This new second edition of Science and Practice of Strength Training comes with many additions and changes. A new coauthor, Dr. William Kraemer, joins Dr. Vladimir Zatsiorsky in expanding on the principles and concepts needed for training athletes. Among Dr. Kraemer's contributions are three new chapters targeting specific populations--women, young athletes, and seniors--plus the integration of new concepts into the other chapters.
Together the authors have trained more than 1,000 elite athletes, including Olympic, world, continental, and national champions and record holders. The concepts they divulge are influenced by both Eastern European and North American perspectives. The authors integrate those concepts in solid principles, practical insights, coaching experiences, and directions based on scientific findings. This edition is much more practical than its predecessor; to this end, the book provides the practitioner with the understanding to craft strength training programs based on individuals' needs.
Science and Practice of Strength Training, Second Edition, shows that there is no one program that works for any one person at all times or for all conditions. This book addresses the complexity of strength training programs while providing straightforward approaches to take under specific circumstances. Those approaches are applied to new physiological concepts and training practices, which provide readers with the most current information in the science and practice of strength training. The approaches are also applied to the three new chapters, which will help readers design safe and effective strength training programs for women, young athletes, and seniors. In addition, the authors provide examples of strength training programs to demonstrate the principles and concepts they explain in the book.
The book is divided into three parts. Part I focuses on the basis of strength training, detailing concepts, task-specific strength, and athlete-specific strength. Part II covers methods of strength conditioning, delving into training intensity, timing, strength exercises, injury prevention, and goals. Part III explores training for specific populations. The book also includes suggested readings that can further aid readers in developing strength training programs.
This expanded and updated coverage of strength training concepts will ground readers in the understanding they need in order to develop appropriate strength training programs for each person that they work with.
If you're interested in the theory and science behind strength training this book is indispensible. Don't buy it looking for actual templates or step by step instructions, but look at it as a textbook of why and what strength principles are effective. Then use that knowledge when shopping around for a more user friendly program. Tactical Barbell, and Pavel Tsatsouline's materials heavily use the principles found in this book (off the top of my head), and are both very effective approaches. I'm not 100% sure but I think Westside Barbell does as well. If you're looking for templates and programs go with those materials. If you're curious about going indepth into strength science, and are good at using numerous principles to come up with your own program, this book is excellent.
I'm quite ambivalent about this book. On the one hand, the first couple of chapters give some great insights into basic principles and models of training. However, there is a great amount of outdated information in here. Some of which was already outdated when the book was first published, while at other times, statements were made with way too much confidence, not fully displaying the body of evidence at the time. Especially the stuff on injury prevention and pain management are just plain bad. Would not recommend reading this book, especially if you're new to the field.
Good stuff. Definitely not a general-interest read, but a very valuable for coaches and athletes alike, and I enjoyed its strong slant toward weightlifting. Given the lead author’s background as a Russian sports physiologist, this emphasis isn’t surprising. There is some good physiology information, and a treatment of training considerations for different types of athletes, including a fairly comprehensive and helpful section on training children. There is nothing about competition here, except for acknowledging the ability of athletes to lift considerably more under competitive conditions, a well known phenomenon. Also some of the physics explanations are shaky (not wrong, but a bit hard to follow). The book is now about twelve years old so it could probably use an update soon.
This is the penultimate read for anyone looking to maximize training with more of a scientific approach. The kinesthetic and physics-derived explanations are stellar, complete with discussions/diagrams of force, angle, resistance, and their relevant transferability to activity. The sheer amount of variety in discussion here is incredible, from biochemical (catabolics/anabolics) to physiological, no detail is spared.
Best educational resource for anyone looking to get the most out of strength training.
This is a very intense book on Training and for me it was a little too detailed.
Book reads like a Exercise Science textbook with various scientific studies (a bit of Physics, Physiology and Biology) that is filled with charts and formulas. It would be a great book for coaches planning the optimal routine for their athletes or professional athletes themselves. For an average joe like me wanting to improve my knowledge on strength training it was quite easy to get lost in the academic language.
However there are some interesting things I found, such as how muscles are formed, benefits of heavy weight training, free weight training being more effective than machines and etc. I would prefer finding a routine that someone else has optimised instead of planning it from ground up.
Not a bad book but surely not for someone just interested or beginning in training
Lots of detail and insight. Was very useful for challenging my own assumptions on strength training (maximal load rather than sub-maximal) and guidance on programming training. I found some parts not appliciable - on monitoring and some bits on training specific demographics - but overall it's a great resource for strength training.
This is regarded by many as the most influential book to S&C ever written. Certainly lives up to the hype. Valuable information on how human adaptation works for coaches in any field.
Conditionally great book on Soviet era strength training. Detailed, but it assumes world class athletes and a lot of chemical assistance, given the times and subsequent investigations.
Nice general overview of different strength training concepts and how to apply them in practice. Doesn't give you specific rep schemes or weights, but that's because of the need for individualization of programs. Also doesn't go into too much depth about what the "best movements" are, though it does seem to promote free weights over machines. Overall, a very good book for the aspiring Personal Trainer or self-programming weight lifter.
This is an absolutely amazing book. It explained the theories and application of strength training. Although it does not give you step by step of how to train, but it does give you an incredible amount of knowledge to plan your own training. It helped me to understand more of factors that affecting our strength. And I love it when they differentiate between maximal strength and RFD, This is the biggest misconception that I noticed when athlete's want to improve their performance.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I found that this material was more guided towards fitness professionals rather than individuals. Things were more verbose than necessary and it was difficult to quickly tease out suggestions. I assume the content is excellent but the material was too low in information density that I mostly skimmed it.
5 stars for content, 1 for the fact that counting each hair on my head would be vastly more entertaining than this book. But I expected that coming in, still a good read for people interested in any kind of lifting.
Super useful information but intensely hard to read. Everything is immensely dry and just presents data as a dump of information that you have to fend for yourself to understand. I basically took the sections I thought were interesting, read them and moved on.
Basically the same comment that I gave to supertraining: good, but not the only, resource for someone with experience and that can think for himself/herself
A gighly scientific breakdown of the factors and combination of factors which affects the recovery, fatigue, performance, strength, endurance etc of athletes. Would recommend to anybody who wants a better understanding of biomechanics, general knowledge about programming principles, and lifting technique. Would not recommend to anybody who wants in depth and quickly applicable tips for weightlifting and powerlifting programming. All in all, it is great book for gaining general preparation to understanding and applying strength training principles.