9
Massive Muscle Building Exercises You Can Use to Boost Your Muscle
Gains
By Gregg Gillies
Proper exercise selection plays a big role in the kind of progress
you can
make with your muscle building goals. If you want to develop ripped,
bulding, rock-hard muscles, you need to use the right weight training
exercises. If not, you won't get the real muscle buildings gains
that you want.
Quads
Squat
Did
you really think I was going to say something else? Wimpy leg
extensions, maybe? Yeah, go for the burn and tear up your knees
while you're add it. But you won't build huge quads from leg extensions.
I know squats are brutally hard work. And that's why they are
so freaking effective. If you want to bulid slabs of muscle all
over your body, you need to squat.
Hamstrings
The
Stiff Legged Deadlift (knees slightly bent)
Sorry,
no leg curls here. Once again, it's the hard exercise using a
lot of weight that is most effective for building massive hamstrings
that aren't overshadowed by overdeveloped quad muscles.
Calves
Standing
Calf Raises
Basic
is better. You can use a heck of a lot of weight on this exercise.
Go for it. An alternative is to do them on a leg press machine.
Chest
Dips
Surprised
that it's not the bench press? Sure, the bench press is the most
popular chest exercise. That doesn't make it the best. First off,
it's not a hard exercise. You lie flat on your back. Yeah, that's
real tough. Try an all out set of dips versus the bench press
and you tell me which has you working harder. I guarantee you,
it'll be the dips.
The
flat bench press can wreak havoc on your shoulders and rotator
cuff. It puts them in a very awkward position.
The
dips works your chest, triceps and shoulders more thoroughly and
effectively than the flat bench press does. Many people have called
it the upper body squat. If you want to build massive muscles
through the chest and shoulder area, make dips a focal point of
your weight training program.
Midback
Deadifts
Yes,
another exercise that far too few trainees perform. Yet, it should
be the cornerstone of your back training program. The deadlift
works your back like no other exercise can. Yes, like the squat
and stiff-legged deadlift, it's brutally hard. BUt it works. Learn
to like hard work.
Lats
Chins
Chins,
not lat pulldowns. If you can't do enough chins now, work hard
on lat pulldowns until you can. Once you are strong enough, go
to chins for your lat development.
Shoulders
Dumbbell
Upright Rows
Why
not some form of overhead press? Because overhead presses focus
more on the front delt. To hit the bulk of the muscle, you need
to hit the side head, which involved moving your upper arm out
to the side. So you'd think lateral raises. However, this is a
light exercise. You can't really overload the delts with side
lateral raises. So what's left? Dumbbell Upright Rows done the
right way. You gotta do these with dumbbells, not a barbell. This
allows you the freedom of movement to do them in the most productive
manner.
As
you pull the dumbbells up, your upper arms should move slightly
out to your sides as you lean slightly forward. Your upper arms
move into the same finishing position as if it were a lateral
raise but your forearms finish as if you were doing a row. You
can use more weight this way and it really overloads the delts
and traps.
Triceps
Dips
Yep,
the same exercise as for chest. To emphasize the triceps more,
make sure your body is straigh up and down as you lower and raise
yourself each rep. If you want a separate exercise, go with the
close grip bench press. I prefer doing this on a decline as opposed
to a flat bench. There is less emphasis on the shoulders.
Biceps
Standing
Dumbbell Curls
The
dumbbell curl is much more effective than the barbell curl or
ez curl bar curl for a couple of reasons. First, the ability to
supinate your hand adds to the effectiveness. The barbell curl
also has a tendency to place more emphasis on the forearms than
the biceps as you curl the weight up. The ez curl bar is not effective
for the biceps as it puts your hands in a position that de-emphasizes
bicep contraction. Go with the dumbbells and supinate your hand
as you curl so that your pinky is above your thumb at the top
of the rep.
No
matter what kind of weight training routine you use, make sure
to include most of these mass builders as often as possible. This
way, you'll be sure to get the most muscle building bang for your
buck from every routine you use.
Gregg
Gillies is the founder of http://www.buildleanmuscle.com Interested
in gaining 21 pounds of muscle in only 9 weeks? Grab his free
report at http://www.fastmasstips.com Want to boost your metabolism,
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