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Does Lean Hybrid Muscle Training Work? – You Be The Judge!

Does Lean Hybrid Muscle Training Work?
You Be The Judge!

Byron Gains  20 lbs of Hybrid Muscle!
Byron Gains 20 lbs of Hybrid Muscle!
Byron Gains 20 lbs of Hybrid Muscle!
Byron Gains 20 lbs of Hybrid Muscle!
Byron Gains  20 lbs of Hybrid Muscle!
Byron  Gains 20 lbs of Hybrid Muscle!

Lean Hybrid Muscle Works For The Girls Too!

The perfect muscle building system for women too“Lean Hybrid Muscle Training has transformed my body completely! Not too long ago I would have never imagined I would be able to step onto a stage in a skimpy swimsuit.

The Lean Hybrid System has shed a lot of light on the typical misinformed gym rats. In short, the system is incredible! There’s no better way to get the results that every woman wants!”

Ria Black
Figure Competitor
Jacksonville, FL

Build Muscle, Lose Fat, Be Physically & Mentally Fit!

Diagnostic Nutrionist“What I like about what Mike and Elliott have done with Lean Hybrid Muscle is that they have thoroughly covered all the elements one needs to build muscle, lose fat, be physically and mentally fit, truly healthy-and FUNCTIONAL! Whether you want to cut unwanted body fat, change your muscular structure, build vibrant heath, or put the finishing touches on an already healthy lifestyle; Lean Hybrid Muscle shows you how.

Most importantly, it shows you how to go about this process and customize it specifically to you-the individual. Since Mike and Elliott not only talk the talk but walk the walk, I highly recommend Lean Hybrid Muscle to anyone that wants to look and feel their best.”

Eric Talmant
Certified Metabolic Typing® Advisor
Functional Diagnostic Nutritionist
Nationally Ranked Powerlifter

Who Else Wants To Add Lean Muscle Mass?

Power Building“The Lean Hybrid Muscle program is a one of a kind training system that allows you to simultaneously add muscle, while losing bodyfat.

This is a great program for anyone wishing to increase lean muscle mass!”


Marc Snyder
2009 NPC COntinental USA
Lightheavy Weight Champ

The Blueprint You Need To Transform Your Body

Hybrid Ab Training for Ripped Abs“Every once in a while a fitness product comes along that rises head and shoulders above any competition. New fitness ideas and theories are a dime a dozen and it’s easy to get swamped with so many rip offs and useless information. But what Mike & Elliott have created here is nothing short of outstanding.

Inside the Lean Hybrid Muscle System you will get your hands on a blueprint to take you on a journey to the most incredible results you will likely ever get in your fitness, fat loss and lean muscle pursuits. Here are two men who know EXACTLY what they are talking about and EXACTLY what you need to do to transform your body. If you are tired of searching, are ready for a system to believe in then you need to fight like a warrior to get your hands on this!”


Tristan Lewis, NASM-CPT
Professional Fitness Specialist
Founder Abmetrics.com

Learn Power Secrets Most People Will Never Know!

Type 3 muscle helps you lift more weight and burn more fat“The Lean Hybrid Muscle building and fat burning system is a must for anyone involved in sports, stength training or the fitness industry. Never have I seen so many myths dispelled and methods proven in an easy to understand format! It has worked wonders for me and many friends. The proof is in the pudding!”


Brian Carroll
Pro Powerlifter – 2nd AllTime @ 275
CriticalBench Athlete

Do You Want A “Lean Hybrid Muscle” Success Story?

Get Lean Hybrid Muscle Program

but first read:

Lean Hybrid Muscle Review

Top 5 Hybrid Training Questions

by Mike Westerdal

1. Is there really such thing as type III muscle fiber?

A Type III muscle fiber is just a cool name for a hybrid type II muscle fiber that takes on traits of a type I fiber.

Heavy HandsIt’s nothing new. It’s just something a lot of people haven’t heard about.
Early adaptors of this theory included Dr. Len Schwartz who in 1995 coined the phrase “Long Strength”. Dr. Schwartz describes Long strength as “the ability to exert significant strength for an extended period of time.”

John Parrillo-the second proponent of long strength-began having his bodybuilders doing really high intensity cardio. He claimed that doing this actually altered the muscle composition. He called this form a resistance training the “100 rep extended set,” saying that it helped the body to construct more mitochondria-the muscles’ “cellular blast furnaces.” He also says that this increases muscular growth by developing the circulatory pathways that provide nourishment to the muscles.

Ori Hofmekler is the third early adopter of the long strength concept. Ori developed a weight training system that he called, “Controlled Fatigue Training.” According to Ori, this type of training was specifically designed to develop these super hybrid muscles-ones that were capable of generating and sustaining strength for extended periods.

2. Why do we want a type 3 super muscle?

We know that Type 1 fibers have a higher mitochondrial density than type 2 thus they are more fuel efficient. Simply put, they burn fat for energy better than the type 2 fibers.

Type 2 fibers usually have a thicker diameter… they are bigger fibers. When they begin adopting the behavior of type 1 fibers by gradually increasing their mitochondrial density they ultimately become even BIGGER in size as well a better at burning fat for energy.

So if you want muscles that are BIGGER, STRONGER, have more ENDURANCE, and are better at FAT BURNING than you’ll want to develop these muscles.

3. How do we get them?

By combining cardio and resistance activities it causes the composition of muscles to transform from predominately type II or type IIb into Type III. By doing this, we are able to push “beyond our genetic limits,” much like the ancient Spartans, Gladiators and Vikings did.

Having more mitochondria in the muscle cells means that more nutrients can be processed, giving the muscles the ability to work considerably harder for longer periods. They’re also able to grow larger and are able to resist getting tired for longer periods.

Knowing this, we can see that the goal of cardio combined with resistance—sometimes known as hybrid cardio is to push our muscles to undergo a reconfiguration and increase the number of mitochondria in the cells.

4. Should I eat for size or fat loss during this program?

hybrid muscle trainingThe answer to that is…it depends. Sometimes you’ll eat more calories and sometimes you’ll eat less. However nutrient timing is just one aspect of gaining muscle and burning fat.

Nutrition would be such an easy topic to practice and discuss if human beings were as simple as a mathematical equation.

You know… 10 – 3 = 7

But when it comes to the dynamic hormonal and nervous system fluctuations present in the human body… often times

10 – 3 = 478!!

With such various reactions to a broad spectrum of stimuli, the simple notion that calories in vs. calories out determines your fat loss or muscle building results, is a completely ineffective means for determining fitness results.

For example, when exposed to the harsh and threatening demands of prison life, many inmates continue to build thick, lean muscles despite the lack of access to high quality foods, proteins and supplements.

This is due to the highly anabolic state that their bodies are able to maintain when in such a testosterone driven environment. Also, have you ever met a fat person that barely eats? They consume very little calories yet they are obese! This is also due to a hormonal response. It also destroys the notion that lower calories equal less body fat.

Fat loss and muscle building are the result of several lifestyle and nutrition modifications, none more important than the other. All of our daily choices have an impact on our fitness results, not simply how much food we eat.

5. Can I continue my current workout and add Resistance Cardio at the end of my workouts for 20-30 minutes?

Yes that’s a great idea. That’s a hybrid workout in itself. Continue to train with weights for strength, muscle growth and toning. Than instead of doing 30-minutes of traditional cardio on a treadmill or stationary bike add some resistance cardio to your workout to start developing the Type III muscle fiber.

hybrid-cardioTo do hybrid cardio all you need to is combine aerobic and anaerobic (resistance) activities. You can do this by adding dumbbells to your cardio workout.

If you want to go jogging, try wearing a weight vest while doing it. If you want to do something low impact, pick up some kettlebells or dumbbells and walk up a flights of stairs. Interval hybrid cardio using your bodyweight is another good option.

Another idea is to set up a circuit of pull-ups, squats, box jumps and push-ups. Alternate exercises every 20-30 seconds and keep moving. Keep going for 20-minutes. I guarantee you a bodyweight circuit like this will be faster, burn more calories and keep you more entertained. You can mix things up even more by holding each position for five to ten seconds—up for pull-ups and push-ups, down for lunges and squats.

Once the bodyweight cardio exercises aren’t challenging enough you can try a few of these sample Metabolic Resistance Cardio workouts to do at the end of your normal workouts. They are all full body workouts, so feel free to rotate through them, it doesn’t matter which one you pick.

Remember your muscles will already be somewhat fatigued from the weight training session you just performed so you’ll want to use a much lighter weight when doing this kind of resistance cardio after a weight training session.

When you buy the Lean Hybrid Muscle program you get hybrid cardio templates that you can add to the end of your workouts. Like we mentioned this is great if you want to spice up your boring cardio sessions but stay with the current lifting program you’re currently doing.

To learn more about the Type III muscle fiber visit this page:
http://www.leanhybridmusclereview.net/science-of-rapid-muscle-growth-article

Why Train like an Athlete? – 5 Big Reasons Why Everyone Should Train Like Athletes

byron_yelling

By Elliott Hulse Co-Creator of Lean Hybrid Muscle

If you’re like me, you probably want nothing more than to feel like a ’super-stud’ every time you take your shirt off in public. You want to have the confidence to say, ‘Boy, this sweaty shirt is chaffin’ me’, then reach over your shoulder and tear your shirt off like Brad Pitt in Fight Club. When you know that your pecs look like two soup bowls inserted beneath your skin, and your abs are as hard the asphalt you stand on, it’s tough to keep your shirt on!

Today you are gonna learn the top 5 training principles that you MUST implement in order to make your physique and performance goals… a reality. But, before I open the info-floodgates, there is something you’ve got to understand. Men… all men, should recognize that we are athletes and our training programs must reflect this.

Even if you’re a ‘pencil pusher’ or a ‘white collar crook’, the essence of your being is athletic. In order to see any type of fitness results it is essential to recognize that Squats, Power Cleans, 40 Yard Dashes and Vertical Jumps are not only for NFL Combine participants… they are for you!

1. You’re An Athlete By Design

The foundation principle of everything that I teach all begins with one extremely powerful phrase: “We are primal beings living in a modern world”

Our physical bodies have been unchanged for thousands of years. In fact, today, our bodies are an exact expression of what our ancestors were over 100,000 years ago. It is believed that it takes about 100,000 years for 0.001percent of a genome to change… so yourself and Primal Man are for all intents and purposes… the same.

What has changed is how WE have chosen to live, if you can even call it that. As we have ‘advanced’ in technology we have regressed in physical strength and stature.

We function at a much lower capacity than were inherently capable of. This is analogous to those people who buy off-road vehicles that will never see anything but concrete! You’ve been given the ultimate athletic tool… use it.

2. Short, Hard and Intense Workouts Yield Lean, Hard and Muscular Bodies

When you spend over an hour in the gym sitting on useless ‘fitness machines’ while you’re waiting to do your ‘next set’…your nervous system’s primal response is to release Cortisol and Glucocorticoids – which are stress hormones, (these make you sick, sad, fat and, stupid) in response to your body thinking… “Holy Cow, we’ve been training for over an hour… perhaps we’re being chased by a tiger and need to preserve body fat”, then it begins sacrificing muscle tissue for energy! This is called The Catabolic Effect. Also, workouts exceeding 1 hour have been shown to be associated with a rapid decrease in androgen levels.

This is why marathon runners look so emaciated… id much rather look like one of those Lock, Stock & Ready Sprinters with muscles rippling across their backs and abs.

3. Aerobics and Cardio Training Is Boring & Ineffective

Strength coach Charles Poliquin has coined the phrase “Chunky Aerobic Instructor Syndrome” (CAIS). You’ve seen them, they do cardio all day long… don’t you think that they would be a bit leaner? Well, there is a scientific reason as to why they are cubby even though they bounce up and down on those colorful blocks all day long. In fact research has shown that aerobic instructors who taught an average of 3 hours a day maintained a body fat of 22-24% – mind you, that Olympic athletes hover around 9%.

Especially with repetitive exercises like aerobics the body adapts quickly to the stimulus and ceases to respond to the stimulus. Also, you begin to become very fuel-efficient… Listen, think of a metabolism that has adapted to long treks of cardio as being a Honda… it burns very little fuel (i.e. fat) but can go miles and miles. Think of a metabolism that is roaring with increased mitochondria activity (as is present in someone who weight trains with circuits) as a Hummer, large fuel combusting metabolism!

Here’s Why this is so important! You want a stronger heart, without the fat saving response of long boring cardio treks. That is why I teach my clients how to do work capacity sets. We take 4-6 exercises and complete them back to back with no rest and aim to complete them all with in about 2 minutes… if your heart is not ready to pound out of your chest after that, then maybe you should visit your veterinarian!

Here’s a simple circuit that you can do at home – first 20 squats, then 20 lunges, then ’step ups’ on a bench 10 each leg, finally do 10 squat jumps and get it all done in less than 90 seconds! Kick-ass workout!

We begin every session with Plyometrics and then get right into 3-5 “work capacity” sets for upper and lower body.

4. Get High on Oxygen & Sunshine

Besides the fact that training on treadmills and ’sit down’ exercise equipment is less effective than getting your feet on the ground and learning how to use your own bodyweight, training indoors can be detrimental to your performance and fitness results.

As ‘primal beings’ we are in need of several vital elements and forms of energy. The suns rays are nourishing to your mind as well as body. It is well documented that those who live in the cooler northern climates that enjoy less sunshine through out the year are several times more likely to suffer from depression.

Also, if you’re like most Americans you work and live indoors (maybe). In fact, the average person spends 90% of their time indoors. Several health experts have propounded that our homes and workplace are the most toxic environments in our lives. Many studies have stated that toxic particles and fumes found in your home and workplace include: air fresheners, spray starch, paints, mothballs and even ‘new car’ smell kills more people every year than automobile accidents!

So, what do you do? Train in the great outdoors! When I train my Strength Camp clients at Vinoy Park in St. Petersburg Florida, not only do we benefit from the sweet bay breeze but also the scenery is beautiful enough to give a nun spring fever!

5. It’s Gotta Be Fun!

Drop out rates for exercise programs are almost as high as the drop out rate in my old middle school! The bottom line is, if you don’t enjoy it – you wont do it. The most effective way to ensure that you stick with your training program is to change it often. This doesn’t mean hop from one modality to the next before you get any results. It means stick with your weight-training program for a minimum of 90 day but change the exercises you use for each body part at least every 3 weeks.

This not only keeps you interested but also, your nervous system will be challenged with the new exercises and be forced to adapt. This yields fast and long-lasting results!

Want a Badass Program To Gain Muscle and Burn Fat at the Same Time?

Check out my Lean Hybrid Muscle Review

Science of Rapid Muscle Growth Article

By Elliott Hulse
The Science Of Rapid Muscle Growth
Constructing the type 3 muscle fiber

muscle fiberLean Hybrid Muscle building routines include some of the most grueling workouts that most people have ever experienced.  Its a good day when none of the guys that train at Strength Camp puke after a training session.

Well, if you’re like most AVERAGE fitness folks you are probably asking yourself… “Why the heck would someone pay this psycho… only to engage in this form of fitness brutality?”

There are many strength and conditioning coaches that train their athletes and clients to the point of “revisiting their lunch” simply to punish them or to prove a point.  But when members at Strength Camp engage in our hybrid muscle training sessions there is a SCIENCE behind the sadism.

You see, most people go to the gym on Monday and do their weight training followed by cardio on Tuesday.  But at Strength Camp we combine both weight training AND cardio in the same session… in fact, many times both elements are expressed in a single exercises.

Here’s an example…

Instead of the average training routine that would include dead lifts and biceps curls for 3 sets of 10, our “hybrid” routine may consist of heavy sandbag loading for as many reps as possible in a 60 second span.

Here are the benefits of training The Hybrid Way:

1. When you force a fast twitch (type 2b) muscle fiber that is accustomed to explosive movements such as heavy sand bag loading to maintain its function via high repetitions within a short span of time, repeated for several sets… you train it to behave more like a slow-twitch (type 1) fiber.

2. Type 1 fibers have a higher mitochondrial density than type 2 thus they are more fuel efficient.  Simply put, they burn fat for energy better than the type 2 fibers.

3. Type 2 fibers are usually more explosive and have a thicker diameter… they are bigger fibers.  When they begin adopting the behavior of type 1 fibers by gradually increasing their mitochondrial density they ultimately become even BIGGER in size as well a better at burning fat for energy.

4. We call these newly formed, mitochondrial infused type 2 fibers… Type 3 Muscle Fibers.

5. Type 3 Muscle Fibers are BIGGER, STRONGER, and more fuel efficient (burn more fat) than the speedy yet sluggish Type 2 fibers.  Type 3 fibers are also more explosive and have greater athletic capacity than the slow and steady Type 1 fibers.

Here is a challenge that I invite you to try this week.

Instead of your normal back and biceps training routine followed by cardio… create a 100 pound sand bag and load it onto a 54″ platform (or about the height of your chest) for as many reps as possible in 60 seconds.  Repeat for 5-10 sets with no more than a 2 minute rest in between.

Step 2 – come back to this website and post comments below about how soaking wet and soar you were after this workout!

This type of training is the World’s Fastest Way To Burn Fat & Build Muscle — ever!

Lean Hybrid Muscle Building

The Secret To Building Lean Muscle

Welcome to Lean Hybrid Muscle TV, this is episode #1.

In this episode… Elliott Hulse describes the difference between Type 1, Type 2 and the “Super Hybrid Muscle” Type 3 fibers.

Also discover the #1 reason why most people fail to build muscle and burn fat at the same time.

Enjoy!

Getting this information out to as many people as possible is our goal.  In order that we don’t overwhelm seekers with too much information at one time, I will with hold publishing a follow up video until there are at least 25 comments for each video.

POST A COMMENT BELOW — if you enjoyed this video, let us know… what have been your experiences with this type of training?  What kind of results have you gotten? Do you think we are full of s*it? Did you hate the video?  — whatever your thoughts or position, Let Us Know…

It is your feedback that is driving this project forward.

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Lean Hybrid Muscle Review

Lean Muscle Workout Plans – Design Your Own Hybrid Workouts

How To Design Hybrid Muscle Workouts

Getting this information out to as many people as possible is our goal.  In order that we don’t overwhelm seekers with too much information at one time, I will with hold publishing a follow up video until there are at least 50 comments for each video.


POST A COMMENT BELOW
— if you enjoyed this video, let us know… what have been your experiences with this type of training?  What kind of results have you gotten? Do you think we are full of s*it? Did you hate the video?  — whatever your thoughts or position, Let Us Know…

It is your feedback that is driving this project forward.

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Visit the Official LHM Blog

or

Click Here to View the Official Lean Hybird Muscle Review

Burn Fat and Build Muscle at the Same Time – is it Possible?

Power Building and Resistance Cardio: The Killer Combo!

by Elliott Hulse, CSCS

resistance-cardioIt never ceases to amaze me how many people have fallen victim to the lie of “isolated results.”  Essentially, the idea that fitness, success and life results are created in a vacuum… completely detached and isolated incidences.

For example, many women call me inquiring about fitness training and assert their desire to “lose belly fat” or “get leaner arms”.  What they fail to realize is that fat loss, muscle building and all fitness results are the expression of a SYSTEMIC change in their bodies… not just the manipulation of a single muscle or energy system.

As one of my favorite authors Dan John, would say… “The body is one piece.”

We evolve as a whole.  All systems… muscular, nervous, cardiovascular and hormonal systems work synergistically to move us in the direction that’s most consistent with our behaviors.  Even when we aim to isolate systems, we unexpectedly receive the benefits of advancement in others.

For example, you decide to quit smoking so that you can breathe better.  After several months of not smoking you notice an improvement in your cardiovascular abilities, but you ALSO recognize that your skin looks better and your hair has stopped falling out!  This is exactly how our body works… we are “one piece”.

Whatever we do, affects everything.

If we agree that the human body / mind is a single unit, then why do we still approach our exercise and training programs in a segmented fashion?  Wouldn’t it make more sense to work WITH our bodies and prepare for the advancement of ALL strength and fitness qualities at the same time?

When we follow a “holistic” or hybrid approach to our training we effortlessly move in the direction of our greatest muscle building, fat loss and athletic performance potentials without resistance from nature.  We are moving with the river, instead of against it.  This leads to faster, longer lasting results… minus the typical anxiety and frustration.

Two of my favorite integrated or hybrid approaches fat loss and muscle building are “Power-building” and “Resistance cardio”.  These hybrid training systems enhance your body’s ability to naturally build muscle and burn fat at the same time.  They are effective means for increasing strength, muscle mass, cardiovascular health, fat loss and systemic vitality.

mike-squat

The first hybrid approach is “Power Building”.  This is where a fitness seeker or athlete combines strength producing exercises and the variables consistent with it (heavy weights and low volume) with muscle building exercises and the parameters associated with it (moderate weights and high volume) in the same workout.

An example of a Power Building workout would include a heavy full body exercise like barbell squats for multiple sets to train the nervous system followed by a moderate intensity exercise for higher reps like dumbbell step-ups to develop muscle mass.  This is a great way to improve functional strength and build attractive muscle at the same time.

power-buildingWith regards to conventional cardio training, most individuals limit themselves to the single dimension of jogging or cycling.  This type of training is good… but what may be even better would be to combine the efforts of the cardiovascular system with the muscular system.  This would create a hybrid experience within the body that produces the results of more lean mass while burning fat.

Resistance Cardio can be performed in several manners, but amongst my favorite are the use of pulling sleds and kettlebells.  Pulling sleds offers a low impact, moderate intensity form of cardio training that has the capacity to build muscle and strength in the legs and core while increasing the heart rate offering a fat burning response.

I also really enjoy kettlebell training as it offers a functional (and fun) alternative to jogging.  Kettlebells also elicit a muscle building response which leads to a leaner, HARDER physique that with the use of jogging alone.

When we follow a “holistic” or hybrid approach to our training we effortlessly move in the direction of our greatest muscle building, fat loss and athletic performance potentials with ease.

Hybrid muscle training is highly effective, functional and fun.  If you believe as I do, that the body (and our lives) are an expression integrated  systems and subsystems AND you love the fat loss and muscle building benefits of challenging workouts… then I invite you to consider:

Lean Hybrid Muscle training!

but before you make your decision make sure you read my:

Lean Hybrid Muscle Review!



Lean Muscle Routines – 100 Rep Giant Set Training

Read at the LHM Blog: http://www.leanhybridmusclereview.net

By Mike Westerdal

100repset Nutrition and training expert John Parrillo is an innovator who has been on the cutting edge of bodybuilding for more than two decades. His ideas go against conventional wisdom and have been hailed as revolutionary by some and dismissed by others. Some people think he’s an exercise and nutrition genius who knows more about maximizing muscle growth and losing body fat than just about anyone else around, while others think he doesn’t know what the hell he’s talking about. In any case, John was among the first to embrace the idea of Super Hybrid Muscle. In fact, he was really the first one to develop the first hybrid training system.

More than 15 years ago he caught on to the idea of Super Hybrid Muscle and began having his bodybuilders doing really high intensity cardio. John realized that by doing this, his guys

were actually altering the composition of their muscle fibers. He called this form a resistance training the “100 rep extended set,” saying that it helped the body to construct more mitochondria—the muscles’ “cellular blast furnaces,” while also increasing muscular growth by developing the circulatory pathways that provide nourishment to the muscles. As the cellular blast furnaces, mitochondria are extremely important to muscle because they’re the energy-supplying systems of the muscle cells.

Every muscle has a certain number of mitochondria–the more mitochondria in the muscle, the greater its potential for growth. So by forcing the body into creating more mitochondria, you’re setting the stage for big increases muscle strength, stamina and endurance. Ordinary muscle fibers are either built for strength or endurance–not really for both. By forcing the body to increase the number of mitochondria in the muscle cells, you’re also causing a metamorphosis that converts ordinary muscle fiber into Super Hybrid Muscle fiber. And not only that, but a human body loaded with mitochondria is far less likely to accumulate body fat than a body with fewer mitochondria.

While researching ways in which to reconfigure the composition of muscle fiber, John realized that the answer could be found in the past. Looking back, he realized that prolonged, intense physical effort causes a working muscle to build additional mitochondria, resulting in big gains in muscle strength and stamina. Part of this realization came from looking at railroad workers from the 1860s. These guys would lay track all day long using a 4-pound sledgehammer developing powerful arms, forearms and shoulders loaded with mitochondria, strength and endurance. But because their legs weren’t being exercised as intensely, they stayed the same.

100repgiantset So basically, John’s 100 Rep Giant Set training routine recreates this kind of super intense, prolonged workout.

Here’s how it works. You start by picking a single muscle group, doing 20 reps of an exercise, then launch right into 20 reps of the next exercise. Immediately after that, you do 20 reps of another exercise, followed by 2 more sets of 20 reps each of two different exercises. There is no rest allowed between the 20-rep sets. At the end of all this, you’ve done a total of 100 reps, almost sequentially. Now you can rest for no more than 1 minute before starting the whole cycle again, repeating it at least 2-3 times total.

That is one hell of a tough workout–especially when you realize that you’ve just done 200-300 reps for a single muscle. In a normal workout, even on a high rep day, most guys aren’t going to even hit 100 for a single muscle. The important thing to remember here is that the workout needs to be intense. You don’t want to be screwing around wasting time by not making it challenging. At the same time though, you don’t want to start out with a weight that’s too heavy because once you start, you need to commit to finishing with the same weight. No drop sets here.

You can do 100 Rep Giant Sets for any body part–you’re not limited to just certain muscle groups. You can also do it whether you use machines or free weights but you’ll always get the best results from free weights because they force each limb to carry its fair share of the total weight, requiring each muscle to perform equally, making free weights far better muscle-building tools than machines. You should do the 100 Rep Giant Sets once or twice a week, rotating body parts for about eight weeks.

If you tell most bodybuilders that you’re going to be doing 100-rep sets to build strength, stamina and size, they’re likely to ask if you’ve gone out of your flipping mind. Most hardcore bodybuilders reject this philosophy entirely because it runs directly contrary to the all-known logic – fewer repeats, bigger weights – equals bigger muscle growth.

Even though the path to getting there is a bit different, the underlying principle and ultimate goals of 100 Rep Giant Sets and Lean Hybrid Muscle training are the same. Both rely on grueling workouts that combine resistance training and cardio activities to force the body to increase the number of mitochondria to build Super Hybrid Muscle.

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Badass Muscle Transformations from Lean Hybrid Muscle

Check out these Lean Hybrid Muscle Transformations

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Do You Have To Be Fat To Be Strong?

By Mike Westerdal

Read at the Official LHM Blog Here!

Many of you know that I compete as an amatuer powerlifter.  One thing I’ve noticed over the past few years is that there are a lot of guys that believe the bigger you get and the more bodyweight you carry the stronger you will get.  This was pretty much undisputed in the past.

All you had to do was look up all the world records in the squat, bench and deadlift and you’d find that the super heavyweights weighing 300 lbs and more dominated all the record boards regardless of age.

I’m not sure exactly when it started happening, but the tides are turning.  When you look up the powerlifting rankings you’ll see that today the top numbers at many of the biggest powerlifting events each year are not always held by the heaviest guys.

In fact on forums across the Internet people are arguing that the strongest guys in the world today are representing the 198, 220, 242 and 275 lbs classes.

And I’m not talking about short fat guys that weigh less than their taller counterparts. These are lean powerlifters that look like they compete in bodybuilding.

kroc

Matt Kroczaleski pictured above competes in the 220 lb class giving the
heavyweights a run for their money and I don’t see no stinkin body fat!

The world famous strength coach and owner of Westside Barbell Louie Simmons is an advocate of having his powerlifters push a weighted wheelbarrow and do sled drags.  You can read about it in many of his articles.

What does this have to do with Lean Hybrid Muscle, Mike?  Well, there’s a new breed of powerlifters that are taking over and they do cardio! Can you believe that, powerlifters doing cardio?  Well they’re doing hybrid cardio or resistance cardio.

Not only are they improving their fitness level, but they are increasing their overall or “absolute strength” which seems to be carrying over to their max strength  powerlifting results.

It’s true,  times are a changing in the powerlifting world.  Pretty soon the word powerlifter may just bring to mind a lean hybrid muscle machine instead of the stereotypical big fat bald guy with a goatee.  Hybrid cardio or type III muscle training has a lot to do with it in my opinion.

Sometimes I train with an elite powerlifter named Mike Schwanke over at Tampa Barbell.  Here’s another example of a lighter guy giving the heavyweights a run for their money.  He squats over 1K and has deadlifted 800 lbs.  Check out this video of his training footage prior to a meet earlier this year.

Even though he’s a powerlifter he implements cardio and hybrid conditioning so that he can reduce his bodyfat while building strength.

Yes – You Can Be Strong, Lean & In Shape At The Same Time

This is important so listen up.  Hybrid cardio is not a “style” of training but rather, it is a component of training-and it doesn’t require and special training or fancy equipment.

If you are interested in developing balance among fitness, strength and size, then you should be taking a good look at this blog and the developments. For example, a guy can lift and lift and lift until he’s as big as an ox with bulging muscles of steel but be short of breath from a climb up a flight of stairs.

Or, if you are into competitive sports, adding the Hybrid Muscle Training component to your training mix can really give you a competitive edge. Guys also use hybrid conditioning to improve weak spots, to be more adaptable, improve their overall fitness levels and to boost and speed up their bodies’ capacity to recover.

The sled pull, tire flip, farmer’s walk, wheelbarrow push and plate lifting are some of the more common hybrid exercises around. In doing any of these exercises you start out with a goal of doing it for maybe ten minutes or so, with a long-term goal of working up to about 30 minutes.

It’s important to remember this part: Once you reach 30 minutes, don’t keep striving to be able to do longer stretches of time. Rather, enhance your capacity by increasing the weight, not the amount of time you’re doing the exercises. This is where you’ll really see improvements in your performance.

One of the great things about Hybrid cardio as it relates to muscle building is that it involves compound exercises that require you to use multiple muscle groups and multiple skills (balance, coordination, etc.) at the same time. By doing compound exercises you’re not only improving your all around fitness level but you’re also significantly lowering your risk of injuring yourself.

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Lots of bodybuilders get totally caught up in building size, focusing on doing the same exercises over and over again. By keeping the focus just on the muscles that you see in the mirror (the “beach muscles”) and not training the core, they are setting themselves up for injury.

Powerlifters are equally guilty on totally concentrating on their maximum strength without paying much attention to their hearts or work capacity as we discussed earlier. If you can squat 700 pounds you should be able to squat 225 for 15 reps without getting totally winded.

Many powerlifters myself included could use the fat burning benefits of incorporating some hybrid cardio training which as a bonus will develop the type III muscle fiber. Maybe there’d be a little more gas in the tank by the time the deadlift rolls around on meet day.

I’ve heard the excuses, doing this will make you weaker.  Well I’m calling Bullshit on that one!  How many of you have seen the DVD “242 Raw” featuring Jeremy Hoornstra?  For those of you who don’t know him he’s one of the top raw bench pressers in the world having hit a 675 bench in competition right before my eyes!

It was amazing.  Well in Jeremy’s DVD him and his buddies push his SUV up a hill for their early morning workout. So don’t tell me this kind of conditioning will make you lose max strength, because if anything it will make you overall stronger.

hoornstra-242-raw-review

That’s another great thing about hybrid cardio/muscle building exercises, you can do them with whatever you have handy. If you don’t happen to have a sled hanging around the house, no worries just push a vehicle around.

And if you aren’t able to do that, then maybe you can flip a tire or attach some rope to a piece of plywood, put a bunch of bricks on it and start dragging it around. With lean hybrid muscle building workouts, you’re not tied to a specific routine or exercise.

It’s not a requirement that you do specific exercises or follow a particular routine-it’s more important that you do “strongman” type exercises in addition to your current routine that are really going to challenge you.

Even if you live in the heart of the city you can incorporate hybrid muscle exercises into your training routine. The farmer’s walk can be done anywhere. Just grab a couple of heavy dumbbells and start walking. As you improve, use heavier dumbbells.

sustainedstrengthIf the weather is lousy then you can do it at the gym. At the gym you can also carry around plates instead of dumbbells, if you’d like. Kettle bells are great for doing these exercises too. You can use them to do snatches, the farmer’s walk or any number of other compound exercises.

You can even do these hybrid training exercises if you don’t have anything more than your own bodyweight. Jump squats are just one example of a bodyweight exercise that you can do. The point is this kind of training allows for a great deal of creativity, flexibility and adaptability. Watch the Strong Man competitions on the television if you want some great ideas for coming up with your own routines.

To wrap up, by including Hybrid muscle training exercises into the training routine, dangerous imbalances-and the injuries that often accompany them-can be avoided. Adding some of these exercises into the mix can also help keep boredom at bay and can also keep you from getting burned out on training.

You’ll also be giving yourself a serious competitive edge and as an added bonus, because the body is in all-around better physical condition, you’ll also find that you recover more rapidly and will probably have more energy too.

Thanks for letting me get this off my chest.  I’m learning so much just from reading everyone’s comments.  So if you learned anything or enjoyed this post, than please leave a comment below.  It’s only fair that I get to pick your brain too!

Give me 35 comments below and I’ll be back with a follow up post!

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