• Hello, this board in now turned off and no new posting.
    Please REGISTER at Anabolic Steroid Forums, and become a member of our NEW community!
  • Check Out IronMag Labs® KSM-66 Max - Recovery and Anabolic Growth Complex

Use of Gloves

Marat

5/3/1
Board Rep
Joined
Jun 8, 2008
Messages
2,114
Reaction score
183
Points
0
Location
USA
This excerpt is from Mark Rippetoe's Starting Strength

"Gloves have no place in a serious training program. A glove is merely a piece of loose stuff between the hand and the bar, reducing grip security and increasing the effective diameter of the bar. Gloves make bars harder to hold on to. The only legitimate use for a glove is to cover an injury, like a torn callus or a cut, where the workout is important enough to do with the injury. The desire is to prevent callus formation (possibly so as to not snag one's pantyhose) does not constitute a legitimate use."

A caveat is that he recommends chalk use, which isn't allowed in many gyms.

Thoughts?
 
I agree with him, I never use gloves unles I had a cut and was going to train in a dirty gym. there is liquid chalk that is allowed everywhere.
 
Whatever your priorities are. Mine's soft hands, so I'll always use gloves.
 
I never use gloves
 
I pull the chick card and wear gloves. I hate training without 'em.
 
I use gloves, only because that is what I am used to. The first thing i did when I started lifting weights 5 years ago was buy a pair of gloves. Now it feels weird whenever I forget them.
 
Used to train with gloves all the time, but the sessions i forgot to bring them sucked because my hands hurt. Stopped taking them after that, it was painful for a little while but at least after that it wasn't a problem anymore.
 
I used them for the first little while when I started lifting. But then like was mentioned in the blurb, found that my grip without gloves>>grip with gloves.
 
I have to use gloves other wise I get Calluses.....
 
haha, I have done that
 
I never use gloves, but I gotta admit girls do like soft hands on us guys. oh well
 
People at my 24hour fitness wear gloves but at my high school, no one wears gloves in the weight room
 
Yeah I dont want a guy to have hands like me.....Id think he was gay or something

lol

that reminds me of a buddy of mine. he bought gloves to go to the gym, and I used to rag on him a lot about it. he's like "well, I don't want rough ass hands when I'm with my girl".. I said "I think she'd think it was kind of gay if your hands were as soft as hers"

he hasn't worn them since.
 
I wear gloves and I still end up with calluses n rough hands , but have you ever sen someone at the gym that wears gloves but never actually lifts a weight , there are 2 at my gym all they do is ab work and run -wierd
 
I wear gloves and I still end up with calluses n rough hands , but have you ever sen someone at the gym that wears gloves but never actually lifts a weight , there are 2 at my gym all they do is ab work and run -wierd

Is that not how you get the perfect body, running to burn all the fat off then ab work to get a HUGE six pack, or if you work hard enough an eight pack.......

:wacko:
 
Half picked? Come on, finish the job pussy.
 
I don't use any lifting aids like straps, gloves, belts, joint wraps, etc... because I feel that they mess up your natural movement mechanics. I also wear only flat soled shoes.
 
I don't use any lifting aids like straps, gloves, belts, joint wraps, etc... because I feel that they mess up your natural movement mechanics. I also wear only flat soled shoes.

I'm a fan of straps. I'm able to deadlift more with them. There's no chance that my grip strength can compare to my posterior chain.
 
I use gloves for two reasons - 1) my hands kept getting ripped up because the grips on the bars at my gym are that really granualated, rough metal and 2) the gloves I use have wrist supports and I have had trouble with my wrists in the past.

However, now I use these new things I found called "Lynx Grips". These things are awesome!
 
I'm a fan of straps. I'm able to deadlift more with them. There's no chance that my grip strength can compare to my posterior chain.

I have a personal philosophy that the body is only as strong as it's weakest link. I would rather lift less and be a healthy, functional human machine, rather then overload a weak point and risk the inevitable injury.

IMHO, grip is a major component of strength. It's right up there with a strong glute drive, and having a functionally strong core. I really liked the ideas in Pavel's The Naked Warrior.
 
I have a personal philosophy that the body is only as strong as it's weakest link. I would rather lift less and be a healthy, functional human machine, rather then overload a weak point and risk the inevitable injury.

IMHO, grip is a major component of strength. It's right up there with a strong glute drive, and having a functionally strong core. I really liked the ideas in Pavel's The Naked Warrior.

Sorry, that’s rubbish.

My take: how on earth would your hands and forearms (very small muscles) be anywhere near as strong as your ENTIRE posterior chain? I’m sure your 'personal philosophy' sounds great in your head (we all have a few of those that we like to cling to, lol) but as with most things we assume, it has flaws
 
Last edited:
I'm not going to argue with you because you're clearly coming from a bodybuilding school of thought, and I'm not. I'm more concerned with what my body can do without the assistance of devices. For example in the MMA if your grip gives out, you're fucked because you can't utilize the rest of your strength.

I also understand that this is a bodybuilding forum, so lets just leave it at that. Like i said, it's a "personal philosophy".
 
I'm not going to argue with you because you're clearly coming from a bodybuilding school of thought, and I'm not. I'm more concerned with what my body can do without the assistance of devices. For example in the MMA if your grip gives out, you're fucked because you can't utilize the rest of your strength.

I also understand that this is a bodybuilding forum, so lets just leave it at that. Like i said, it's a "personal philosophy".

I can completely understand this, from my experience your grip will get weaker once you start using straps unless you add extra grip work to your program.
 
Back
Top