How do you fail a dynamic effort deadlift? | Ask Rip #34

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  • čas přidán 3. 07. 2024
  • In this Seminar Q&A, Mark Rippetoe answers questions about how to make progress after following questionable nutrition advice, why the Westside Dynamic Effort isn't doing what they think it's doing, the mental preparation required for a heavy workout, and military fitness testing.
    Recorded at Testify Strength and Conditioning in Omaha, NE during the October 2016 Starting Strength Seminar
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Komentáře • 45

  • @goonerinSP
    @goonerinSP Před 7 lety +27

    Love watching these before training. Squats tonight.

    • @little8940
      @little8940 Před 3 lety

      Only squats?

    • @goonerinSP
      @goonerinSP Před 3 lety

      @@little8940 if I can think back 4 years ago when I wrote this it was squats that night with cable crossovers, wrist curls and calf raises.

    • @little8940
      @little8940 Před 3 lety

      Rippetoe would say, "You weren't doing the program."

    • @goonerinSP
      @goonerinSP Před 3 lety

      @@little8940 I was it was his little known program, squats, milk and accessories. Not available anymore and he denies it ever existed but I know the real truth!

  • @CrimsonStrider
    @CrimsonStrider Před 7 lety +6

    I really like these Q&As. I'm really looking forward to the day I join your seminar.

  • @PassportG
    @PassportG Před 5 lety +3

    Rip is the coach who made me enjoy Deadlifts. 👍

  • @kj22697
    @kj22697 Před 7 lety +17

    there is a constant swarm of flies that follows rip around where ever he goes

  • @metalrocks999
    @metalrocks999 Před 7 lety +26

    3 bars on the plate at 9:50. lmao

    • @adriansaninja
      @adriansaninja Před 6 lety +3

      Allidoiswynn93 haha noticed that too, then scrolled down and saw I wasnt the only one. Mere mortals tremble in the presence of rip

    • @DearDM
      @DearDM Před 5 lety

      Good question nonetheless

    • @robertlevy4613
      @robertlevy4613 Před 4 lety

      They should look at the new Army Combat Readiness Test. Rip would be happy with the new test format except the end (2 mile run)

    • @oliverallen5324
      @oliverallen5324 Před 3 lety +1

      @@robertlevy4613 It's more functional fitness foolishness, so not really.

    • @robertlevy4613
      @robertlevy4613 Před 3 lety

      @@oliverallen5324 yesh it’s still a bunch of silly nonsense but it’s much closer to being the direction. Beats APFT any day.

  • @andrewwebster2403
    @andrewwebster2403 Před 3 lety +4

    “Not everybody has the balls to be strong.”😂👊

  • @00Noontide
    @00Noontide Před 7 lety

    great content!

  • @MrCGangsta
    @MrCGangsta Před 7 lety +1

    I broke my ankel and im lifting again since I started my foot fells much better after only 3 weeks I have no pain when walking and I start to get stronger then I was before the injury my grip feels stronger then ever maybe its because of the wheelchair I was in for a month or from walking on crutches for 2 months I dont know but I feel great and will be hitting PR´s soon only my squats sufferd a lot but Im sure It will go up again I think its the best thing you can do after an injurie just train and the good thing is ppl come out of injuries strionger then ever I cant explain why but I heard it from many ppl and experiencing it myself right now.I get my pins removed in january and I will do Starting Streangh religiously....

  • @Obsidian1392
    @Obsidian1392 Před 7 lety +13

    Weyland Corp t shirt... the corporation from the Alien movies?

    • @Theaikro
      @Theaikro Před 6 lety +2

      Obsidian1392 yes, Rip is a sci-fi guy.

  • @lazur1
    @lazur1 Před 4 lety +2

    When weight's heavy enough, *trying* to move fast goes slowly..

  • @patrickvanmeter2922
    @patrickvanmeter2922 Před 6 lety +1

    Interesting question on having screws and metal holding ones leg together. In 2008 I had my femur basically disintegrated from a gun shot wound. Now, nothing but a metal bar attached through the bone to the hip and knee held together with screws on both ends. I'm 76 and love to squat but don't go over 200 pounds. That is about my max squat and I am afraid to increase it. I'm thinking the one inch bar is stonger than the bone was but not sure about the screws. So far so good. Had it xrayed and nothing is bent so I guess it is OK. I know I am not to interested in finding out the hard way that going heavier didn't work.

    • @Fogyt121
      @Fogyt121 Před 3 lety +1

      going up slowly is adequate, if you ask me

    • @LTPottenger
      @LTPottenger Před 3 lety

      I don't think it's knowable how well it will work but your approach seems wise.

  • @zachlloyd9392
    @zachlloyd9392 Před 5 lety

    I agree on the points in the military. We ran and it just tore up myself and the bigger guys. I had to lift 50cals and cans of ammo overhead a ton, carry 240's and SAW's/ AT4's, and running did jack shit for that. We do not need a distance run, any distance covered was more a relation to mental toughness than physical condition. If you can do the job, why the arbitrary weight requirements? I was overweight and barely passing tape with my abs showing while guys with bellys hanging over thier belt passed with flying colors, its so rediculous.

  • @james_games9684
    @james_games9684 Před 7 lety

    the body composition did not change by the end of that year

  • @chriswaltman368
    @chriswaltman368 Před 5 lety

    Regarding military: endurance training is easier and simpler to do together as a group. It requires less equipment. Skinny in shape folks require less food to maintain. I think the rationale is largely cost and ease based. Part of the training is to break you down as a group and individual for morale and discipline reasons. Weight training is beneficial...look at how many military guys lift and look at what they do overseas...they lift. For basic training and fitness standards lifting is hard to conduct and judge and requires more training and equipment...$$$

    • @oliverallen5324
      @oliverallen5324 Před 3 lety +1

      "The Strongest Shall Survive" by Bill Starr covers how to do strength training in large groups.

  • @andreiionescu520
    @andreiionescu520 Před 7 lety +1

    what would you guys recommend for imbalanced spinal erectors?

    • @abdeldjalilbelhani6244
      @abdeldjalilbelhani6244 Před 7 lety +2

      starting squatting with a good form using light weights while keeping your spine rigid, then increase the weight progressively slowly , thats it i think .

    • @aaronfitch4585
      @aaronfitch4585 Před 7 lety +2

      maybe check this article, in particular the section "What Does 'Imbalance' Really Mean?"
      www.t-nation.com/training/rippetoe-goes-off

    • @andreiionescu520
      @andreiionescu520 Před 7 lety

      @aaron finch very interesting article, thanks for sharing it. But my imblance wasnt caused by lifting, it was enhanced by lifting without me noticing for quite a while(i played team handball for about 4 years before touching the iron) and i was looking for some advice on fixing this.

  • @ggrthemostgodless8713
    @ggrthemostgodless8713 Před 5 lety +7

    17:00
    The thing about the military and the uselessness of aerobic exercise (running)--- Rip, So that is a great idea, to decide that EVERY MALE in the military should at least squat his own body weight, preferably twice his body weight. I know you don't like BW as a measurement, but seldom have I seen ANYONE lift more than 1.5 BW, and for the military that would be a good HARD BUT ACHIEVABLE goal, since they can force them to do it and do it well.
    The issue IN MY EXPERIENCE is that this type of conditions and circumstances in a very strict structural HIERARCHICAL system like the military would cause morale, and obedience issues, lots of them, who wants to obey and listen to a skinny soft motherfucker when you have seen and demonstrated DURING TRAINING that you are stronger, much stronger and perhaps SMARTER?? Imagine my skinny soft good-runner drill instructor trying to scream at me or make me do ANYTHING after WE have been to the gym and he has seen me lift 500 lb--- imagine. That place is nuts with male dominance (as it should be, for combat)---- I mean, the way I feel right after I have done four or five reps at 450 lb --- I feel I can kill anyone at the gym, even the bigger SIZE TALLER guys, I can take on ANYONE.... imagine that shit in the military where they want you to BLINDLY OBEY orders... from a weaker mean-mouth little fuck!!
    So I think it is a great goal overall and the benefits would show it, but it would AUTOMATICALLY RESTRUCTURE the whole thing in there... and honestly I am not sure that would be better, that the PHYSICALLY strongest should lead or be in charge.

    • @chironow3446
      @chironow3446 Před 5 lety +1

      @@petter9399
      Most spec ops are 2.5xheight in inches. Size doesn't equal weight and you can't measure psychological strength to overcome and not quit.
      Military standards are for getting numbers, not the best.
      Someone who can deadlift 2.5x 3-5 and run 3 miles under 20 will be able to handle many things, bit doesn't guarantee they will not quit.
      As a % spec ops see ex-wrestlers and ex-cross country runners make it through because the are comfortable being uncomfortable without breaks.

    • @petter9399
      @petter9399 Před 5 lety +2

      @@chironow3446 if you dont think you get psychologically strong from getting physically strong i think you havent actually gotten physically strong, my view on it

  • @andreyche193
    @andreyche193 Před 2 lety

    Somebody who was overweight or even obese in the past should be very strict with sugar and starch: basically avoid it at any cost!

  • @ConvictJ96
    @ConvictJ96 Před 6 lety

    Mental block? 3 bars on a plate? lolwut

  • @canererbay8842
    @canererbay8842 Před 7 lety

    And how does strength apply better than endurance in today's warfare?

    • @2294cb
      @2294cb Před 6 lety +9

      Caner ERBAY Strength and speed has been more applicable in all of warfare. The only endurance necessary was and is for marching with heavy gear. Being able to deadlift 2x bodyweight translates better to bearing heavy packs and or carrying warriors off the field than running 1.5+ miles unburdened ever could

    • @geoffbischoff816
      @geoffbischoff816 Před 6 lety +6

      Ideally you have both strength and endurance. But I've done the endurance-only route early in my military career, then transitioned to the "be as strong as you can be and THEN go running" method, and I can tell you: Stronger is better, hands down.

    • @johnwest6019
      @johnwest6019 Před 4 lety

      I can tell you strength matters more. As RIP said, at 25 it wasn't hard running 5 miles, not even a bit. In my 30s, I can still run 5 miles pretty easily it just hurts the injuries I sustained in combat and I rarely do any cardio. Maybe the rower or bike for a 5 min warmup. I've watched lifters outperform the guys who could run 11 minute 2 miles on almost every occasion. All of our discounts were lifters, every one, and we didn't have a problem humping it several miles a night. The non-lifters were stuck in the vehicle's as drivers and gunners. Those dudes were really good at endurance running, but you strap 60 pounds of gear to them and put them in a firefight that endurance doesn't count for much when you're running for cover. The new army combat fitness test includes a deadlift explosive ball tods and a sprint drag. It still needs some work but it's a small win. They still have bodyweight pushups and a 2 mile run at the end.

    • @LTPottenger
      @LTPottenger Před 3 lety

      Carrying 150 lbs of gear is very useful.

  • @LTPottenger
    @LTPottenger Před 3 lety

    Running is the most useless exercise ever invented