0% found this document useful (0 votes)
33 views3 pages

Deadlift Training

Tony DeFrancisco's document discusses the importance of proper technique and training frequency for deadlifts, emphasizing that most lifters overtrain and neglect form. He shares his successful training program, which includes extended deadlifts and good mornings, and advocates for practicing deadlifts only once or twice a month for experienced lifters. The document also highlights the psychological aspect of lifting and the need for a positive mindset to achieve success in deadlifting.

Uploaded by

digamusashi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
33 views3 pages

Deadlift Training

Tony DeFrancisco's document discusses the importance of proper technique and training frequency for deadlifts, emphasizing that most lifters overtrain and neglect form. He shares his successful training program, which includes extended deadlifts and good mornings, and advocates for practicing deadlifts only once or twice a month for experienced lifters. The document also highlights the psychological aspect of lifting and the need for a positive mindset to achieve success in deadlifting.

Uploaded by

digamusashi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 3

Deadlift Training - Tony DeFrancisco

Deadlift Training, Technique and Lifting Styles


by Tony DeFrancisco

Like the squat, regular heavy deadlift workouts will do wonders to develop total body power.
Bodybuilders need only look at the fantastic back development of Mr. Olympia winner Franco
Columbu to realize what deadlifts and power bodybuilding can do. Another good example is
four-time world powerlifting champion John Kuc, whose back development borders on the
unbelievable.

In talking to many powerlifters and bodybuilders who do not deadlift I have found two different
rationales – those who avoid the deadlift like the plague for the same reason they avoid the squat
( HARD WORK), and those who damn the deadlift due to slow or no gains and/or have suffered
injuries due to improper application of the lift.

It has been my observation and opinion that the vast majority of lifters train the deadlift
incorrectly. They overtrain by taking two to three deadlift workouts a weekly, generally working
up to heavy singles at least once per week, followed by heavy rack lockouts, and then their
problem is further compounded by paying no attention to proper technique.

Technique? What technique? Isn’t the deadlift the simplest of all movements? After all, all you
have to do is bend down and pull and hope that you can finish, right?

Wrong? Dead wrong! It’s this type of thinking that is responsible for so many lifters having
trouble increasing their deadlifts and suffering chronic back injuries. First of all you have to
understand that the deadlift is the easiest exercise to overtrain on due to the poundages that can
be lifted, which in turn place a lot of stress on the entire body – the lower back in particular.
Also, there is an enormous amount of physical and mental energy used.

The program that follows enabled me to make more gains in four months than I had in the
previous three years. The strength gain (over 70 pounds in four months) was not nearly as
important to me as the health gains I made. Prior to starting on this program I was advised by my
chiropractor to give up weight lifting permanently or suffer permanent back damage, to the point
where I would eventually need surgery. Understand that he was referring to weight training in
general – heavy lifting and any competition was completely out of the question. The upshot of
the whole story? Not only did I make tremendous gains on my deadlift, but those agonizing
lower back pains disappeared, plus the twice weekly chiropractic adjustments were no longer
necessary.

I believe the two key exercises to my program were the extended deadlift (a.k.a. box deadlifts)
and heavy good mornings. These two exercises created a surge of blood from my lower back all
the way down to my buttocks like no other exercises could. I will get into the actual program a
little later.

It is my contention that no lifter, except the rank beginner, need practice the deadlift more than
once or twice per month. Incidentally, I made my biggest gains in the four month period
mentioned above when my training consisted entirely of assistance exercises. The only time I
performed the regular deadlift was in meets. The beginning powerlifter needs to practice the
conventional deadlift more frequently in order to assess the technique that is best suited for him.

Since I have short legs, the best style for me is legs very close together (almost touching), hands
just outside the knurling, legs in a parallel squat position with my knees just over the bar, back
perfectly straight and head tilted upward. I begin the lift by simultaneously pushing down with
my feet (mentally I imagine myself pushing my feet right through the floor) and pulling with the
back, not the arms. As soon as the weight goes past my knees I throw my head back as far as
possible which pulls the shoulders up and back and lock out. Always remember that you will
never complete a maximum deadlift if you look down. When you pull your head back you make
maximum use of your trapezius muscles. Hence an easier and stronger lockout.

A variation of the above style is the hump back style. This approach decreases the distance that
the bar has to be pulled. The disadvantages are that it is harder to get your shoulders back and it
does not lend itself well to some body structures.

Another style, probably the most popular and most used by lifters, is hands and feet spaced about
evenly apart (about shoulder width). The disadvantage here is that most of the pressure is placed
on the back.

Finally, the last style, which on the surface seems to be the most practical and safest is the sumo
style. Here the feet are placed wide apart with the hands close. This movement substantially
decreases the distance the bar has to travel but is also harder to lock out since the hands are so
close together.

So, there you have the four most practiced deadlift styles. Which is the best for you? There is
only one way to find out – P-R-A-C-T-I-C-E.

Regardless of which style you find yourself best suited to, always remember the following
points. Keep the head up, knees over the bar, hips low and bar against the body. Proper technique
can make the difference and help you to avoid injury.
Your mental attitude will also determine whether or not you make a lift, especially in getting the
bar off the floor. You have to think success at all times before and during the lift and have a firm
conviction that you are going to complete it. The deadlift is definitely a psychological lift and
your attitude can and will make the difference between success or failure.

Setting Up a Training Program

My philosophy is different from most lifters in that I prefer higher reps (6’s, 5’s and occasionally
3’s). The time for lower reps is a few weeks before a maximum lift. Lower rep training will help
you acquire the motor skills needed for maximum single rep performances and build confidence.
Bodybuilders who want to follow this program should realize that singles and doubles are not
necessarily required.

Following is the training program that gave me the best results to date. This routine was done
twice a week on Mondays and Thursdays right after my power rack bench workout.

1) Power Cleans – this exercise simulates the motion of the deadlift with the added advantage of
speed and explosion (very important for maximum deadlifts). The turnover at the top develops
the traps and the lighter than deadlift weight helps prevent overtraining.
135x10 (dead hang, first set only), 186x6, 205x6, 225x5, 250x2-3 (only occasionally when the
feeling of extra strength is there), 205x8 or 185x10 depending on energy levels.

2) Extended Deadlifts – done on a platform 6 to 7 inches high, bar should be on toes at the start
of the movement. I regard this as the best power-building movement in the book. This exercise
works the muscles deep down the lower back and glutes and offers a fuller range of movement
than the regular deadlift. Since less weight can be handled it is possible to train this lift twice a
week without burning out.
135x15 (10 bent-legged, 5 stiff-legged), 225x8, 335x6, 425x6, 455x6, 335 or 385x10.

3) Extended Rowing or Pulley Rowing – extended rowing is like extended deadlifts – done on a
platform, wide-grip pull to chest.
135x8, 155x6, 185x6, 205x5.

4) Shrugs – Pull shoulders up as high as possible and roll back and then down.
135x12, 185x10, 225x6, 275x6. 275x6, 315x5.

On Tuesdays and Fridays after squats I would do heavy good mornings. My performance is as
follows: Bar high up on the neck, feet wide (same stance as squat), bend knees slightly, bend
over while keeping the head up and back straight, go down to parallel position and come up.
135x8, 185x6, 205x5, 225x5, 245x5.

You might also like