I want to make you jacked while also turning you into a high performance machine. And that's what this plan is all about – getting you bigger, stronger, more powerful, and better conditioned than you've been in a long time.
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I'm all about high-performance muscle: Any increase in size must come with at least as much improvement in performance. Even if your goal is just to build an awesome looking body, you should maintain this high performance mentality.
Grow in every way possible so that you can actually BE as powerful as you look. This program will help you get there, but first let's revisit its predecessor, Built For Bad.
In 2013 I came out with a program which led to my best physique ever: Built for Bad. The core concepts were:
It's simple yet effective. It can transform your physique at a frightening pace. The only problem? Not everybody could handle the maximal lifting five days a week. Those who could handle the loading made astounding progress. Those who couldn't crashed after 3-4 weeks (but still made gains beforehand).
Also, Built for Bad didn't include any work to fix weaknesses. If you were balanced that wasn't an issue. But not everybody has perfect structural muscle balance.
These are the two issues that I fixed with the Built for Battle program. I also included more exercise choices so that you can better tailor the program to your needs.
Because this program works for lifters at different levels of experience with different primary goals, you'll need to customize it. So here's what you'll do, step by step:
This takes a little work and thought on your part. That's good. It means this isn't some cookie-cutter plan!
There are three levels to choose from depending on your level of conditioning and how fast you normally train. The goal is to eventually build up to the first level. But your progression should be fairly slow, maybe trying to move up a level every third week.
Use this if your conditioning is poor or you're used to a very slow workout pace. You'll take 2:00 to 2:30 minutes between exercises.
Use this if your conditioning is about average. Take about 1:30 to 2:00 minutes between exercises.
Use this if your conditioning is good or you're used to a fast training pace. Take about 1:00 to 1:30 minutes between exercises.
Don't go up a level if it makes your performance suffer. Keep in mind, it's not a superset. The main goal is NOT to go as fast as possible, although you do want a fairly rapid pace to get some conditioning effects.
Each workout includes five exercises covering the whole body. You'll repeat these on the five training days, but the intensity will vary. Do the movements as a circuit: Do one set of the first drill, one set of the second, one set of the third, etc. You'll go through the circuit five times total.
There are three main groups of exercises to choose from. Pick the group that best fits your goal or technical capacity.
The power look is characterized by thick traps, upper back, and shoulders. The exercise selections reflect this and will really jack your "yoke" up. If you like big powerful traps, this is the group for you!
This is mostly for athletes wanting to improve explosiveness while getting stronger and building muscle. Now, even though the plan will build some muscle, it's the least effective of the three groups to get you looking jacked. But the trade-off is that you'll gain a lot of explosiveness and improve your capacity to absorb force.
This is your big basic plan. It'll build the most overall strength.
Note: I selected the front squat instead of the back squat because the front squat is less taxing on the lower back when you also have a deadlift in the plan.
And yes, you can swap some comparable exercises. Let's say you pick the Group 1 lifts, but you really want to do a power clean which is in Group 2. You can swap the snatch-grip high pull for the power clean. But don't swap exercises that target different patterns (like swapping the Zercher squat for a military press).
Day 1 is where you ramp up to your 3RM and use that 3RM to calibrate the loads for the other workouts. On top of being a powerful growth and strength gain stimulus, this day allows us to properly select the weights for the rest of the week and also give us an idea of progression.
Work up to a 3RM in every lift. These are performed in a circuit format. Yes, it's quite possible that you reach your 3RM on one lift before the others, especially the first week. When that happens, drop that lift from the circuit while you're reaching your 3RM on the other ones. But after one Monday workout it'll be pretty easy to hit your 3RM at the same time on all lifts because you'll have a good idea of what you can lift.
Important: Shoot for a technically solid 3RM. A 3RM where that last rep takes 5 seconds – with form breaking down and using compensatory mechanisms – won't work because it will overestimate how much weight you need to use during the week. The goal is to perform all perfect reps, so the weights need to be based on a near perfect performance.
The main scheme will be a 5-4-3-2-1 countdown, meaning your first set will be 5 reps, your second set 4 reps, your third set 3 reps, and so on.
There are several reasons why I love the 5-4-3-2-1 scheme:
When you do the 5-4-3-2-1 workouts do 2-4 warm-up rounds. Do 2 warm-up rounds when it's an easy workout, 3 when it's moderate, and 4 on the hardest session. On those warm-up rounds, gradually add weight from round to round. If your goal is maximum size, warm-up with sets of 5. If you're focusing more on strength and performance, warm-up with sets of 3 to avoid excessive fatigue.
The original Built for Bad program was a blitz plan. Every workout was a limit workout. Five days in a row of all-out lifting was too much for many people, especially those with more traditional jobs and more stress in their lives. The schedule for the Built for Battle plan takes that into consideration and two modifications are included:
Ramp up to a 3RM with good form. Do it in 5-6 sets after you've done 2-3 warm-up sets.
OFF
OFF
Note: Only the work sets are outlined above.
Regardless of the group you selected for your main exercises, all your muscles will be covered to some extent, but for maximum muscle growth you need to include some work with higher reps. That's the role of the assistance circuits, which you'll perform twice a week on the lighter training days.
Note that exercise selection here is much less important as the main lifts. You can swap them for exercises you find more effective, or even use the circuits to work on your weaknesses. Keep in mind that on Wednesday you'll be using intermediate exercises with medium reps, and on Saturday you'll be focusing more on isolation work or other low-stress exercises and do them for higher reps.
Do 2 warm-up rounds, then three work-set rounds. Use a weight that's challenging, but that'll still allow you to get all your reps in (not hitting failure, but getting close).
Do 2 warm-up rounds and 3 work-set rounds. On these exercises you should reach muscle failure on the work sets, which is why I gave you a range. Try to hit failure within that range.
This program is unconventional and unlike most of what you see in gyms. So you might be wondering how it can work. It's supposed to rapidly increase strength and size while also improving conditioning and helping you lose fat. Sounds too good to be true, right? Well, here's the breakdown...
The strength gains come from the rapid improvement in neurological efficiency. The more often you do a certain lift, the better your nervous system becomes at doing it in the most effective way possible.
And when it comes to neural efficiency, frequency of practice (not quantity) is king. The more often you practice a movement (with good form) the faster your improvements. A very high frequency practice like this will give you rapid gains in performance within 3-4 weeks for that reason.
Training a lift more often will improve intra and intermuscular coordination and make the nervous system more efficient at executing that specific motor program.
The 5-4-3-2-1 scheme uses a low volume per lift, and the circuit format allows you plenty of rest between sets of the same exercise so that you minimize movement-specific fatigue and gain optimal motor learning.
There are many ways to trigger muscle growth:
Except for the first trigger, none of these really apply to what we're doing during the strength circuits. Yet the growth is there. This is because of the frequency of training. While each session might not trigger as much protein synthesis (muscle growth) as a more traditional workout, the fact that you're training the same lifts five days a week more than compensates for that.
Don't forget that every time you train hard you increase protein synthesis in the trained muscles (this speeds up muscle repair and building). This increase in local protein synthesis lasts around 24 hours. If you train a muscle once a week you might stimulate a large increase in protein synthesis, but it doesn't last long. When you're training a muscle five days a week your protein synthesis stays elevated pretty much all week. These strength circuits are keeping your body anabolic all the time.
Furthermore, the more often you train a muscle, the better you become at contracting it and recruiting its higher threshold fibers. When that happens it becomes easier to make it grow. By training everything five days a week you improve your capacity to recruit all the big muscles which is an investment in future gains.
This program is first and foremost a nasty strength and size plan, but it can also have a positive impact on fat loss.
First, the circuit nature of the workout allows you to have a high work-to-rest ratio, especially once you get to Level 3 where you're taking shorter rests between exercises. This keeps you in sympathetic mode and keeps your energy expenditure high.
The use of big lifts also helps both from a hormonal perspective (growth hormone release) and caloric expenditure standpoint – bigger lifts use more muscle, which means more fuel burned.
The nature of the program (especially groups 1 and 2) have a huge impact on insulin sensitivity, which will improve nutrient partitioning – sending more nutrients to the muscles, less to the fat cells. It's not the primary goal of the program, but it's a nice perk.
The circuit structure and the whole-body nature of the workouts will have a positive effect on anaerobic power and capacity, two important energy systems for sports. And since your heart rate will stay elevated during the whole 45-60 minutes, it'll also have a positive impact on heart contractile strength which will improve aerobic capacities a bit.
Of course, we're doing low reps, so I won't claim that this program will be the most effective way to improve your conditioning, but it will have a positive effect.
You might ask if you can combine groups. Yes and no. During a phase (lasting 3-4 weeks) you need to stick to one group only. The whole system is built on maximizing neurological efficiency to have a very rapid gain in strength on a select few exercises. So you can't do group 1 on Monday, group 2 on Tuesday, etc. With the way the loading schemes are organized, that wouldn't work anyway.
However, what you can do is to periodize all three groups into a 9-12 week training cycle. In which case I'd recommend doing it in this order:
You can even extend each phase to 4 weeks if you like to stick to the same movements for longer. This will get you super jacked, strong, and powerful.
The original Built for Bad program couldn't have been done for 9-12 weeks. Few people could sustain it longer than 3-4 weeks. But because of the "intensity waving" in this plan, it won't be a problem.
If you're wanting to add farmer walks, Prowler pushing, or sprints to this program, you can. And that addition would make this a very complete program for total body performance. However, you can't simply toss them into the plan, it would be too much to recover from.
But what you CAN do is replace one or both of the assistance circuits (Wednesday or Saturday) with loaded carries or sprints. Depending on what you want to emphasize, here are some options:
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