Showing posts with label Bench Press. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bench Press. Show all posts

Friday, January 30, 2026

Nearly 300 LBS Starting At The Bottom

 Yesterday, something in me had the bright idea to see what I can do at the gym by doing the Bench Press but starting at the bottom and using the Fat Gripz. Wanted to see how I do since I rarely if ever trained in that specific position. There is no momentum so when you're going, you're pressing with a different level of strength. 

I started with 135, got 10 reps which was pretty damn easy and could've done more but that wasn't the goal. Next set, 205 for 10 reps as well. Not too bad, it wasn't easier and had at least 1 more in me but again, not what I was shooting for. Third set, 225 for 5 Reps. It was starting to really hit me that this lift was incredible to try and managed to hit multiple reps but it was a struggle to hit 4 and 5. Fourth set, 245 for 3 Reps. This was getting into Territory I have never been in before and those three were fucking hard.

I had to think long and hard what I wanted to hit up. I felt strong but I had no clue since I'm in uncharted waters here and having strength I didn't even know was there. Should I go for 255? It was a possibility and I had it in me to try but a voice in my head said go higher. How about 275-280, this was getting ambitious and most likely out of my league. With a regular Bench Press getting it off the rack straight arm, come down and push back up, I could've done that but this was going for something entirely different, I wanted to find a weight that made me question my sanity. I don't go for max lifts much anymore and the worst could happen is losing form and dropping the weight back onto the rack without hurting myself (much). I decided, you know what, I'm going for 295. Even I was thinking how nuts this is and it's nearly 300 lbs pushing for pure power and again, no momentum. I had to summon the surge of strength from CoreForce Energy and have myself believe I was like Goku gearing up to being a higher level of a Super Saiyan. 

I filmed this to show if I could do it or not with no fluff, no made up number and show that it was real whether I missed it or not. I wasn't going to fake this and if I missed it, at least I gave everything I had. I loaded up the 35 lb plate each side, sat there on the bench for a brief period, get my focus and fire myself up. I got under the bar, find my grip on the thick intimidating handles, tensed up my breathing and my muscles and went for it. I was fighting with every fiber of my being. The struggle, the weight telling you you can't do it. I pressed hard, pushing & pushing until finally for a second, I locked out my arms as best as I possibly can muster. I did it, I fucking did it, I moved weight that was less than a couple inches from my chest and it was nearly 300 freaking pounds man. 


I don't know where it ranks me among guys who have done this, quite frankly I don't think I want to know. There are guys who can do far more than me and even done it on a 3 inch thick bar but what separates me from them is that they've done this for years, building levels of strength I can't even fathom and they're trained for this especially for Powerlifting. I'm no where near having the strength of a Powerlifter and it's not my dream to be one. To tell you the truth, I hardly ever trained any form of Benching since I was 19-20 years old when I maxed out doing a normal bench for 305. In the last month, I've only done maybe 3 Bench Press workouts and in the last 21 years, I've only done a bottom starting bench only one time prior to this on a damn smith machine and that was back in 2022 or so. Never in my life before this day have attempted this style of lift with Fat Gripz. So, to pull this off with no consistent training at all really, this was a proud moment for me and I got to do it in my 40's. 

This was awesome to have done and I get to keep this for moment for the rest of my life. I love being this strong and knowing that when you're so passionate about what you do, things will happen in the most unexpected places in the most unexpected ways. I'm grateful for this and if Bud is up in Valhalla somewhere looking down, I hope I made him proud. Thank you for taking the time to read this and hope you enjoyed it. Keep killing it in your journey and be amazingly awesome. 

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

A Long Training Day That Was Quite The Thrill

 Yesterday, I decided to head over to the gym down the road and mess around with stuff for a bit. The walk by itself was around 45 minutes or a bit longer. Once I got there, got what I needed and went into the area with the sandbags and the gymnastics mat.

Started out with some stretching, mainly my legs, low back and shoulders. Got my Dopa Stretch Band and did some stuff for my shoulders and back to loosen things up a bit more. After that, got onto the Bench Press and didn't go stupid heavy or anything, just wanted to keep focus on technique and control with some good weight. Hit 135 for 15, 205 for 10 and then went to my weight 225 for three sets. My style of hand placement was closer to the middle of the bar so I was doing a close grip bench. Managed 3 sets of 6 reps and stayed in control the whole time which was what I wanted to do. Even one of the guys saw me working even came up to me and said how solid my form and technique was. Took it as a compliment, for me it was just having fun.

Moved onto Pull-ups for 4 sets of 3. Getting a little better but there's always room for improvement. Chin Over Bar man. Almost every time I go in there now I end up doing pull-ups one way or another. Sometimes I'll do chin-ups but not today. Went to the rack next to the pull-up bar so I can get some shrugs in. Managed 225 for 20, 295 for 10 and then went to 3 plates (3-45 lb plates each side) and got in 5 solid reps. No straps or anything to assist me, picked that fucker up and moved my trap muscles. Last set was another 10 pounds for 325 and got 5 reps in that one too. One of the heaviest lifts I've done in many years. Ended the weight training session with Dumbbell Curls using Fat Gripz, just a couple sets of low-medium reps with 35 and 45 lbers. Nothing special really but that wasn't the end of my workout.

Threw in a finisher for some added conditioning (along with burning off more calories) by doing my 500 Rep Dopa Circuit with my band I brought with me. 5 Exercises, 10 reps each for 10 rounds with the only rest was marking it off and/or adjusting the band since one of the knots came undone and fixed it up. I had the energy but holy shit I was sweating profusely, breathing heavily but hey, that's all part of the game right, finish strong and kicking your ass. I think I had a larger smile on my face than the Joker after all that shit. Packed up, walked all the way back home. Going to and from the gym, it was about 34 out, maybe 32 and although it was cold, it actually helped balance out my body temperature since I built up a lot of heat in that place. Walking back felt smooth and calming. My breathing was back to normal within a couple minutes or so after heading out the door.

Overall, it was a good 2 1/2 hours or so out of my day and I feel great. Today is most likely going to be band training and maybe isometrics. Might throw in a few squats and push-ups who knows. All I know is, in a long time, that was a pretty damn long session and that's including the walking. When I got back home, I weighed in for shits and giggles and went down to 234 even. I was 237.8 on Sunday. Ate a couple tuna sandwiches and some tortilla chips since it was my first meal of the day and didn't eat until after 2. Had some Pina Killada Liquid Death to help wash down the food. Fell asleep for about an hour or so and then went about the rest of my day. It was a thrill and maybe I'll do that again next week, who knows, you never know what will happen.

Be amazingly awesome and hope you all have bad ass sessions as well and killed it. 

Friday, March 22, 2013

The Living Legend Returns


           

            Who do you think I’m referring to? It could be anybody, there are a lot of powerful guys who had their best days and now are returning to the place that gave them that glory but I’m referring to quite possibly the most popular Professional Wrestler of the 60’s and early 70’s and that’s Bruno Sammartino. He defied an era when pro wrestling still had colorful characters but also had a more mat based style to some of the guys who fought in the ring.

            His style of wrestling was some mat-based with a plenty of power moves and a brawler type style as well. Even though his wrestling isn’t as popular as his strength, he still can go the distance with some of the biggest names in the business at the time. His strength was the stuff of legends. One of his first tastes of glory was picking up 640 lb. Haystacks Calhoun in 1961 if I recall and it was a big deal at the time and still is a feat that no one did to him after. Bruno’s lifting power was just incredible, he was one of the first men to Bench Press over 560 lbs. At 5’10 and over 260 lb. he was a force not to be messed with.

            Back in the 60’s where the most popular stars had an ethnic background Bruno was at the top of the ladder because of his Italian background and his love with the fans especially at what might be called the house that Bruno Built Madison Square Garden in New York. No one guy before or since has headlined the World’s Most Famous Arena more times than anyone 211 headlines with 187 sell-outs. Color TV was very low and only less than a handful of shows had color the most popular being Batman so whenever you saw Pro Wrestling it was 99% in Black & White. You had guys like Nature Boy Buddy Rogers, Fritz Von Erich, Pat O’Connor, Lou Thesz, Walter ‘Killer” Kowalski, a young Harley Race and even Karl Gotch but nobody made the money like Bruno did.

            His training was legendary, picking up heavy weights, hundreds of squats and push-ups and had endurance like some of the other greats who can go do hour long marathons in the ring. Many guys couldn't keep up with him and he even wrote a short book on how to build the body from basic strength training and muscle building and he did this (hopefully I’m right) all without drugs, steroids or PEDs when it was the boom of its time. He was a man of hard work and will to become the very best and wrestled the very best.

            He had the longest reign of any champion in history going on nearly 8 years as the champ when he beat Buddy Rogers in 1963 till he lost to Ivan Koloff in 1971. He won it back in 1972 I think and lost again to Superstar Billy Graham in 1977. Nobody ever since held the world title for that long and that tells yeah how important the man was to the business at that time. He fiddled around a while longer before retiring and became a commentator for WWE.

            He ended up leaving the business for good because of what Vince McMahon was bringing to the business and Bruno would have none of it. He was bitter about the business for the longest time about its direction and what was changing with the business until recently a man who has a hold on the company in certain areas especially in Talent Development is Paul Levesque aka Triple H got to talking with Bruno and told him what was going on really. Because of this encounter, Bruno started learning to love some of the business again and finally broke down after turning down so many offers to be in their Hall Of Fame has finally come to an end. The Living Legend will be at Madison Square Garden one more time being the headline but not in the ring, not in an interview but on stage as a WWE Hall Of Famer.

            I've been watching wrestling ever since I was 11 years old and learned so much about the wrestlers that I wanted to learn more about the history and how it came to be and how we as fans can improve it. I like more of the mat style wrestling than the colorful antics of the wrestlers. My first glimpse of Bruno was in a Video Game, Legends Of Wrestling 2 where they did interviews with big names like Hulk Hogan, Jerry Lawler, Jimmy Hart, Jimmy Snuka, The Road Warriors, Eddie Guerrero and Paul Orndorff to name a few and I was fascinated with how they portrayed Bruno. The powerful man that he was and how he talked about his matches with Killer Kowalski was just great. It made me love the old-timers ever since then and I kept learning more about real style wrestling and pro wrestling.

            I don’t know if its because I’m of Italian descent or because of my love for wrestling but I felt connected to Bruno’s career and wanted to learn more about what he did, who he wrestled and how he trained. I’m glad one of the best finally gets the respect he’s deserved for so long and be enshrined for the test of time. I never got to see Bruno during his Career because he retired not too long after I was born give and take a couple years but at least I and others my age who are in love with wrestling get to see some of his work through youtube and some other wrestling sites and be in awe of what it would be like to be in that era. Welcome back Bruno and thank you. 

Friday, January 25, 2013

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