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Strength Training Anatomy Workout III: Maximizing Results with Advanced Training Techniques [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 256 pages, height x width: 254x178 mm
  • Sērija : Anatomy
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-Jun-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Human Kinetics
  • ISBN-10: 1492588512
  • ISBN-13: 9781492588511
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  • Cena: 32,60 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 256 pages, height x width: 254x178 mm
  • Sērija : Anatomy
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-Jun-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Human Kinetics
  • ISBN-10: 1492588512
  • ISBN-13: 9781492588511
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Books by best-selling author Frédéric Delavier have sold more than two million copies. His latest, The Strength Training Anatomy Workout III, is an advanced guide to the secrets of training. It will help you cross the plateau to achieve greater muscle development and gains.

Frédéric Delavier, the mastermind of the best-selling Strength Training Anatomy phenomenon, is at it again. More than two million readers have turned to his books, including Strength Training Anatomy, to find the most effective exercises in strength training. The Strength Training Anatomy Workout provided beginners with program guidelines to develop fitness and athletic performance. The Strength Training Anatomy Workout II followed to offer serious strength trainers and bodybuilders the keys to creating lean muscle mass. Now, in The Strength Training Anatomy Workout III, Delavier and coauthor Michael Gundill pick up where Volume II left off to help you continue developing beyond the tapering phase with advanced training techniques. This guide uncovers the secrets of strength training to address three problems facing serious athletes:
  1. How to achieve strength gains when the more you progress, the harder it is to progress further
  2. How to keep popular misconceptions from limiting your training
  3. How to solve typical problems that you experience after years of strength training
The Strength Training Anatomy Workout III is loaded with 146 of Delavier’s unparalleled illustrations and 195 photos depicting proper exercise technique and highlighting how muscles interact with surrounding joints and skeletal structures. Exercise descriptions include technique, explanation of muscle engagement and interactions, variations, benefits, limitations, and safety considerations. You’ll assemble these exercises into advanced programs for long-term strength and muscle development. Break past your training plateaus with high-tech strength training protocols like electrical stimulation, blood flow restriction, and vibration and oscillation training. Avoid injury and muscle fatigue with advanced strategies that promote nerve, tendon, and joint recovery.

In the striking detail that only Frédéric Delavier provides, The Strength Training Anatomy Workout III will help you cross the threshold to advanced muscle development and strength gains.
Introduction 7(3)
Part I Deepen Your Understanding Of Advanced Anatomy And Morphology
Analyze Your Anatomy and Morphology
10(27)
The Worst Squat in the World
10(1)
Anatomy and Morphology: Concepts That Are Often Misunderstood
10(1)
There Is No Miracle Exercise That Is Perfect for Everyone
11(1)
Are the Proportions of the Vitruvian Man Real?
12(2)
A Few Simple Rules
14(1)
Analysis of Arm Length
14(8)
Long and Short Torsos
22(1)
The Ratio Between the Abdomen and the Rib Cage
22(5)
Large Hips/Narrow Hips: How Does This Affect the Thighs?
27(3)
Short Thighs/Long Thighs
30(2)
The Paradox of Upper-Body/Lower-Body Development
32(1)
Genetic Secrets of the Calves
33(1)
Conclusion
34(1)
When Your Future Is Obvious From Your Morphology
35(2)
Understand the Pathologies Related to Strength Training So You Can Protect Yourself
37(1)
Success, Yes...but Not at Any Cost!
37(1)
Be Clever Like a Chess Player
37(1)
Learn to Structure Your Warm-Up
37(4)
Start With a Total Body Warm-Up
39(1)
Specific Warm-Up for Weak Areas
39(1)
Complete Warm-Up for the Muscle Groups That You Plan to Work
40(1)
Joint Hypermobility Caused by Hormone Fluctuations
41(3)
The Function of Relaxin
41(2)
Fatigue: Another Cause of Joint Hypermobility
43(1)
The Weather Report and Joint Pain
43(1)
How to Manage Temporary Joint Hypermobility or Sensitivity to the Weather
44(1)
What to Do If a Hypermobile Joint Does Not Get Better
44(2)
How to Alternate Exercises to Avoid Repetitive Injuries
46(8)
Can an Athlete Escape Wolff's Law?
47(1)
What Is the Proper Range of Motion for Maximum Gain Without Injury?
48(1)
Partial or Full Reps?
48(1)
The Advantages of a Full Range of Motion/Disadvantages of a Partial Range of Motion
48(1)
The Disadvantages of a Full Range of Motion/Advantages of a Partial Range of Motion
48(4)
Conclusion
52(2)
Part II Training And Recovery Techniques
Advanced Training Techniques
54(11)
Target Muscles With Surgical Precision
54(1)
The Method of Contraction Influences the Muscle Area That Is Recruited
55(1)
Strategies for Adjusting Rest Breaks Between Sets
56(2)
Practical Applications of the Jendrassik Maneuver
58(3)
Changing the Center of Gravity by Adding Weight
61(3)
The Give-and-Take Theory for Progress
64(1)
High-Tech Strength Training Methods
65(8)
Electrical Muscle Stimulation
65(2)
What Is the Point of Blood Flow-Restricted Training?
67(4)
Vibration and Oscillation Techniques
71(2)
Secrets for Recovery
73(15)
A Better Definition of the Concept of Overtraining
73(1)
Heterogeneous Recovery Times
73(1)
Double Shock
74(1)
Nervous System Damage Following a Workout
74(3)
How Can You Promote Nerve Recovery?
77(2)
Understanding Aches and Pains Better
79(4)
Ensure Tendon and Joint Recovery
83(3)
Master Recovery Through Targeted Supplementation
86(2)
Part III Strength Training
Enlarge and Protect the Shoulders
88(22)
Specific Shoulder Pathologies
88(10)
Problems Developing the Shoulders
98(2)
Shoulder Rotation With a Band
100(3)
Jammer Press
103(2)
One-Arm Lateral Raise, Cheating, With a Dumbbell
105(5)
Attack the Complex Muscles of the Back
110(22)
Anatomy and Morphology Characteristics
110(3)
Pathology Specifics
113(5)
Problems Developing the Back
118(2)
Weightlifting Snatch
120(3)
Deadlift for the Latissimus Dorsi
123(4)
Reverse Hyperextension
127(3)
Delavier's Shrug
130(2)
Target the Chest
132(18)
Why Is the Development of Chest So Unbalanced?
132(1)
Anatomy Specifics
133(3)
Specific Information About Good Training Equipment
136(8)
Isolation Shrug for the Upper Chest (Gundill's Shrug)
144(3)
Floor Press
147(3)
Build the Biceps, Triceps, and Forearms
150(22)
Problems Developing the Biceps
151(4)
Problems Developing the Triceps
155(5)
Finger Extension
160(4)
Power Biceps Curl Using a Low Pulley
164(4)
Power Triceps Extension Using a High Pulley
168(4)
Strengthen the Core
172(14)
Problems With Core Strength
172(2)
Problems Trimming Fat
174(2)
Problems With Water Retention in the Abs
176(1)
Problems With a Muscle That Lacks Endurance
176(2)
The Plank and Its Many Variations for Static Core Strengthening
178(4)
Standing Power Crunch With a Resistance Band for Dynamic Core Work
182(4)
Fill In the Quadriceps
186(20)
Biomechanical Specifics
186(2)
Specifics About Proper Training Equipment
188(3)
Morphological Characteristics
191(3)
Problems Developing the Quadriceps
194(4)
Belt Squat
198(4)
Squat Using a Machine
202(2)
Vertical Leg Press
204(2)
Catch Up the Hamstrings
206(12)
Anatomy and Morphology of the Hamstrings
206(3)
Problems Developing the Hamstrings
209(1)
Problems With Regional Recruitment of the Hamstrings
210(2)
Glute-Ham Raise
212(2)
Hip Extension
214(4)
Fill In the Adductors and the Sartorius
218(11)
Anatomy and Morphology of the Adductors
218(2)
The Sartorius Is an Indispensable Muscle for Competitions
220(2)
Thigh Adduction Using a Machine
222(4)
Seated Sartorius Exercise
226(3)
Understand and Manage Unequal Development in the Calves
229(5)
Physiological Characteristics
229(1)
Belt Squat Calf Raise
230(4)
Part IV Advanced Programs
Advanced Warm-Up Programs
234(4)
Basic Warm-Up
235(1)
Complete Warm-Up
236(2)
Advanced Programs to Catch Up Weak Areas
238(10)
Catch Up the Arms
238(2)
Catch Up the Upper Chest
240(2)
Catch Up the Back of the Shoulders
242(2)
Catch Up the Back
244(2)
Catch Up the Thighs
246(2)
Bibliography 248
Frederic Delavier is a gifted artist with exceptional knowledge of human anatomy. He studied morphology and anatomy for five years at the prestigious Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. The former editor in chief of the French magazine PowerMag, Delavier wrote for several fitness publications, including the French magazine Le Monde du Muscle, Men's Health Germany, and Ironman. He has also authored several books including the bestselling Strength Training Anatomy, Women's Strength Training Anatomy, Delavier's Core Training Anatomy and Delavier's Stretching Anatomy to name a few. Michael Gundill has written 16 books on strength training, sport nutrition and health, including co-authoring The Strength Training Anatomy Workout, The Strength Training Anatomy Workout II and Delavier's Women's Strength Training Anatomy Workout. His books have been translated into multiple languages and he has written over 500 articles for bodybuilding and fitness magazines worldwide, including Iron Man and Dirty Dieting. In 1998 he won the Article of the Year Award at the Fourth Academy of Bodybuilding Fitness & Sports Awards in California.