vendredi 13 mai 2016

FRANK ZANE'S BEST TIPS FOR A CLASSIC V TAPER



This approached helped the three-time Mr. Olympia become an aesthetic legend.



TRAIN LIKE ZANE


    If there's one man who understands the aesthetics of bodybuilding better than anyone else, it's Frank Zane. The three-time Mr. Olympia is still considered the gold standard of aesthetic appeal with his trademark small waist and dramatic V-taper of well-developed lats, shoulders, pecs, and a deeply carved serratus.
We asked The Chemist to distill his top tips for the classic V-taper down to the following list, and he obliged. Read on and get training like a legend!

EAT CLEAN



"Besides eating minimally procesed foods, this means fewer carbs than protein," Zane says. "Eat one gram of protein per pound of body weight when leaning out and a half gram of carbs per pound."

DON’T IGNORE YOUR SERRATUS


"I discovered the ideal combination to work the serratus, and that was to superset dumbbell pullovers with straight-arm pulldowns. With pullovers I got a deep stretch as I lowered the weight all the way down, almost touching the floor, and then with arms slightly bent pulled the dumbbell up until it was over my face. Pulling any farther would take tension off the serratus and start putting it more on the front deltoids. Right after my set I would do a one-arm overhead shoulder stretch with each arm as I walked to the lat machine to do the pulldowns," Zane says.

"Standing in front of the lat machine, leaning slightly forward and grasping a straight bar with hands 12 inches apart and elbows slightly bent, I’d pull the weight down in an arc until it touched the tops of my thighs and then slowly lower it back while continuing to lean forward. This movement contracts the lower lats and serratus and completes the arc of what you would get on a pullover machine."



STOP SKIPPING CARDIO


"This will keep you tight everywhere. If you get bored, make it interesting. Play basketball or go mountain biking. Don't overthink it. Just sweat."

USE A 3 WAY SPLIT


"Over the years I’ve used different versions of the three-way split—workouts spaced according to my level of progression. The one I’ve done the most is Day 1 pull, Day 2 legs, Day 3 push. I train Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, working each body part once a week."
TRAIN WITH AN UPBEAT PARTNER
"Keep rest short and train with a partner who will help set a brisk workout pace."

DON’T FILL UP


"Instead, eat frequent small meals," Zane says. "When you eat a lot of food it takes a long time to digest it; this inefficiency also blunts nutritional benefits."

WORK YOUR ABS A LOT




"Gradually build up reps on four exercises until you get around 1,000 for the day. Break it up however you need to; it's easy to bank it out in bunches."







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                                           Source: http://www.muscleandfitness.com

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