Give an inanimate object a scary name and people will conjure up a mystique in their minds surrounding it, guaranteed. Once this objects ‘reputation’ spreads to epic proportions, pretty soon everyone will be afraid of it.
Make a barrier or a test out of something and whatever it is instantly increases in difficulty exponentially.
This is exactly what’s happened in the Hardstyle kettlebell community with the
RKC half bodyweight kettlebell press! This feat is a required strength standard for passing the RKC Level 2 certification. It has subsequently been heralded as a coveted tough to attain barometer of awesomeness. As such, it has become a self-imposed ceiling and mental barrier for many men who are ACTUALLY capable of rendering this ‘test’ nothing more than a warm-up.
Big guys have traditionally had an even tougher time making this ‘milestone’ a reality. To be fair it actually IS harder for larger men to press a half bodyweight object overhead. So, for reasons of safety and realism, the powers that be have capped the upper end weight limit required for half bodyweight level achievement at
48kg (106lbs) for any man over 203lbs. Which is a pretty sweet deal if you’re an experienced lifter weighing in at 250-300lbs!
Why then has it been my observation over the years that the least amount of ‘half bodyweight presses’ have come from the over 203lb’ers? Surely the less representative a kettlebell is of half your body weight, the easier it would be to press it?
Well, I don’t know, but if you call something ‘
The Beast’ it scares people.
‘The Beast’ is a great name to market a hardcore strength tool with! It fires up some, it intimidates others, but either way, it wins everyone’s instant respect. It transforms an ordinary object into an icon, a mythical monster and in some cases…an insurmountable obstacle.
What Actually is ‘The Beast’?
The ‘Beast’, my friends, is nothing more than a bully, and like most bullies, he’s an impostor who’s trying to act scarier than his reality actually commands. He’s a big fish in a very small pond. Nothing more!
Traditionally, kettlebells were relatively light objects of fixed weight used most prolifically for high volume power endurance work. So in the ‘small pond’ where traditionally the biggest fish would rarely exceed
32kg, a 48kg object suddenly looks astronomical within this environment.
But, once the hype is stripped away and the ‘Beast’ is taken out of its ‘small pond’ and placed in the larger ocean that is the strength world as a whole, all of a sudden Moby Dick starts looking more like The Little Mermaid. This beast that was ‘raised in captivity’ whilst surrounded by much smaller objects, now struggles to intimidate the same way in ‘the wild’ when its 106lbs is compared to giant dumbbells, atlas stones, logs, and of course…the mighty, and virtually unlimited, barbell!
Big guys CAN and should be able to press half bodyweight. In fact, seeing as the rules of the RKC Level 2 test stipulates that big guys have to press no more than 106lbs, which may represent less than half bodyweight, this over 203lbs category SHOULD have the highest pass rate in this test!
My Number One Student
At this point I’d like to introduce you to my longest serving student, John Goudy (or ‘GOuD Almighty’ as he is referred to in Centaur in a tongue in cheek way). John’s training has been following my principles, in my gym, for more than a decade now. In that time his body weight has risen from around 200lbs to 264lbs of drug free juggernaut!
He’s been a joy to work with from the start and is still a dream to program for to this day. Despite his inhuman physical ability he’s THE most coachable lifter I’ve ever worked with. His patience is unparalleled and the only thing which exceeds his immense strength is his common sense and decision making. I never have to worry about him deviating from the plan to rush things. His patience and cyborg-like consistency has well and truly paid off as his muscle mass and pure physical power has now reached mythical proportions for a drug-free individual!
At 6’3 and 264lbs, Big John has rock solid and lean 20″ arms (cold) and 18″ forearms! His back and shoulders are barn door wide and his waist is tiny by comparison.
According to the rules of the RKC Level 2 press test John would have to press 106lbs (48kg) once, in order to pass. But this ‘test’ wouldn’t even constitute an adequate warm up for John’s regular press practice session. He’s never tried it because I don’t believe in testing limits too often (in fact these days I don’t believe in testing them at all really), but I’d guesstimate he could strictly press about 15 reps with a 106lbs kettlebell if he wanted to. This is backed up below as John is seen pressing an ACTUAL half bodyweight kettlebell of 132lbs (60kg)…for almost 7 consecutive reps!
You see, we can all press more than 50% of our bilateral max when we go unilateral. In layman’s terms, when you lift bilaterally the signal from the nervous system to the muscles has to split in two directions. But once you go one handed on a press or a pull, all of the CNS’s focus gets concentrated on that one limb and as such a higher percentage of the bilateral ‘juice’ can be sent down one side. So even if unfamiliar with the different implement (kettlebell), the extra strength created by the ability to press bodyweight overhead on a bar should provide enough of a buffer to get the job done regardless.
Maybe you’re thinking…"I’m lean enough but I weigh 250lbs, it will take me forever to build up the strength to military press 250lbs on a barbell". Well first off, I disagree. If you program it correctly and your body fat isn’t significantly high, it shouldn’t take that long to develop a bodyweight press.
But having said that…YOU don’t have to wait that long Mr 250lbs Man. The RKC Level 2 standard states that guys over 203lbs have to press no more than 106lbs no matter what they weigh. Plus, as explained above, a two-arm max doesn’t have to reach double the weight of a single arm goal in order to actualize it. You could probably get away with two-arm pressing 190% of the single arm goal as long as you had reasonable skill with a kettlebell.
So now our 220-250lbs guy’s mission, should he choose to accept it, is to build his two arm barbell press up to a single with about 190-195lbs. Now that’s a mission that’s hardly impossible.
However, just to make doubly sure of success we will add a caveat to the routine. As great as the barbell is, nothing overrules the law of specificity when it comes to pretty much everything. So, it would be prudent to keep the single kettlebell pressing groove open for business throughout the barbell building cycle. The good news is this part becomes a non-exhausting afterthought of the main routine, but an important wrinkle none the less.
Below is an example of a John Goudy style ‘Long-haul’ routine for a guy whose current kettlebell press max is
40kg (88lbs), his barbell military press max is 75kg (165lbs) and his goal is a
48kg (106lbs) kettlebell Beast Press.
(Week 1)
Day 1: BB MP 100lbs 3×10, KB MP
28kg 1×4/4
Day 2: BB MP 105lbs 3×9, KB MP 28kg 1×4/4
Day 3: BB MP 110lbs 3×8, KB MP 28kg 1×5/5
Day 4: BB MP 115lbs 3×7, KB MP 28kg 1×5/5
(Week 2)
Day 1: BB MP 100lbs 3×10, KB MP 28kg 1×6/6
Day 2: BB MP 105lbs 3×10, KB MP 28kg 1×6/6
Day 3: BB MP 110lbs 3×8, KB MP 28kg 1×5/5
Day 4: BB MP 115lbs 3×7, KB MP 28kg 1×5/5
(Week 3)
Day 1: BB MP 100lbs 3×10, KB MP 28kg 1×6/6
Day 2: BB MP 105lbs 3×10, KB MP 28kg 1×6/6
Day 3: BB MP 110lbs 3×9, KB MP 28kg 1×7/7
Day 4: BB MP 115lbs 3×8, KB MP 28kg 1×7/7
(Week 4)
Day 1: BB MP 100lbs 3×10, KB MP 28kg 1×6/6
Day 2: BB MP 105lbs 3×10, KB MP 28kg 1×6/6
Day 3: BB MP 110lbs 3×10, KB MP 28kg 1×7/7
Day 4: BB MP 115lbs 3×8, KB MP 28kg 1×7/7
(Week 5)
Day 1: BB MP 100lbs 3×10, KB MP 28kg 1×8/8
Day 2: BB MP 105lbs 3×10, KB MP 28kg 1×8/8
Day 3: BB MP 110lbs 3×10, KB MP 28kg 1×7/7
Day 4: BB MP 115lbs 3×9, KB MP 28kg 1×7/7
(Week 6)
Day 1: BB MP 100lbs 3×10, KB MP 28kg 1×8/8
Day 2: BB MP 105lbs 3×10, KB MP 28kg 1×8/8
Day 3: BB MP 110lbs 3×10, KB MP 28kg 1×10/10
Day 4: BB MP 115lbs 3×10, KB MP 28kg 1×10/10
This represents one full mini cycle. After this mini cycle is complete you will add 5lbs to every set and recycle the routine as written above with regards sets and reps. Keep the kettlebell press weight and volumes the same as the first mini cycle in every future mini cycle except the fifth, in the fifth you will increase the weight to
32kg and recycle the same volumes. At this rate of progression the end of the 5th mini-cycle, or week 30, would look like this:
(Week 30)
Day 1: BB MP 120lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×8/8
Day 2: BB MP 125lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×8/8
Day 3: BB MP 130lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×10/10
Day 4: BB MP 135lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×10/10
Finally, you will run a peaking week to help actualize the strength you’ve accumulated with the higher volume work. It would look like this:
(Week 31)
Day 1: BB MP 145lbs 3×8, KB MP 32kg 1×10/10
Day 2: BB MP 155lbs 3×6, KB MP 32kg 1×10/10
Day 3: BB MP 165lbs 3×5, KB MP 32kg 1×10/10
Day 4: BB MP 180lbs 3×3, KB MP 40kg 1x max reps
(Perform on an every other day basis. After the final session rest for 3 days then warm up and press ‘The Beast’ easily)
Yes, 31 weeks. Does 31 weeks seem like a long time to add 30-35lbs to an already well developed barbell military press? If it does then you’re nuts in the head and the help you need goes way beyond the scope of this article. Viewed with the end goal of lifelong perpetual strength gains in mind, 31 weeks is nothing.
Now, allow me to take a moment and make your instant-gratification-loving brain explode for a second here… For himself, Big John would slow this routine down by at least a factor of 2, maybe even 4! That’s right, he’d train no more than twice, possibly even once a week, and happily take 14-28 months to add 30lbs to his ever so ponderous military press max. At his stage of extreme drug free advancement, needing 2 years to add 30lbs to his military press is positively breakneck speed! Bearing in mind that the next time he adds this amount of weight to his military press we’ll see a drug free man strictly pressing 150kg overhead with ease! So why then would he want to speed things up when he knows that doing so would only, ironically, slow his progress down?
If however, you need something a little bit more aggressive because you have a deadline in which to hit your
beast press, no problem. Try this adapted version of the same routine to achieve a similar peak much quicker.
(Week 1)
Day 1: BB MP 100lbs 3×10, KB MP
24kg 1×6/6
Day 2: BB MP 105lbs 3×10, KB MP 24kg 1×7/7
Day 3: BB MP 110lbs 3×8, KB MP 24kg 1×8/8
Day 4: BB MP 115lbs 3×8, KB MP 24kg 1×10/10
(Week 2)
Day 1: BB MP 105lbs 3×10, KB MP 24kg 1×7/7
Day 2: BB MP 110lbs 3×9, KB MP 24kg 1×8/8
Day 3: BB MP 115lbs 3×8, KB MP 24kg 1×10/10
Day 4: BB MP 120lbs 3×8, KB MP 28kg 1×4/4
(Week 3)
Day 1: BB MP 110lbs 3×9, KB MP 28kg 1×4/4
Day 2: BB MP 115lbs 3×9, KB MP 28kg 1×5/5
Day 3: BB MP 120lbs 3×8, KB MP 28kg 1×5/5
Day 4: BB MP 125lbs 3×8, KB MP 28kg 1×6/6
(Week 4)
Day 1: BB MP 110lbs 3×10, KB MP 28kg 1×6/6
Day 2: BB MP 115lbs 3×9, KB MP 28kg 1×7/7
Day 3: BB MP 120lbs 3×8, KB MP 28kg 1×7/7
Day 4: BB MP 125lbs 3×8, KB MP 28kg 1×8/8
(Week 5)
Day 1: BB MP 115lbs 3×9, KB MP 28kg 1×8/8
Day 2: BB MP 120lbs 3×9, KB MP 28kg 1×9/9
Day 2: BB MP 125lbs 3×8, KB MP 28kg 1×9/9
Day 3: BB MP 130lbs 3×8, KB MP 28kg 1×10/10
(Week 6)
Day 1: BB MP 115lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×4/4
Day 2: BB MP 120lbs 3×9, KB MP 32kg 1×4/4
Day 3: BB MP 125lbs 3×8, KB MP 32kg 1×5/5
Day 4: BB MP 130lbs 3×8, KB MP 32kg 1×5/5
(Week 7)
Day 1: BB MP 120lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×4/4
Day 2: BB MP 125lbs 3×9, KB MP 32kg 1×4/4
Day 3: BB MP 130lbs 3×8, KB MP 32kg 1×5/5
Day 4: BB MP 135lbs 3×7, KB MP 32kg 1×5/5
(Week 8)
Day 1: BB MP 120lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×6/6
Day 2: BB MP 125lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×6/6
Day 3: BB MP 130lbs 3×8, KB MP 32kg 1×5/5
Day 4: BB MP 135lbs 3×7, KB MP 32kg 1×5/5
(Week 9>
Day 1: BB MP 120lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×6/6
Day 2: BB MP 125lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×6/6
Day 3: BB MP 130lbs 3×9, KB MP 32kg 1×7/7
Day 4: BB MP 135lbs 3×8, KB MP 32kg 1×7/7
(Week 10)
Day 1: BB MP 120lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×6/6
Day 2: BB MP 125lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×6/6
Day 3: BB MP 130lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×7/7
Day 4: BB MP 135lbs 3×8, KB MP 32kg 1×7/7
(Week 11)
Day 1: BB MP 120lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×8/8
Day 2: BB MP 125lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×8/8
Day 3: BB MP 130lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×7/7
Day 4: BB MP 135lbs 3×9, KB MP 32kg 1×7/7
(Week 12)
Day 1: BB MP 120lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×8/8
Day 2: BB MP 125lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×8/8
Day 3: BB MP 130lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×10/10
Day 4: BB MP 135lbs 3×10, KB MP 32kg 1×10/10
(Week 13)
Day 1: BB MP 145lbs 3×8, KB MP 32kg 1×10/10
Day 2: BB MP 155lbs 3×6, KB MP 32kg 1×10/10
Day 3: BB MP 165lbs 3×5, KB MP 32kg 1×10/10
Day 4: BB MP 180lbs 3×3, KB MP 40kg 1x max reps
(Perform on an every other day basis. After the final session rest for 3 days then warm up and press ‘The Beast’ easily)
In case you haven’t noticed, this routine will also succeed in slapping huge mass gains on your shoulders and triceps over time! Well, after all, it is based on the work I’ve done with John. Basketball sized delts and 20″ arms don’t grow themselves.
The ‘Beast’ is the bully of the Hardstyle kettlebell world, and seeing as bullies only respond to strength…it’s about time YOU got strong as hell!
Stay Strong
Paul McIlroy
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www.amazing12.com
Email:
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