hold good technique throughout the lift.
After the Snatch is complete you will normally move onto Clean + Jerk. The Snatch having warmed your body up for movements with lighter weight, you won't be cold going into heavy lifts. Sometimes the lift will be seperated into Cleans or Jerks isolated from the other half of the movement, depending on which area requires more work, or just to reduce effort on the lifter (Most people can Clean more than they can Jerk, so it may be that you Clean very heavily one day, but if you were to only Clean to a Jerkable amount, you would be limiting your Clean progress).
After the two competition lifts have been completed, you can move onto assistance exercises. These generally consist of Squats, Front Squats and variations of the two main lifts. And then once these have been completed, the less 'functional' exercises can be completed. Things like Rows, Bench Press, Chinups, exercises that don't have much direct transfer to the two lifts, but will give the person greater overall strength and/or size. Depending on their goals.
So using these concepts, we can assume that a very basic layout for an average day would look like:
Snatch
Clean and Jerk
Squat
Pull
And a person who chose to stick with just that routine multiple times a week would have a very succesful routine. There is no need for anything fancy like supersets, drop sets etc. You won't find bodypart days in a weightlifters routine either. They do not train their body, they train the two lifts they need to, their body is just the tool they use to complete those lifts and as such needs modifying in specific ways.
What do u mean by pull? Any examples etc?
ReplyDeletehttp://www.catalystathletics.com/exercise/98/Clean-Pull/
Deletehttp://www.catalystathletics.com/exercise/97/Snatch-Pull/
And variations of these