Quote Originally Posted by hitmandonny View Post
Hey Herb...

In honesty I haven't checked out any of these newsletters and as a result I didn't fully understand what you were speaking about here. However, I did pick up on something I might be able to help you with.
I was probably pretty vague -- sorry about that -- I didn't want to repeat everything in Fran's newsletter and I didn't review my arthritis problems (which I have mentioned elsewhere) to explain my squat issues.

Quote Originally Posted by hitmandonny View Post
When beginning training for my last fight my squats were mediocre at best, mostly because I tended to hunch up, allowing the weight to force me forward, placing the load on my quads.
I don't do this (hunch up), my back is pretty straight, but but due to arthritis in my knees and pretty limited hip flexibility (OA there too) I really have trouble getting low with my back still VERTICAL.


Quote Originally Posted by hitmandonny View Post

this indicated weakness in my erectors and other lower back muscles.
This meant the obvious solution was to strengthen my lower back. Deadlifts are the obvious choice in strengthening the back, but they will load on muscle which will result in a change of weight class. So as an alternative try strengthening the back with hypers etc.
Weight class is not a (big) issue for me: I am an older guy (57) and will never be allowed to fight even in amateur (I tried to figure out how to get a waiver for Masters' but it doesn't seem possible) so weight classes don't mean much to me.

Maybe a minor concern, since due to my knees I really don't to need ANY weight, even muscle. I have generally been trying to improve fitness, lose fat, and only gain as much muscle as absolutely necessary.

Quote Originally Posted by hitmandonny View Post

For me this allowed a huge jump in my squats which translated to easier slipping and rolling in the ring.
I don't generally do dead lifts or free squats with much weight -- due to stability -- but I was doing lose reps high weight* on the leg press machine.

*[I was moving 750 lbs on the sled for low reps.]

I also do free squats to 50% (legs parallel to floor) quite often (most ever day).

My one leg squats are terrible -- I really need to be able to do AT LEAST 1/4 squats on a single leg just to get up and down stairs effectively but this is VERY hard for me.

So would this indicate my back and legs are strong enough or likely part of the problem?

Currently I am about 195 with probably 45 lbs of fat (based on percentage from my scale), and I am trying to get down to about 175.

Didn't mean to turn this into a rehab thread for me, but hey, I will take all the help I can get and some of your guys here are pretty smart.


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HerbM