Hi all,
Recently been seeing lots of social media posts (by reputable coaches / subject matter experts) discussing hard sets, say a top set at 0-2 RIR (often 0-1 RIR) and then some back offs with similar failure ranges to elicit 'effective reps' or stimulus, but overall still subscribing to that 10-20 hard sets a week recommendation.
Personally, the above theory makes sense to me, as opposed to programs where you just see generic 4x12 of A,B and C exercise. This to me suggests that there may not be an actual 'hard' set that elicits proper mechanical tension and you're really just doing the exercise/sets for the sake of doing it.
Additionally, any more of these sets are just accumulating fatigue, while most of the stimulus/benefits have already been extracted, so it becomes diminishing returns.
Plus the former (with the hard set) would reduce time in the gym and you get out faster
----
Nonetheless, curious to hear what you fellas/madams think of this!
Recently been seeing lots of social media posts (by reputable coaches / subject matter experts) discussing hard sets, say a top set at 0-2 RIR (often 0-1 RIR) and then some back offs with similar failure ranges to elicit 'effective reps' or stimulus, but overall still subscribing to that 10-20 hard sets a week recommendation.
Personally, the above theory makes sense to me, as opposed to programs where you just see generic 4x12 of A,B and C exercise. This to me suggests that there may not be an actual 'hard' set that elicits proper mechanical tension and you're really just doing the exercise/sets for the sake of doing it.
Additionally, any more of these sets are just accumulating fatigue, while most of the stimulus/benefits have already been extracted, so it becomes diminishing returns.
Plus the former (with the hard set) would reduce time in the gym and you get out faster
----
Nonetheless, curious to hear what you fellas/madams think of this!