New Strength Program: Kettlebells & Barbells

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Out of necessity, I greatly reduced my strength training as I was preparing for the marathon. As the stress of running went up, the stress of lifting had to go down. It was a bit tough to give up the weights, but it had to be done. Now I’m back to lifting and I’m loving it. It’s definitely refreshing to let the pendulum swing from the endurance end of the spectrum back to the strength & power end.  My main goals are to see my numbers go up in the clean, press, deadlift, and squat.

I’m a big fan of both kettlebells and barbells. They’re quite different implements but both are very enjoyable to use. Used correctly, both tools can make you big, strong, and powerful. My current workout comes from RKC Mike Mahler and it’s called the Kettlebell and Barbell Solution for Size and Strength Part II. (Part I can be found here.  I had to choose one.  I picked Part II.) It’s a 4x/week workout with two days on/one day off/two days on/two days off.  I like the workout 1) because I get to lift most days of the week and 2) because I get to use kettlebells and barbells in all workouts.

Each workout has one or two of the big lifts (squat, bench press, overhead press, deadlift) as the focus with other supplemental lifts included such as pull-ups, renegade rows, bent barbell rows, kettlebell swings and snatches, and core exercises such as the Turkish get-up, hanging leg raises, and windmills. I’ve modified the workout slightly to include barbell cleans, barbell presses, a one-arm dumbbell press, and pistol squats. Ballistic exercises like the kettlebell snatch and swings come at the front of the workout. The ballistic exercises help fire up the nervous system. The big-bang exercises come next, followed by pulling exercises, core exercises, and a finishing metabolic exercises that gets the heart rate up. I plan to cycle various exercises in and out over the course of several four-week blocks.

The scheme

The volume/intensity scheme is a version of Wendler’s 5-3-1 program. In essence, it looks like this: Each workout is centered around one core lift: squat, bench press, deadlift, and standing shoulder press. Each training cycle lasts four weeks, with these set-rep goals for each major lift:

Week 1: 3 x 5
Week2: 3×3
Week 3: 1×5, 1×3, 1×1
Week 4: deload

Then you start the next cycle, using heavier weights on the core lifts. Again, the Mahler program is a variation of this, and I’ve modified it further. Here’s my version:

Monday:

  • Double kettlebell swing: 5×5
  • Barbell deadlift: 2×5, 3×3, 6×1
  • Barbell overhead press: 3×5, 3×3, 5-3-1
  • Kettlebell Renegade Row: 3×6+ I’ll add weight once I get 10 reps on each side.
  • Kettlebell swings: 3×15, one- and/or two-arm swings. I’ve also used the rower.

Tuesday:

  • One-arm kettlebell snatch: 2-3×5-10 each side
  • Barbell cleans: 3×3, 5×2, 6×1
  • Pull-ups: 3×5. I’ll add weight once I get eight reps on the final set. (I’m bad at pull-ups. The cost of being tall….)
  • Bench Press: as per the 5-3-1 program
  • Kettlebell windmill: 3×5
  • Kettlebell front squat: 3×8+ I’m keeping this somewhat light.
  • Kettlebell swings 3×15 or farmer’s walks.

Wednesday: Off

Thursday:

  • Double kettlebell snatch: 3-5×5
  • Barbell hang clean: 3×3, 5×2
  • Back squat: as per the 5-3-1 program
  • One-arm dumbbell press: as per the 5-3-1 program. I clean the dumbbell from the ground and then press all my reps.
  • Barbell bent-over row: as per the 5-3-1 program, except I don’t do a 1-rep max in the 3rd week.
  • Hanging leg raise: 3×5. Mahler’s workout calls for 3×10 but I’m not up to 10 reps yet.
  • One-arm kettlebell swings, rower or farmer’s walks

Friday:

  • Double kettlebell swings: 5×5
  • Barbell cleans: lighter than Thursday
  • Barbell floor press: as per the 5-3-1 program
  • Weighted pull-ups: 3×3
  • Kettlebell Turkish get-up: 3×3. These are really tough at this point in the workout.
  • Pistol squats: 3×3, 2 or 1 depending how I’m feeling.
  • Kettlebell swings: I’m often smoked by this point so I may only do 1×10 or I may go as high as 3×15-20

Saturday/Sunday: Off

Observations

I’m on my third week of the program. I’ve made good progress. I think that since I was away from lifting for several weeks I have a lot of room to move forward. Plus, I’m eating more and I’ve recently started taking creatine which I haven’t used in a while. All of this should contribute to some decent increases in size and strength.

During the workouts I keep a mind to staying within my limitations.  I don’t need to push to the red line during these workouts.  I’ve written here and here about the risks of going too hard too often.  I intend to work hard but I’ll stop well before the failure point.

I intend to cycle exercises in and out as this program moves along.  I’m not sure when I’ll change them out though. Since I’m hitting most of these exercises only once per week that should mean I’ll be able to stick with them for a while.  I know I need to change exercises when I start to plateau on a particular exercise.  Likely substitutions are as follows:

  • Barbell snatch for barbell clean
  • Front squat for back squat
  • Good morning for deadlift
  • Weighted dips for bench press and floor press
  • Push press for barbell press

Depending on how things go and how I’m feeling, I may focus more closely on the deadlift.  I still want to pull 500 lbs. some day.  Maybe that day is sooner than I know.

2 thoughts on “New Strength Program: Kettlebells & Barbells

  1. Looks like a great strength program! I’ve not yet done a Wendler protocol on my lifting…definitely something to consider adding in soon! And thanks for the reminder on the de-load week…I tend to skip/ignore it and I think I’d have more consistent gains if I used it more often. 🙂

    • Kyle

      Thanks for the comment. I haven’t really done 5-3-1 either but I’m playing around with it and I like it. It’s simple and like you say, building in that rest week is really important. If you want to see similar type stuff that is designed to get you stronger but not beat up, check out Easy Strength by Pavel Tsatsouline and Dan John.

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