While many of us have experienced significant gains in our athletic abilities and physical appearance thanks to Crossfit, we all reach a fitness plateau where our progress and gains appear to have stalled, at some point.

When it comes to continuously progressing and growing from a fitness perspective, you need to go heavy on a regular basis. Β 

Many beginner and inexperienced Crossfitters bang out light-weight, high-rep met-con WODs five to six times a week and burn themselves out on this schedule. Met-con workouts are designed to stress several energy systems. However, multiple, back-to-back met-cons in a week can severely tax the body and limit fitness and strength progress and growth. Β 

By programming heavy lifting days with a few basic lifts into your weekly workout schedule, you can overcome some of these plateaus and catapult your training to a new level. Basic multi-joint lifts include the deadlift, back squat, military press, and bench press. Β 

There are many different types of strength programs and methods that can be adapted to your fitness needs and schedules, without committing a lot of extra time in the your local box. For example, in the January issue of The Box Magazine, they feature an article on using the 5/3/1 program created by former competitive powerlifter Jim Wendler based on the basic lifts mentioned above. Β 

Wendler’s 5/3/1 methodology is based on a percentage of your one rep max for each of the individual lifts. His program is a four-week cycle in which you work a different basic lift on different days. For example, Mondays are for deadlifts, Tuesday would be for bench presses, Thursdays for squats and Fridays for military presses. Β 

For the first three weeks of the cycle you are building on those percentages of your one rep max, and for the fourth week, you are doing what they call β€œdeloading” by using significantly reduced percentages of your max to give your body a rest, while still keeping you active with a particular lift. Β 

Here is an example of what a squat program for an individual whose one rep max for the squat is 315 pounds may look like:

Warm-up:

Reps Percentage Weight*
5 40% 125 lbs
5 50% 160 lbs
5 60% 190 lbs

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Week 1:

Reps Percentage Weight*
5 65% 205 lbs
5 75% 235 lbs
5 85% 270 lbs

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Week 2:

Reps Percentage Weight*
3 70% 220 lbs
3 80% 250 lbs
3 90% 285 lbs

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Week 3:

Reps Percentage Weight*
5 75% 235 lbs
3 85% 270 lbs
1 95% 300 lbs

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Week 4:

Reps Percentage Weight*
5 40% 125 lbs
5 50% 160 lbs
5 60% 190 lbs

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* All calculated weights on these charts have been rounded off. Β 

The Wendler 5/3/1 program has proven to one of the simplest, most schedule-friendly programs, and efficient for improving your overall strength for many power- and weightlifters, as well as Crossfitters. Β 

So strap on your TuffWraps and start enhancing your strength by committing to a regular program of heavy lifting, like the 5/3/1 program, on a regular basis.

TuffWraps Staff