How to Train Efficiently: Part 3 – Training Female Athletes
This is the third of a three-part interview on female athletic training with strength coach, John Paul Catanzaro.
Q: What are some exercises that are efficient for female athletic development?
A: If squats and deadlifts are the kings of lower body development, then dips and chin-ups are the kings of upper body development. Unfortunately, you mention a chin-up to a female and she'll respond with "No way!" The limiting factor is perception - they perceive that they can't do it and sure enough, they won't do it! It's a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Granted, the average number of chin-ups a female can perform is 0 (zero) but it is definitely quite trainable as is the parallel-bar dip. These are two closed kinetic chain exercises that will contribute significantly to female (and male for that matter) athletic development. There is nothing more impressive, in my opinion, than to witness a female rep out on these exercises with additional loads.
I had the pleasure to meet Al Vermeil a couple of weeks ago. He had some interesting comments regarding female athletic development. The first was that females tend to land more upright than males - they should learn to land at a 30 degree trunk angle to reduce shearing forces on the knee. Women also get more tendonitis due to low eccentric strength so they should concentrate on this component.
In addition, Vermeil mentioned that neurologically, females tend to recruit the quads before the hamstrings. They are inclined to be quad-dominant and are better at front squats than back squats. Thus, women need to train hip extension with pulls, RDL's, and reverse hypers for strength and activation.
There are many excellent athletic strength training programs out there. For instance, Christian Thibaudeau has some neat routines with concentric, eccentric and isometric emphasis while Joe DeFranco has some great stuff based off the Westside system. I frequently employ Poliquin's 3-day split utilizing undulating periodization (i.e. alternating between accumulation and intensification phases) with my athletes. Variable recovery is built in to this scheme and it works exceptionally well.
However, let me offer another aspect that is rarely considered. Women possess about 40% to 60% of the upper body strength of men (relatively speaking, their lower body strength is much closer). So a good approach is to use a 2:1 (upper:lower) ratio in training - in other words, sandwich one lower body between two upper body exercises. Here's an example of a 3 day a week routine.
Day 1 - Mon A1) Mid-Grip Chin-Ups 5 x 3-5 @ 50X0, 90" A2) Back Squat 5 x 3-5 @ 50X0, 90" A3) Close-Grip EZ-Bar Bench Press 5 x 3-5 @ 50X0, 90" B1) Seated One-Arm Abducted Cable Row 4 x 4-6 @ 32X0, 75" B2) Suitcase Deadlift 4 x 4-6 @ 32X0, 75" B3) Lying Dumbbell Semi-Supinated Press 4 x 4-6 @ 32X0, 75" C1) Bent-Over EZ-Bar Supinated Row 3 x 8-10 @ 20X0, 60" C2) Ab Rollout 3 x 8-10 @ 20X0, 60" C3) Standing One-Arm Dumbbell Press 3 x 8-10 @ 20X0, 60"
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