humerus. To work a muscle most effectively you want to shorten the distance from the insertion to origin. So for the chest anytime that humerus comes closer to the sternum the muscle will be worked better.
Knowing the biomechanics lets take the most popular exercise at any gym, the bench press. With normal barbell benchmarks you lower the weight until it touches your chest and then push it straight up. There are 2 things that are wrong with this. When the bar is touching your chest it requires the front delt to do most the work and is doing more harm than good for your body. Stopping a couple inches before the bar touches your chest will result in fewer injuries and no loss in strength gains. The second error is that you aren't able to shorten the distance from you bicipital groove to you sternum with a straight bar. Using dumbbells is much more effective in building muscle in your chest.
Monday, April 20, 2009
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Best Chest Workout
If you want the best chest workout then you need to follow a few simple rules. Remember that there is not one single workout that is going to work forever for every person. You must continually shock the body with something it is not used to. While a great chest workout routine might work for you one month it could do nothing for you the next month. So you need to switch it up. I recommend doing a week of high reps in between your low rep heavy weeks.
One tip is not to cheat form to be able to do heavy weight. Yes everyone can do the whole stack of weight on the chest fly machine, it's not hard to do. But to do it properly with your chest out is a different story. Do lighter weight and focus on squeezing and contracting the pecs at the end of the movement. Your chest should never cave in while doing flys! If it does then you need to drop the weight.
One tip is not to cheat form to be able to do heavy weight. Yes everyone can do the whole stack of weight on the chest fly machine, it's not hard to do. But to do it properly with your chest out is a different story. Do lighter weight and focus on squeezing and contracting the pecs at the end of the movement. Your chest should never cave in while doing flys! If it does then you need to drop the weight.
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Saturday, February 7, 2009
Chest
First, lets start off with a little review of the chest and how it works. Most people know that to build strength you go with heavier weight and less reps. To build size you go with a little less weight and higher reps (around 10). And to just get lean you go even lighter and increase the reps even higher. Well, that's what 90% of the people in the gym think, and it's true to a degree. But that holds true only if you pick one of those methods and stick to it. But if we mix and match all of them over time in our workouts we will have a combination of size, strength and the lean look we want.
Chest Workout
This blog will cover multiple chest workouts and teach you how to overcome plateaus in training to increase your bench press and get the chest you've always wanted.
Labels:
bench press,
bigger chest,
chest workout,
chest workouts
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