12-27-2022, 02:07 PM
Charles Staley, Strength Training, 1
If youâre a competitive lifter, your âcoreâ lifts are your actual competitive lifts (clean & jerk and snatch for O-lifters and squat, bench, and deadlift for powerlifters).
Historically, most lifters have tended to go intense & heavy on the core lifts, and then a bit lighter on the assistance lifts. In recent years, powerlifting maverick Louie Simmons turned the traditional paradigm upside down: his Westside charges go moderate and fast on the core lifts, and then get down to business, going super-heavy on the assistance lifts.
Hereâs why this approach CAN work very well, especially for experienced lifters:
If youâre experienced, youâre fairly near your ultimate potential. This means that itâs hard to make new PRâs on your core lifts, because those are the lifts youâve been doing the longest and hardest. Therefore, if youâre an Olympic lifter for example, youâll have a lot more emotional and psychological angst surrounding your two competitive lifts than you will for assistance lifts like pulls, squats, and so on.
That said, follow me for a secondâ¦
If you focus mostly on hitting good numbers on your core lifts, and you donât do so well, youâll find yourself getting frustrated and depressed. This further increases future angst. BUTâ¦if you instead train the core lifts moderately, and seek big numbers on the assistance lifts, one of two things can happen:
1) If you do well on the assistance lifts, you think âGreat- this should âleak overâ into my core lifts.â (if Iâve chosen the right assistance lifts anyway). Orâ¦
2) If you donât do well, youâll think âWell, theyâre only assistance lifts.â No sweat. Itâs a lot better for your confidence.
Thatâs my takeâ¦whatâs yours?
If youâre a competitive lifter, your âcoreâ lifts are your actual competitive lifts (clean & jerk and snatch for O-lifters and squat, bench, and deadlift for powerlifters).
Historically, most lifters have tended to go intense & heavy on the core lifts, and then a bit lighter on the assistance lifts. In recent years, powerlifting maverick Louie Simmons turned the traditional paradigm upside down: his Westside charges go moderate and fast on the core lifts, and then get down to business, going super-heavy on the assistance lifts.
Hereâs why this approach CAN work very well, especially for experienced lifters:
If youâre experienced, youâre fairly near your ultimate potential. This means that itâs hard to make new PRâs on your core lifts, because those are the lifts youâve been doing the longest and hardest. Therefore, if youâre an Olympic lifter for example, youâll have a lot more emotional and psychological angst surrounding your two competitive lifts than you will for assistance lifts like pulls, squats, and so on.
That said, follow me for a secondâ¦
If you focus mostly on hitting good numbers on your core lifts, and you donât do so well, youâll find yourself getting frustrated and depressed. This further increases future angst. BUTâ¦if you instead train the core lifts moderately, and seek big numbers on the assistance lifts, one of two things can happen:
1) If you do well on the assistance lifts, you think âGreat- this should âleak overâ into my core lifts.â (if Iâve chosen the right assistance lifts anyway). Orâ¦
2) If you donât do well, youâll think âWell, theyâre only assistance lifts.â No sweat. Itâs a lot better for your confidence.
Thatâs my takeâ¦whatâs yours?



