Screw body part splits. You know, where Monday is chest day and you don't train those muscles or lifts again for another week. The missing variable in the typical bro-split is exercise frequency.
If you're like the typical lifter on a body part split, you change up your exercise selection, poundages, and rep ranges on a semi-regular basis, but you only hit every major body part once a week. In terms of intramuscular adaptations, strength, and hypertrophy, you'll plateau if you only hit every movement pattern once a week. The plateau-busting potential of increasing your frequency will shock you.
Retire the body part split and increase your frequency. At the very least, give push-pull training a go for a couple of months and see what happens.
If you're like the typical lifter on a body part split, you change up your exercise selection, poundages, and rep ranges on a semi-regular basis, but you only hit every major body part once a week. In terms of intramuscular adaptations, strength, and hypertrophy, you'll plateau if you only hit every movement pattern once a week. The plateau-busting potential of increasing your frequency will shock you.
THE PUSH-PULL SPLIT
In order to increase exercise frequency, move to a push-pull split while reducing your overall daily training volume. Here's an example of what it'd look like:DAY ONE: PULLING MUSCLES
- Hamstrings
- Back
- Biceps
DAY TWO: PUSHING MUSCLES
- Quads
- Pecs
- Delts
- Triceps
Retire the body part split and increase your frequency. At the very least, give push-pull training a go for a couple of months and see what happens.