IN WHAT ORDER SHOULD I DO MY STRENGTH
TRAINING?
by Dan DeFigio
As a general principle, exercises should be
performed from most demanding to least demanding, making sure that important
stabilizer muscles (like trunk and rotator cuff) are not fatigued too
soon. "Demanding" can be a relative term, so let me explain some of the
criteria I use to categorize the difficulty of particular types of exercises.
Topping the list of most difficult exercises
are those that involve not only large groups of muscles, but those that
require a high degree of speed and proprioception. Examples would be any
weighted, explosive exercises such as the snatch, the clean-and-jerk,
or squat presses. Exercises slightly less demanding would be unweighted,
explosive exercises that require a high degree of balance and coordination.
Most of your plyometric and balance training fits here.
Non-explosive compound movements are next on
the difficulty list, and these should usually be grouped from largest
to smallest muscular demand (squats and deadlifts first, chest presses
and rows next, followed by shoulders, etc.). Dumbbells require more control
than barbells, but I suppose heavy barbell movements can be more demanding
from the standpoint of total muscular effort. You decide.
Single joint movements are next, including
chest flies, lateral raises, biceps, triceps, neck, and forearms.
Waist and shoulder rotator work should be last,
because you don't want these important stabilizers to be fatigued during
your compound movements. Burning out your trunk muscles before you squat
is asking for trouble!
NOTE: This ordering of exercises is only a
guideline for general purpose, full-body workouts. Numerous common sense
exceptions exist, such as pre-exhaustion, supersets, and grouping all
exercises for a particular bodypart together before moving on to the next
group. I am by no means suggesting that this ordering system is the only
sensible way to go about strength training.
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