Musings on “Good” Workouts and Effective Training Strategies I’m sure that you’ve heard of “the rule of 3.” Actually, just kidding. I’m sure that you haven’t because, well, I made it up. Like right now. This moment. But it should be a rule, and once I hit “post” on this essay, it will forever be on the internet, so it, you know, will be a rule. Forever and ever. Or until the internet collapses in an apocalyptic, cataclysmic downfall. But maybe then it will be rediscovered by Max and all those grimy kids when they go in search of Tomorrow-morrow Land, and find a copy of it that one of you printed off the internet. Anyway, rule or not, it is a good way to look at your training. Now, there are various “rules of 3.” After writing that first paragraph, I did a cursory search and Google spat out a handful of different “rules.” The only one I was familiar with, I mus...
A High-Frequency, Mass-from-the-Past Training Program for Stupendous Size and Peak Conditioning Ross as he appeared in a Weider publication in the '50s Clarence “Clancy” Ross was one of the greatest bodybuilders of all time yet has been almost forgotten in our day-and-age. You hear or read more about some of his fellow “Silver Age” bodybuilders, such as Bill Pearl , Steve Reeves, or Marvin Eder, than you do Ross—heck, I’ve written more about his fellow world-renowned lifters. But back in the early-1950s, Muscle Power and Your Physique magazines, a couple of early Weider publications, dubbed him “King of the Bodybuilders.” That’s right. King. He ruled over those other guys. He received the moniker because he had won the Mr. America, Mr. USA, Mr. North America, and Pro Mr. America, along with virtually any other title in existence. Keep in mind that the Mr. Olympia didn’t come along until 1965, and at that time it ...