Plateaus are the ever-present bane of every lifter’s existence. Over time, a lot of us just develop the ability to change our focus- we switch from powerlifting to bodybuilding, to variations on the Olympic lifts, to strongman, to Crossfit, or whatever strikes our fancy. The same weight will be waiting there for us when we return to whatever our previous focus was however, looming over us like the goddamned Babadook, only far less horrifically unscary and far more real. There is another way, though, and it doesn’t involve a five year training plan and spending enough money to put a third world kid to college for a couple of years- eating.
More specifically, the best way to blast through plateaus is (not coincidentally) the approach of the subject of this article:
Clearly, the foregoing articles on Bruno Sammartino, Bruce Randall, Chuck Ahrens, Chuck Sipes, and Steve Merjanian stressed this point as well, so I present this article at the risk of flogging a dead horse. It is a subject of interest to me, however, because I ignored it for about 25 years and it is only now, at the age of 41, that I realize the error of my ways. Having adopted this strategy and watched PR after PR fall in the gym driven solely by the force of my appetite, I feel like I need to be standing on a fucking milk crate in front of every gym on the planet screaming like one of those end of times lunatics raving about hellfire and corpse gods. If I had the ability I would travel back in time and beat my own ass like I was a group of heavily armed cops and my younger self was an unarmed black man. Like I was Ed Norton tuning up the singer from 30 Seconds to Mars. I would literally beat my younger self like I was my own dick, because it’s about the only way my younger self would realize that the sacrifice of two abs to Khorne for a couple of years would mean that at the age of 41 I would likely be benching 500 rather than 415 and front squatting 600+ rather than 545, etc. At the time I thought that mass would come over time but I might as well sacrifice strength for abs in the meantime was as stupid as it was sad.
Unlike a lot of the guys pushing huge poundages in powerlifting’s infancy, Cassidy was not much of an athlete growing up. As a college junior he was 5’10” and 155lbs, and realized very quickly that he didn’t have the size, strength, or ability to play football, so he bought a 110lb set of weights at a sporting goods store. By his own account,Cassidy was so weak he might as well have been a modern-day Channer- he had to take two trips to get a 110lb weight set into the house from the streetcar he’d taken to buy them. To say that the guy was not all that genetically predisposed to putting on muscle is like saying that a fistfight between Orlando Bloom and Justin Bieber would probably end in buttsex or that if you left a bowl of heroin sitting out in a roomful of musicians, it would probably be gone by the time you got back from the bathroom. After a year of training with that set, Cassidy was up to a whopping 156lbs and started looking around for other options. Instead of taking the modern tack and consulting a bunch of weak strangers with no muscle mass on how best to go about getting jacked, Cassidy hit his local YMCA and joined immediately upon seeing the most jacked dude he’d ever laid eyes on walk out the front door. Within six months of joining, simply aping the movements of the people around him, Cassidy was up to a respectable 185 pounds and took third in a local YMCA bodybuilding competition, a feat he repeated the following year.
After another two years he was up to 205 and joined the Army, where he started drinking seven or eight quarts (6.6L-7.5L) of milk a day and put on 46lbs in six motherfucking weeks. It is no exaggeration when I say that simply typing that sentence inspired me to get up and make a protein shake in 24oz of milk (where in the past I would have made a shake at a predetermined time and mixed in water, rather than just said fuck it and bombed down a massive shake in milk just because gainz). At that point he was big and strong enough that he decided to try his hand at Olympic lifting, posting an aggressively unimpressive 260lbs-200lbs-275lbs (the third being the press) because he had absolutely no clue how to do the lifts. It was then he realized he had no future in Olympic lifting, but he persisted in smashing weights and milk like they were ladyboi asspussy in a Thai whorehouse anyway.
At that point, powerlifting was truly in its infancy, but although it was neither well-known nor well-respected, Cassidy was bitten by the powerlifting bug after watched the York Powerlifting Championships in 1965. After going apeshit training the powerlifts for a year, Cassidy entered his first powerlifting meet and posted a 1410 total at 242- nothing terribly exciting these days, but it was respectable in those. Bear in mind when you read his numbers going forward that powerlifting was not done then the way it is now. The lift order was bench-squat-deadlift, and the attempts were not separated into flights- they went strictly by weight. Thus, if your opener was so heavy that it was after the next strongest person’s third attempt, you did all three attempts back to back, with 90 seconds between lifts. Same goes for the weak guys- if all three of their lifts were crazy light compared to the rest, they might be doing theirs back to back.
By 1969 Cassidy had found his groove and hit a 1765 total at 242 with 475-615-675, but it was the next year he really started to tear shit up, because he went back to strategy of “EAT MOTHERFUCKER” and hit a 2010 total at 275 with 540-730-740. Drink that in like a baby bird sucking down its momma’s delicious puke- by packing on an extra 30lbs of weight, his bench went up 65lbs, his squat went up 115lbs, and his deadlift went up 65lbs in a single year, long after his noob gains had disappeared. The coup-de-gras was in 1971, though, when he defeated two absolute titans of powerlifting at the World Power Meet with a total of 2160, posting lifts of 570-800-790 at 291lbs (and absolutely no equipment- not even a belt). To say that is phenomenal progress hardly begins to describe these events, because hardly anyone on Earth makes those kinds of gains 15 years into lifting, and it all comes down to one thing- eating your fucking face off.
Whatever you’re thinking “eating your fucking face off” entails, you’re thinking like a pussy. According to Marty Gallagher, when Cassidy was making the jump from 242 to heavyweight (there was no 308 class at that time), the man was a machine. When attending the first ever National Powerlifting Championships as a spectator, Cassidy waddled into the auditorium with a big-ass cooler full of milk and sandwiches- to be exact, a dozen sandwiches and two half gallons of milk. As the lifting progressed, Cassidy methodically destroyed the sandwiches one by one, washing them down with big-ass gulps from the milk cartons (Gallagher Primitive 32). When at home, he’d drink extra pint cartons of milk between sandwiches and meals, and after dinner would drink a protein shake consisting of “two eggs, one instant breakfast, and two cups of powdered milk with a half gallon of skim milk in a large container” that he’d sip slowly while winding down for the evening (Cassidy “Long Road”). He continued that approach day in and day out, endless sandwiches and gallon after gallon of milk, until he ended up nine pounds short of his goal weight of 300 at the World Power Meet.
That weight gain didn’t come without a price, however. As Cassidy put it:
“I still plan to continue training although I’ll be very happy to shed some of this excess poundage. Although I’m impressed with the “big guys” I find it isn’t easy to be one of them without a lot of sacrifice. There is the constant sweating and the rashes that last until cooler winter weather. There is frequent acid indigestion and ever-present diarrhea from all the milk and eggs and protein powder. You have to walk like a duck or your thighs grind into hamburger. There are the spinal erectors that go into spasm whenever you walk up a grade and of course the food bill and the clothes that no longer fit. Big men’s sizes are about as tasteful as some guy wrapped up in an awning. Most of my shirts look like I’m still in pajamas. What with the extra naps and the shortness of breath I’ve decided to reduce to the 242’s again. I’ve been miserable these last two years but also very pleased with the gains in power” (Cassidy “Long Road”).
In short, eating like you’re training for the World’s Hot Dog Eating Competition non-stop, year-round, takes its toll on a human being. Rather than being a fun-filled exploit wherein you simply see how much KFC you can jam down your throat in one sitting at all times, the type of aggressive eating required to make serious strength and size gains can be more miserable than being forced to binge watch alternating episodes of The Golden Girls and Antiques Roadshow, and in many ways is less pleasant than actually dieting to be lean.
He’d say. If the poundage were feeling heavy on Saturday morning weighing 216, push your bodyweight to 220 by Wednesday and make those weights seem light” (Gallagher Primitive 35).
Such is life- if it were easy, everyone would do it, right? As for training, it’s astonishing that Cassidy and his training partners weren’t puking into trash cans through half of each session, since they were all following Cassidy’s prescription for eating-until-half-dead. His training methods evolved over time, but the focus remained very simple- beat the living shit out of the main lifts and throw in minimal arm, shoulder, and neck work as supplementary work. The supplementary work was only included to prevent boredom (and a throwback to his bodybuilding past) that he even suggested people vary their hand spacing, sets, and reps- the man was all business (Niemi). For the World Meet, Cassidy’s training looked like this (Cassidy “Long Road”):
Hugh Cassidy’s WR Training Routine
Monday/Friday
Bench Press – 135×15, 245×10, 345×6, 425×3, 475×3, 510×1, 530×1 or 2, 545×1.
Bench Press (with two second pause) – 470×5, 505×3, 525×1 or 2, 545×1.
Squat – 275×8, 435×5, 560×3, 650×3, 700×3, 725×3, 650×3, 670×3.
Deadlift – 335×8, 535×5, 670×2, 750×2.
Wednesday/Saturday
Upright Row (press grip, with straps) – 185×20, 225×12, 275×8, 205×15.
Neck Work (with helmet, front) – 40×25, 60×25, 75×20, 50×40;
Neck Work (with helmet, back) – 40×25, 60×25, 75×20, 50×30.
“‘I’m so sick of this overtraining crap! It’s such a cop out. It appeals to our laziest instincts. It says less is better and suggests there really is a substitute for hard work. Kid, when you’re squatting 800 pounds, then we’ll talk about overtraining. Work load capacity can be systematically increased…. You can improve the body’s ability to work heavier, longer and more often. INTENSITY, DURATION and FREQUENCY is what we’re talkin’ in this gym'” (Cassidy and Gallagher).
For a while, Hugh decided to use his teeth for something other than endless sandwiches and turned his eye toward setting records in teeth lifting. For the life of me I cannot figure out what the logic is there- I have an easier time understanding why people might become furries and how two invariably fat people manage to make their naughty bits touch while dressed up like Disney characters. I’m assuming he read the biography of Joseph “The Mighty Atom” Greenstein and was inspired, though I fail to understand why. The why, however, isn’t important- for all we know Hugh liked fucking old ladies’ church shoes and while dressed like a flamenco dancer. Hugh goes into great detail about his teeth training, which is such a bizarre and specific type of strongman feat there’s no real point in detailing the bits about strengthening your teeth, choosing a mouthguard. What should be of importance, however, is how the structure of his training changed to suit the specific type of strength he sought- and note the distinct lack of periodization, which Hugh stated at least once was a stupid fucking way to structure a program.
Hugh Cassidy’s Teeth Lifting Program (Cassidy “Teeth”)
Deadlifts – 335×8, 435×8, 505×8.
Upright Row (press grip) – 115×15, 135x10x3sets, 115×15.
Neck Work (helmet with weights loaded on a pipe on top) – 40x25x2, 55x25x2, 70×15, 70×20, 50x30x4.
Teeth Lifting – 85×20, 150×15, 200×10, 250×5.
Hugh’s other beloved assistance work was stiff legged deadlifts. As I alluded to above, Cassidy was a devout believer in the adage that the best assistance exercises are those that most closely match the lift itself- close grip bench for bench press, narrow stance squats for the squat, and the stiff legged deadlift for the deadlift (Gallagher “Trade”). To that end, every deadlift workout would conclude with two sets of stiff legged deadlifts, ultra strict, with the goal of turning lifters’ spinal erectors “into industrial cranes” (Ibid). Occasionally done standing on a 3″ thick 100lb plate, these would initially be pulled off the floor conventional, as a deficit deadlift, keeping the bar in contact with the shin the entire time. It’d then be lowered with a stiff-legged method, maintaining contact with the shin and a slight bend in the knee, light touch to the floor, and repeat. Like Chuck Sipes with the skull crusher, Cassidy and his lifters knew for a certainty that if their stiff legged deadlift PR increased, their deadlift would too. The ratio was different for every lifter, but seemed to hover in the 40-50lb range- ergo, if their stiff legged PR was 650, they were good for 700 or so on the conventional deadlift (Ibid).
After setting his world record, Cassidy blew out his knee and retired from competing, but as you can see above, he definitely didn’t quit lifting. Cassidy cut back down to 195 and competed in bodybuilding for a while, but he kept training powerlifters in his basement gym for years. A man after my own heart, Cassidy was Marilyn Manson-style weird- a metal sculpture artist in his spare time, Cassidy built demonic metal monstrosities that scared the living shit out of any Christians who happened to wander by his yard. Additionally, he was a badass guitarist and bass player, but the bulk of his ingenuity was devoted to new ways to torture his proteges into become powerlifting behemoths… and it worked. Cassidy coached retired semi-pro baseball player-turned-powerlifter Marshall “Doc” Peck to a 790lb squat, 530lb bench, and 710lb pull at 220 using what I assume was first gen powerlifting gear, and Mark “Duck” Dimiduk to an 800lb squat and deadlift and a 500lb bench at 220. Their program was even more brutal than the one Cassidy used to hit his world record total.
Hugh Cassidy Training Split (Gallagher Primitive 34)
Saturday
Squat– Top set of 8 reps, then 3 back off sets of 10 reps (Week 1-4)
Top set of 5 reps, then 3 back off sets of 8 reps (Week 4-8)
Top set of 3 reps, then 3 back off sets of 5 reps (Week 8-12)
Bench Press– Same as squat cycle
Deadlift– Same as squat cycle
– Heaves (Heavy high pulls)- 2-3 sets done explosively for 6-8 reps
– Stiff Legged Deadlifts– 2-3×5
*One of the two
{Bicep Curls– 3-4×6-8
{Tricep Pushdowns or Skullcrushers– 3-4×6-8
* Arm work was generally supersetted
** 2-3 sets of 5 of close stance squats could follow squat if you want, and the same for bench, though generally he only had his lifters do deadlift assistance.
Tuesday
Repeat Saturday
As to the loading for the backoff sets, here’s how it worked:
“‘For a 500 pound squatter, we might go 145×15, 235×10, 325×7, 400×5. No suit, no wraps. Okay, after you work up to your heavy five rep set, reduce the weight to 275 or so an do a set of 10 reps. Take a five minute rest and load the bar to 300 and do a set of 10 reps. Rest about five more minutes and load the bar to 320 and do your final set of 10 reps. All three back-off sets must be done within 15 minutes. That’s the cardinal rule. We’re building reserve power here and increasing the body’s workload capacity” (Cassidy and Gallagher).
And there you have it- the best way to smash through sticking points and demolish plateaus isn’t any of the happy horseshit you read about changing exercises and rep schemes, or finding a coach and paying him hundreds of ultimately wasted dollars to provide you with some tired routine that is almost guaranteed not to work. The best way to smash through sticking points and drive your lifts into the stratosphere is to eat like you’re the glutton in the movie 7even and just try not to die at the end, then lift until you’re practically bleeding from the eyes. Then sleep and repeat. Stop making this shit out to be harder than it is.
Sources:
Cassidy, Hugh. My long road to the top (1972). The Tight Tan Slacks of Dezso Ban. 8 Oct 2017. Web. 2 Jun 2018. http://ditillo2.blogspot.com/2017/10/my-long-road-to-top-hugh-cassidy-1972.html
Cassidy, Hugh. New wrinkles in neck work (1973). The Tight Tan Slacks of Dezso Ban. 16 Oct 2017. Web.
2 Jun 2018. http://ditillo2.blogspot.com/2017/10/new-wrinkles-in-neck-work-hugh-cassidy.html
Cassidy, Hugh. Teeth lifting. The Tight Tan Slacks of Dezso Ban. 15 Oct 2017. Web. 2 Jun 2018. http://ditillo2.blogspot.com/2017/10/note-this-article-was-first-posted-here.html
Cassidy, Hugh and Marty Gallagher. All Trax Lead To Jax: A Modern Squatting Parable (1985). The Tight Tan Slacks of Dezso Ban. 4 Mar 2017. Web. 2 Jun 2018. http://ditillo2.blogspot.com/2017/03/a-modern-squatting-parable-hugh-cassidy.html
Furman, Tom. Really, really simple strength from Hugh Cassidy. Train for Life. 22 Nov 2006. Web. 2 Jun 2018. http://www.tomfurman.com/really-really-simple-strength-from-hugh-cassidy/
Gallagher, Marty. Trade Secret #77: Stiff-leg deadlift. Powerlifting Watch. 5 Feb 2008. Web. 2 Jun 2018. https://www.powerliftingwatch.com/node/7221
Gallagher, Marty. Purposeful Primitive. St. Paul: Dragon Door Publications, 2008.
John, Dan. 10 things every lifter should be able to do. T-Nation. 10 Jun 2016. Web. 2 Jun 2018. https://www.t-nation.com/training/10-things-every-lifter-should-be-able-to-do
Niemi, Paul. Power training simplified. The Tight Tan Slacks of Dezso Ban. 2 Aug 2010. Web. 2 Jun 2018. http://ditillo2.blogspot.com/2010/08/hugh-cassidy-paul-niemi.html
Good article Jamie, you're on a roll for some time now!
While I'm far from a strength specimen, I noticed from personal experience that I could keep a decent amount of the strength I gained while eating my face off when leaning out again. Provided I didn't diet like a retard. Beyond a certain bodyweight (or rather, bodyfat level), my cardio becomes complete dogshit overnight, though. That's a personal thing, I know plenty of in shape thick guys (and girls).
Funny, Gina Carano is currently banging Kevin Ross (US muay thai fighter) and I was just remarking today how they could produce useful and brutal offspring haha
Hahaha. he is a lucky, lucky man.
You've mentioned a few times about redditors whining about the porn in your blog. I'll have you know I skim every article to enjoy the porn first, before enjoying the article haha.
Ha, well, at least there is one of you out there. Until they just started locking all of the threads about m y articles in r/weightroom, fully half of the comments were about how horrible a person I am for the porn on this site.
Jamie – now you're 41, how's your natural test levels holding out (if you get it tested)? Do you blast and cruise (ie, cycle and trt), or just cycle and hope for the best?
Sally do you have brain damage u cunt?
Why, do you want your brain damaged, you thick fucktard?
I bet i can fuck the grumpy steroid hate out of you. Where do you live?
England, Midlands. Lets meet up, bring your mom too. She can suck my cock while fixing up your broken nose, fucking faggot.
LMAO, why do you have a girls name and why do you talk like one too? HAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHA! i was convinced for moths ur a female, retard!
Why do you have a dog as your photo, when it's clear you're actually a pussy?
And why are you a cunt? Cunt…
As much as I hate to interrupt this love affair, Ive never gotten too scientific about my gear use. When i have it I use it and when I'm out I just crash. My natural levels seem fine though- of the 8 years I've used gear on and off, I've not been on more than half that time, and never running too much.
Another kickass article! Oh yeah and I saw the argument between you and Lyle McDonald on the Eric Helms post on Facebook, awesome job wrecking his ass!
This I have to see. Got a link?
It's on Jamie's wall on Facebook. He shares a post that Eric Helms tagged him in. I have read some of Luke's articles and heard some of his talks and I really wish Lyle would quit that "know it all" attitude.
Sorry not Luke meant Lyle. Stupid autocorrect.
Hahahaha. Thanks man- I can't believe he turned a complete 180 on keto- that blows my fucking mind.
Love learning about people like this! Any thoughts on eating/training for strength for people in sports governed by weight categories? I would imagine you have some experience from your wrestling days.
I had to keep my weight down for powerlifting as well. Keto was a lifesaver on that, so basically I stayed lean as shit year round and just tried to keep my weight low enough that I could still make weight. I never competed with less than a 12 hour weigh-in though. I cut way too hard for that shit.
Thanks for the response! So essentially still eating enough to stay strong, but just keeping it strictly keto?
I ate a cyclical keto diet, with one to two carbups a day, with very high levels of calories-you'll just have to toy with your calories to determine what keeps you from putting on too much mass.
It's not necessarily that simple. Yes, when you first start an extreme bulk, it feels like magick. I remember when I did GOMAD plus eating everything in sight I tried to close grip bench 315 and after one rep got up and checked the weights, because I thought my training partner had taken a 45 off each side. My bench shot up from barely 315 on a good day to 385. That was one of the only times in my life when I've been able to do a strict military press (no leanback, heels togeather) swith my bodyweight (230 at the time. But it did not work out whole body or long term. First my knees got so bad that My squats and deadlifts started decreasing. Then it got so bad that I couldn't overhead press without knee pain. Then all my lifts started decreasing, probably because my t-levels were down from being a fat fuck. It was only when I started cutting down from that nonsense that my deadlift went back into the 6 plate range and I started feeling genuinely strong again. Since then I've been more moderate in my bulks a and cuts. But some people are so naturally healthy they can get away with being a fat fuck.
I'm not into that no-abs life, so I would never let it get that far out of hand.
Bulk up when young, hone when you are old. Maybe start as a powerlifter and slowly over the decades turn into a triathlete doing weights as a secondary pursuit? Caterpillar to butterfly deal.
You couldn't find any photos of Hugh's evil metal birds, because he used an alias as an artist:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1983/06/29/sculptor-gets-a-lift-out-of-metal/c64c426d-99ee-4cb4-9dc7-7cff1651f9c0/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.8ae3239d0b79
I followed his alias, Truman Fitzhugh and found this: http://www.bgop.org/newsletters/1987-10.pdf
that has his member profie and a photo of his work (page 18)
Oh wow. Sweet!
The new CnP logo looks fuckin' great!
Thanks man- a fan from Puerto Rico hooked it up!
Jamie, have you ever been pure carnivore for a while? If so, what was your experience? If not, what is your opinion on carnivory? Thanks.