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Posts Tagged ‘weightlifting’

Hoskins putting his weight behind weightlifting

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

Hoskins putting his weight behind weightlifting
A long time before weight training became a vital part of just about every sports program around the country, John Hoskins was throwing weight around as part of his coaching assignments.

Read more on Denver Post



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Olympic Weightlifting Compilation

Sunday, July 25th, 2010


This is my first video that I edited and added music video I hope you guys like it

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Weight-Lifting Injuries Are on the Rise

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

Weight-Lifting Injuries Are on the Rise
Almost a million Americans went to emergency rooms with weight-training injuries from 1990 to 2007, according to a new study.

Read more on New York Times

Is Weight-lifting Resulting in Hair Loss?

Monday, June 7th, 2010

Are you a regular weightlifter? Are you desperately trying to cope up with the problem of fast receding hairline? Then, you are not the only one. Scientists have found a definite relation between weight-lifting and hair loss. Let’s check it out. How Weight-lifting Causes Baldness? In normal condition, weight-lifting helps in building of our muscles and keeping us fit. A regular weight lift may also increase free testosterone level and this excess causes various physiological changes in our body like receding hairline, balding in the crown or general baldness in male. In female, it results in general thinning of hair. A 45-minute work-out session can increase the level of testosterone (hormone) in our body by 25%. When this excess hormone is reacting with 5-alpha-reductase (an enzyme naturally found in our hair follicles), it is causing the formation of dihydrotestosterone (DTH). This DTH is responsible for shrinkage of hair follicles and roots. Ways to Control Baldness: While it is natural to loss 100-150 hairs on an average everyday, we start noticing thinning of hair only after we have lost half(50%) our hair! Listed below are some of the ways to control or prevent baldness affected by weight lifting:

You do not have to stop or curtail certain weight exercises to control baldness. All you have to do is to follow proper medication and treatment under physician’s active guidance.

Weight-training and Weight-lifting

Saturday, May 29th, 2010

What is Weight Lifting? Lifting barbells or dumbbells with the goal of increasing your strength and/or muscle size. Weight lifting can take several forms:·    Weightlifting Sport. The sport of Weightlifting is part of the Olympic Games. It consists of 2 lifts: the Snatch and the Clean & Jerk. The goal is to lift more weight than competitors in the same weight class. ·    Strength Training. Lifting weights to increase your physical strength. More muscle & a lower body fat are byproducts of strength training. Weightlifting Olympic sport since 1896An ancient sport as old as mankind, embodying the most direct manifestation of human strength, weightlifting has not only flourished, but also developed into a modern sporting discipline for the 21st century. The apparent simplicity of lifting the barbell from the ground and over the head in one or two movements is deceiving. Weightlifting requires a combination of power, speed, technique, concentration and timing. Super heavyweight lifters normally claim the title of World’s Strongest Man or Woman. However, kilo per kilo,  the lightest weightlifter is often the strongest. Men’s weightlifting was on the programme of the first modern Olympic Games in Athens in 1896. Women participated for the first time at the Olympic Games in Sydney in 2000. Find an instructor. Find an instructor who can help you learn how to do the exercises correctly. Good technique is one of the most important ways to avoid injury. A high school coach or athletic trainer can help you. If a college is located in your town, the weight coach for the varsity athletic teams may be able to give you advice or recommend another instructor. The National Strength and Conditioning Association may also be able to recommend a qualified coach in your area. Advice from people who have never learned good technique themselves, such as parents, friends, coaches or other weight lifters, may not be correct. Books can help, but nothing beats personal coaching. Without your diet supplying the raw materials your body needs to build muscle, all the hard work you do in the gym will be wasted. If you don’t provide the body enough rest time with which to repair and rebuild muscle, all your weight training will be wasted. There is a dominant basic weight training philosophie:1.     HIT – HIT is an acronym for High Intensity Training. HIT calls for the trainer to workout 1-3 times a week with full body single-set routines. These are to be short but very intense workouts. The basic prescription is 8-12 reps per set always done to failure. Each and every workout is expected to produce an increase in strength so that when performing your next workout you should either look to perform more reps with the same weight or the same number of reps with a greater weight. How to Do the Concentration Curl for BicepsThe concentration curl is an exercise for targeting the biceps of the upper arm. By supporting the back of the arm, you can target the biceps brachii muscles more directly by inhibiting assisting muscles while doing a biceps curl.

Busting the Most Common Female Weightlifting and Bodybuilding Myths

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

There are many myths that continue to surround weight training and bodybuilding among females. Some of these have hampered most women into trying bodybuilding. Here are some of the most common myths:
• Weight training makes a woman more masculine and bulky. Do not be misled by this common myth. Women do not produce testosterone as men do, therefore, it is impossible for women to increase their muscle sizes by simply carrying some weights. What deters most women from trying weightlifting is the appearance of most female bodybuilders. Remember that these women use anabolic steroids (also known as synthetic testosterone), hence, they tend to look more like males. Women who undergo weight training without anabolic steroids only get leaner muscles and cellulite-free bodies.
• Weight training can make women stiff and muscular. This is far from the truth as weight training increases a woman’s flexibility instead. Dumbbell presses, flexes, and chin-ups stretches all contribute to flexibility and not stiffness.
• Exercising increases a woman’s chest size. Breasts of women are composed of fatty tissues, thus, it is not possible to increase breast size just by simply lifting some weights. In fact, if your body goes under 12% of body fat, your breast size may even decrease. The confusion started because weight training increases the size of a person’s back (not the cup size).
• Weight training would turn fats into muscles. As much as metal cannot be turned into gold, this is also true of fats turning into muscles. Weight training makes you lose fat while developing muscles-these fats do not turn to muscles!
• Stopping weight training could turn muscles into flab. As much as fats don’t become muscles, muscles also do not become fat as soon as you let go of weight training. Remember that fats and muscles are two, separate types of tissues. The reason why people seemingly get fat after giving up on weight training is because most of them also give up on their diets and fitness programs as soon as they stop lifting weights.
• The only suitable exercise for women is cardio exercise and when they do decide to lift weights, they shouldn’t be heavy weights. Cardio exercises only provide fat burning. Once most of the body fat is gone, muscles can be further developed through weightlifting. Muscles respond to resistance training, so weightlifting is great training even for women.
• For as long as you do some exercises, you can eat anything and as much as you want. Not to burst your bubble but this is isn’t true at all. This is only applicable to people who have high metabolic rates or the so-called hardgainers. These people don’t have to exercise just to attain their desired weight or figure. If they don’t eat much, they can either maintain or lose weight. For all other people, the formula is quite simple-the more calories you eat, the more weight you gain.
Women should train hard not just to have a good looking body but also to be healthy and fit. So, go on, lift some weights and discard all inhibitions that you might have regarding weight fitness training.

What Do Weightlifting Shoes Do?

Sunday, April 25th, 2010

As a long time fitness buff, I can attest to the value of having the right type of weight lifting shoe when you go to the gym. Free weights make this need even more pressing, so shoes are extremely important. Those big lifts you perform in the gym such as squats, deadlifts, power cleans, jerks and leg presses all have one thing in common… the power starts at your feet. You wouldn’t try to do a bench press with baseball gloves on your hands would you? Yet you see trainees lifting weights while wearing running shoes, sneakers, and all other types of incorrect footwear. Wearing shoes with the wrong type of soles will prevent you from deriving maximum power from your legs, therefore preventing successful maximum lifts. The shoes you normally wear out will make your feet shift back and forth as you move; this wouldn’t happen with real weightlifting shoes, supplying you with unprecedented lift results. So What Makes a Good Weightlifting Shoe?It’s complicated. In the past, serious trainees have worn almost everything on their feet that you can imagine, including thick soled combat boots. Recently, weight training specific shoes are actually beginning to gain acceptance among serious gym members. Quality weightlifting shoes give you a firm base from which to commence the various lifts. This is accomplished because of the rubber based composition of the soles of the shoes which provides solidity to the lifter. They’ll have a secure hold on the foot using straps to give your entire foot unprecedented support for the lifts. The shoes should also be made solid and durable, no cheap stitching or cutting corners with cheap materials. What Shoes Should I Get? Essentially these shoes can be classified into two types: The flat shoes with a hard sole, and the lifted shoes with the slightly elevated heel. The shoe to select is dependent on the specific movement that the lifter will be doing, as well as the pertinent muscle that will be isolated. For example, the shoe with the elevated heel will assist in squat performance because it encourages the lifter to move in the correct groove for this exercise. The correct performance of the barbell squat will throw the stress of the movement on the quadriceps area, which will encourage increased thigh muscle size. You can find a huge list of all the shoe available in the USA along with reviews and comparisons of each model at Weightlifting Shoe Info – Recommended Weightlifting Shoes – On the other hand, when you are performing “pressing” exercises such as a leg press, you may not want that extra emphasis on your quads. You might want to invest in flatter soles in this instance. As a cheap alternative I use Chuck Taylors or a good pair of wrestling shoes for these types of lifts, although it is a pain to change my shoes mid-workout. Obviously, a trainee would require two different types of soles in his training if he performs both olympic lifts and conventional muscle building exercises, unless there was a way to combine them in one shoe. Enter the hybrid. The hybrid shoes has a heel with just a slight lift, so both types of support are accomodated.

Are Weightlifting Shoes Necessary?

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Ever thought about the shoes that you wear to the gym? Of course you have. Most likely you have shoes set aside for the express purpose of exercise use at your favorite health club or lifting facility. And what prompted you to select this specific footwear to be used to exercise? Suitability for the task? Improved exercise sessions? Safety? Not usually. The prevailing reason for the selection of specific gym shoes is appearance. But if you are using barbells in your training, this is a mistake. Most of us would never consider wearing a pair of Bruno Magli’s to play racquetball. They are built to look good, not to perform well on the court. While this may be obvious to some, many of us will make an equally poor footwear decision and wear running shoes to the gym to lift weights. Proper footwear in the gym is important, especially if you are lifting free weights. In a weightlifting session we are seeking to accomplish two things:1. ) The Harnessing of all body power for a concerted power explosion; 2. ) Moving the intended weight to its destination without excessive risk of serious injury. Performing the basic lifts in a running shoe robs the trainee of a solid foundation from which to explode. The soles of the running shoes, the marshmallow, will absorb and dissipate a large amount of the force generated against the floor that should be directed towards moving the weight. A gel or air cell shoe is a great thing for reducing the impact shock that causes the repetitive use injuries associated with running. But in the weight room, shoes should provide for the efficient transmission of power between the bar and the ground. You can’t lift as much weight in the wrong shoes. The second issue is control of the weight – and your body – while standing on an unstable surface. A compressible medium placed between the feet and the ground will behave inconsistently enough during each rep to alter the pattern of force transmission every time. In other words, it is not possible to execute a standing barbell movement the same way each time. Because of the inconsistent surface, the probability of a weight lifting mishap and serious injury increases exponentially due to the difficulty in obtaining a good balance position. Weightlifters and powerlifters have known this for more than 50 years, although the shoe choices available for their purposes were formerly quite limited. Until thirty years ago, all types of shoes were worn in weightlifting sessions, including Chuck Taylor’s, combat boots, and even patent leather shoes, worn by lifting icon Paul Anderson. For maximum performance and stability, a weightlifting shoe must fit tightly and have a strong backing, with a solid wedge type bottom to create the required traction for heavy weight lifting. Generally the best models will feature a full lace down the entire shoe to accomodate varying sizes with an additional attachment across the top of the foot for better balance. When Adidas from Germany and Kahru of Finland became available on a limited basis in the US, weightlifters finally had the opportunity to use equipment specifically designed for their activity. High topped and not especially stylish, these shoes had minimal appeal to the fashion conscious, but lifters loved them because they worked. But there was a scheduling problem: the gym and fitness club industry had just been revolutionized by the simultaneously-evolving exercise machine industry. Having removed the factors of balance, coordination, and technique from the equation, exercise machines temporarily sidelined the development of weight training shoes. However, in the last twenty years the appreciation of the barbell and dumbbell has started to resurface in exercise facilities everywhere. The only available manufacturer to fill the demand was Adidas, which put out several models suitable for exercising. Competitors such as Nike started entering the fitness market with a variety of lifting shoes. A number of foreign brands such as Do Win (China), and Power Firm (Canada), as well as the American company Safe-USA have also competed for a share of the growing US market. All these companies offer shoes that are designed for competitive weightlifting or powerlifting, but that are good for all basic lifts, especially the squat, given their exemplary support and incompressible heel design. A variety of powerlifting shoes with essentially flat soles and no heel lift, much like track flats or wrestling shoes, are also available from powerlifting equipment houses like Inzer (USA), and also work for basic exercise purposes. These shoes are not ideal for performing the barbell squat because of their flat sole, but will work exceedingly well when doing other important lifting movements, such as deadlifts and presses. Another pair of shoes to buy? Is it really worth it? Yes. Effective training yields superior results. You can check out the lastest brand of weightlifting shoes here. Safe training yields fewer training injuries. This is just common sense. You can purchase a proven inexpensive lifting shoe or an expensive, modern, high technolology shoe by Adidas, but either way you will be absolutely sure that you have the optimal training tool for weightlifting. The right shoe is important for performance and safety, and for as little as half the cost of a premium running shoe, you can look and lift like a pro. For more interesting articles on weightlifting shoes you can check out Can weightlifting Shoes Really Help Increase Strength? – Can weightlifting Shoes Really Help Increase Strength? –

One of a Kind – Olympic Weightlifting

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

Olympic Weightlifting
“One of a Kind” by Breaking Point.

Duration : 0:3:30

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Bodybuilding some muscle flex last summer (vid 2)

Monday, April 5th, 2010

Bodybuilding Bodybuilder muscle flex biceps workout:
here on request a vid last summer

Duration : 0:3:27

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