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Weight Training, Muscle Building, Fat Burning, & Exercise Tips from Real SOLUTIONS Magazine


Get the Body You Want—Faster—from Supersets

Supersets—What They Are, Why They Work, and Several Unique Variations You Can Try in Your Next Workout to Build Muscle and Drop Fat, in Half the Time

By Nick Nilsson barbell curls

The Superset is a very simple concept. Basically, you just perform two exercises back-to-back, with no rest in between! A quick example of this is doing a barbell curl for biceps and then going directly into a bench dip for triceps.

Sound simple? It definitely is. (But easy? Certainly not.)

There are many different combinations and ways to use the Superset to make it an incredibly powerful weight-training technique. Before I get into specific combinations, you need to know what, generally speaking, makes a Superset more effective than two regular sets done with rest in between. There are three major reasons Supersets are so effective for training (and there are many more specific reasons that apply only to specific Superset types):

1. Supersets increase lactic acid production, which helps boost growth hormone (GH) levels in the body. The body responds to the reduced pH (increased acidity) in the body from the production of lactic acid by secreting GH. GH is a powerful fat-loss and muscle-building hormone.

2. Supersets are time-efficient. By doing sets back-to-back, you reduce your total workout time, basically in half, while still doing the same amount of total work. If you're in a hurry in your workout, Supersets can get you out of the gym faster. triceps dips

3. Different Superset combinations can help increase muscle fiber activation. Essentially, this means you can use specific exercise combinations to increase the intensity of work on a specific muscle, helping to develop it faster.

As I mentioned above, there are many different types of Supersets that fall under the Superset umbrella. I will go through these different types, telling you exactly why they're so effective and giving examples of each that you can take to the gym and try out for yourself!

Keep in mind when you're doing these, they are intensity techniques and should not be used every day. Your body needs a chance to recover, and using these techniques too often can hamper recovery. My suggestion would be to do workout supersets no more than once a week for any particular body part.

By doing sets back-to-back, like the barbell curl and triceps dips pictured above, you reduce your total workout time significantly while skyrocketing your results!

1. The Single Body Part Superset

This is the typical type of Superset where you use two different exercises for the same body part. An example of this is doing a pulldown for the back and then immediately doing a seated cable row for the back.

The benefit of this is to hit somewhat different fibers of the muscle from different angles, without giving the body part time to recover from the first exercise. This forces the body part to work that much harder to complete the second exercise.

It's a powerful increase in intensity and one that can dramatically ramp up muscle development.

Here are some examples for other body parts:

Chest:
flat barbell bench press + incline dumbbell press
incline flyes + flat dumbbell bench press
cable crossovers + push-ups

Legs:
squats + leg extensions
leg press + lunges

Shoulders:
side lateral raises + rear lateral raises
dumbbell shoulder press + barbell shoulder press

2. Antagonistic Supersets

Instead of doing two sets in a row for the same muscle, you will do two sets for directly opposing (antagonistic) muscle groups. An example of this is doing a biceps exercise followed immediately by a triceps exercise.

Antagonistic Supersets are excellent for allowing you to compress workout time while maintaining high strength levels. When you work an opposing muscle group directly after the original muscle, studies have shown that the nervous system activation can actually increase strength in the second muscle group when you work it.

Here are some examples of Antagonistic Supersets:

Chest & Back
flat barbell bench press + bent-over barbell rows

Biceps & Triceps
barbell curls + close-grip bench press

Quadriceps & Hamstrings
leg extensions + leg curls

The shoulders don't technically have any direct antagonist muscle groups, but you can work with the specific shoulder exercise movements to do the opposite movement. For example, you can do dumbbell shoulder press and then go directly into pulldowns for the back. You can also do rear delt lateral raises and then dumbbell flyes.

The antagonist muscle to the two major calf muscles is called the tibialis anterior. It's a small and relatively weak muscle compared to the major calf muscles (the gastrocnemius and the soleus) and not particularly useful for doing Supersets with.

3. Pre-Exhaust Supersets

This type of Superset focuses on first using an isolation (single joint) movement to "pre-exhaust" the target muscle group before doing a compound (multi-joint) movement to allow the secondary mover muscles to push the target muscle harder. dumbbell shoulder press

In English, that means you start with an exercise that works just the target muscle, such as a dumbbell flye. When you're done, you use an exercise that works the target muscle with help from other muscles; e.g., the bench press.

The net result is that you first exhaust the pecs with the flyes. When you move to the bench press, the pecs get help from the triceps and shoulders to help keep moving the weight, pushing the pecs much harder than they would normally have to work when doing the bench press.

The result of this is much faster muscle development!

Here are some other examples of Pre-Exhaust Supersets:

side lateral raises Shoulders:
dumbbell side lateral raises + dumbbell shoulder press

Triceps:
pushdowns + dips (bench or parallel bar)

Legs:
leg extensions + squats

Biceps:
barbell curls + close-grip pulldowns with the torso vertical

4. Giant Sets

Pre-exhaust Supersets, like the dumbbell shoulder press and the dumbbell side laterals pictured above, are a great way to really increase your intensity!

The Giant Set is another very simple concept. But, much like the Superset, it's by no means easy. Instead of doing just two sets for a Superset, you do three or more sets in a row for that body part using different exercises!

Giant Sets are generally done just targeting a single body part. They are very intense and shouldn't be used too often. The goal with the Giant Set is to really shock the muscles, forcing the body to activate many more muscle fibers than it normally would to perform these exercises.

In fact, you can even use the same exercise twice in a Giant Set to really shock your muscles into hyper-growth mode!

Here are some examples of Giant Sets:

Chest:
incline barbell bench press + flat bench press + decline bench press

Back:
chin-ups + wide-grip pulldowns + seated cable rows + hyperextensions

Quads/Thighs:
squats + leg extensions + leg press

Hamstrings (here's a case where you can use the same exercise twice in the Giant set):
leg curls + stiff-legged deadlifts + leg curls

Some Giant Set combinations are not as practical, however. For example, if you do a Giant Set for back, you may not have the back strength (or grip strength) to finish with chin-ups.

5. In-Set Supersets

This is a unique type of Superset where you basically mesh two different exercises into a single set. There are a number of very effective variations of this that are extremely challenging, including one of my very favorite techniques for building powerful triceps. dumbbell bench press

In a nutshell, you will do one rep of one exercise and then one rep of a different exercise, alternating reps until you can no longer do any reps of the weaker exercise. At that point, you finish with as many reps as you can do of the stronger exercise. It's a very intense technique!

This type of Superset maximizes training intensity and allows you to work several different aspects of the muscle at the same time, dramatically increasing workout efficiency.

Here are some examples of the In-Set Superset:

Chest:
dumbbell flyes + dumbbell bench press

Dumbbell Flyes Back:
barbell rows + deadlifts

Biceps:
regular dumbbell curls + hammer curls

My All-Time Favorite for Triceps:
lying barbell extensions + close-grip bench press*

*Finish by doing as many close-grip bench presses as you can!

BONUS

A Unique 3-Bodypart Combination—Biceps, Shoulders, then Triceps:
In-Set Supersets, as with the barbell bench press and dumbbell flyes pictured above, maximize training intensity and allow you to work several different aspects of the muscle at the same time.

Start with one dumbbell at a time the first time you try this. The coordination can be tricky. The weight you use for each of the three exercises is similar enough to make this a very effective and timesaving combination.

Begin with a regular dumbbell curl. At the top of the curl, you then perform an Arnold Press for your shoulder (where you start with the dumbbell in front of you in a top-of-curl position, then swing your elbow out to the side as you press up—your hand ends up facing forward). At the top of the press, immediately go into an overhead dumbbell extension.

Reverse the order to bring the dumbbell back down to the start position: extend the arm to the top of the triceps extension, perform the lowering phase of the Arnold Press to the top of the curl position, then lower the weight doing the down-phase of the curl.

When you are comfortable with the execution, you can move to doing both dumbbells at the same time. For an extra challenge and test of your skill and coordination (or simply for your friends to have a good laugh), try doing this exercise reverse-alternating.

What that means is while you are curling up your right dumbbell, you are performing an overhead triceps extension with the left dumbbell. Then, as you do an upward Arnold Press with the right dumbbell, you are doing the lowering phase of the Arnold Press with the left dumbbell. Then, as you are doing the lowering phase of the Overhead Triceps Extension with the right, you are lowering the curl with the left.

When it comes right down to it, Supersets are a VERY effective training technique. Give one of these Superset methods a try in your next workout. You'll be amazed at how powerfully they crank up the intensity of your training and how fast you can start to see results when you use them regularly.

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About the Author

Nick Nilsson is Vice President of the online personal training company BetterU, Inc. He has a degree in Physical Education and Psychology and has been inventing new training techniques for more than 16 years. Nick is the author of a number of bodybuilding eBooks, including Metabolic Surge—Rapid Fat Loss, The Best Exercises You've Never Heard Of, Gluteus to the Maximus—Build a Bigger Butt NOW! and The Best Abdominal Exercises You've Never Heard Of—all available at www.fitness-ebooks.com. He can be contacted at betteru@fitstep.com.


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