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Strength Training Manual eBook: Volume Two

(5 customer reviews)

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Strength training has always been a significant component of physical preparation for athletes and recreational athletes. Strength training seeks improvements in strength performance, looking fabulous when naked, injury prevention as well as transfer to other sporting activities. Planning ideas, approaches, and philosophies in strength training is also an excellent vehicle for understanding overall planning strategies and training theories in general due to more straightforward quantification of the training load and easily observed performances.

Strength Training Manual represents my ongoing pursuit in understanding both strength training and training theory in general, by providing an overview of the conflicting opinions, but also giving practical, heuristic solutions to common problems and their reconciliation. The framework for such an approach is the Agile Periodization, which approaches planning from uncertainty perspective, iterations, and experimentation while providing satisfying and robust solutions.

Besides being very rich in theory, Strength Training Manual is also rich in “forum for action” solutions, including reference tables, useful heuristics, and more than 1,900 set and rep schemes provided and analysed. It also provides the best practices from other experts tinkering in this field.

This book is published in three electronic Volumes. Volume One covers major theoretical points needed for further understating of the more practical material in Volumes Two and Three.

Strength Training Planning revolves around three iterative phases:

  1. Establish 1RM
  2. Plan the Training Phase
  3. Review and Retrospective (or Rinse and Repeat)

Volume Two provides a detailed explanation of the second and third phases by covering the following topics:

  1. Thorough discussion on the training dose concept, as well as dose -> response models
  2. Anatomy of set and rep schemes and their archetypal variants
  3. “Mladen’s Methodological System of classifying Set and Rep schemes”
  4. Horizontal and Vertical planning perspectives (This will cut through all the periodization crap you have been fed over the years)
  5. Novel planning strategies and concepts such as robustness, microdosing, “Don’t break the chain” and Markov Chain
  6. Thorough discussion on what individualization really is (and what it should be)
  7. Review and Retrospective practices including updating planning 1RMs between phases and “phase potentiation” ideas and critiques (and novel “iterative” approach)
  8. Discussion on predictive and causal modelling in strength training

Strength Training Manual will give you not only a practical solution to tackle everyday problems of planning, prescribing, and monitoring strength training, but also critical thinking skills. You can use these essential skills of thinking and tools in other types of physical preparation and training in general.

Click HERE to preview the Strength Training Manual: Volume Two.

5 reviews for Strength Training Manual eBook: Volume Two

  1. Robert Frederick

    This is gold, pure gold! Mladen has put together an encyclopedia of modern thought in sports science and this is essential reading for anyone looking for ways to get ahead of their competition.

    Robert Frederick
    Strength and Conditioning Specialist
    Website: http://www.strongur.io

  2. Joe Kenn

    Having followed Mladen’s work for some time now, it never seems to amaze me the meticulous of his dissection of periodization and program design models. In his latest work, he gives us, the clinician, the practitioner, the coach another in depth analysis of the numerous ways we can design effective and efficient strength programs to our athletes. This is a must have for your library!

    Joe Kenn
    Physical Preparation Specialist
    Website: http://www.bighousepower.com

  3. Karl Goodman

    The fact that this isn’t another ‘here is my method for training athletes’ strength book is exactly why I love it; having a book dedicated to principles and heuristics seems a lot more valuable in a time where adaptability trumps rigidity in most contexts. I was telling one of my staff today when we were talking about Strength Training Manual: ‘Mladen isn’t for everyone, but he isn’t trying to be. He knows who he is for and those that get him, appreciate everything he does

    Karl Goodman
    Director of Athletes Authority
    Website: http://www.athletesauthority.com.au

  4. HÃ¥kan Andersson

    Probably the most comprehensive read on planning and periodisation in the English language

    HÃ¥kan Andersson
    Sprint Coach – High Performance Centre, Växjö Sweden

  5. William Wayland

    Best strength and conditioning book I’ve read in year!

    William Wayland
    Strength & Conditioning Professional
    Owner of Powering Through Performance
    Strength & Conditioning consultant to the PGA European Tour

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