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Selective
bodybuilding, being a science of proportional bodybuilding for that
aesthetic physique... |
Tabloids
rarely report bodybuilding in a favourable light, especially female muscle
builders, as witnessed a while back with an interview with six time
British 400 metres champion Donna Hartley, supposedly saying when talking
of her ripped pecs. “Tits are just fat anyway”. Even worse publicity was
propagated by another paper which printed ‘My Muscles Drive Men Mad’ says
‘Sex tiger Big Hannie, boating 19 inch biceps and 28 inch thighs’. The
‘article’ invited readers to phone in via a ‘You the Jury’ box as to
whether, quote ‘You find this woman attractive’. A loaded question
indeed. Apparently not too many did, with a massive percentage giving
Hannie the Hunk the thumbs down. Bit unfair I thought, what would have
been the results if Rachel McLish, Juliette Bergmann or similar muscular
‘beaut’s’ had been pictures, without the ‘freak’ angle?’
Much the same results
would no doubt have been obtained if a ‘most muscular’ picture of Mike
Quinn or some other ‘nasty’ had been put on centre pages to frighten away
readers. Au contraire put a photograph of the beauty facially and
physical of Dave Hawk, Mr. Proportion Lee Haney, Bob Paris, or especially
Steve Reeves in his Hercules heyday, and I suspect the survey would show
up a different set of results – more in favour of the good looking
Adonis-type physique. 'Beef It' may be the show supporters shout, but my
bet is the leaner and lither model wins hands down in the popularity
stakes for both male and female trainee out in the real world, where the
tabloids successfully gauge public opinion.
Whilst perhaps not the
first bodybuilder to use the principal of training for the illusion of physical perfection, the legendary
Steve Reeves, Mr. Universe and Hercules of the screen certainly trained on
a very Selective basis, choosing with care specific exercises to enhance
his physique and avoiding those movements which would have proven
detrimental to his chosen image. This idea of Selective physical training
is for the majority of trainers precisely what true bodybuilding should
be, i.e. the attainment of a superbly fit and muscular body, pre-imagined
for design details working much as one would sculpture with stone or carve
with wood, accentuating the finer points and cutting down with the
unwanted areas.
For a while sheer
muscle mass may have won the game, but the more astute physique show judges
finds big is no longer beautiful without equal symmetry. Even big Lee
Haney who can hardly be called lithe says: “Keep a close eye on proportion
when training”. Physical sculpture via Selective exercise pays off,
popular title winners choose specific movements and schedules. An
illustration of unwanted possibilities of selective anatomical admiration
for example would be to consider certain African tribes, inhabitants of
the Kalahari desert who believe large buttocks to be beautiful and much in
vogue, and as a result of determined efforts develop huge ponderous
derrieres (bums to you!) known medical as Steatopygia. The potential
Olympia star would by contrast minimize most exercise for the buttocks,
especially as the E.F.B.B. frowns on the current fad of exposing ribbon cut
glutes, and concentrate upon other parts, for example the lateral head of
the deltoids for WIDE – Ron Love like shoulders, the upper lats, sweeping
into a small (again consider the huge differential between Loves shoulder
and waist) narrow waist without over developed side muscles (obliques),
the upper and outer chest area instead of heavy feminine lower pecs
(regardless of what Donna said) which combined with steroids develop
‘bitch tits’… the lateral head of the triceps, and full lower biceps, the
mid and lower thighs, and finally diamond shaped calves.
The magic Egyptian
Mohammed Makkawy almost sculptured his physique as did triple O winner
Frank Zane tops for symmetry winning titles for decades. Still popular
today is the pre-mentioned Steve Reeves who pioneered many bodybuilding
techniques designed to produce desirable development with overall muscle
mass. Reeves normally trained just three times a week saying “more time
in the gym would be both mentally and physically draining to me, and I
think it is to those dedicated zealots who spend most of their waking time
in the gym. You will notice they usually burn themselves out in time,
making little progress for the many hours of slaving they did”. Bob Paris
like Reeves believes there should be balance in life and one should have
other interests than the mindless pumping of iron and self set diet
regimes. Paris acts on his own advice by spending a lot of time helping
those less fortunate in health, spending time and money working for
several charities.
To return to Reeves,
Steve’s philosophy was to work for proportion and symmetry, using unique
exercises plus allowing time via rest periods for recuperative processes
to recharge nervous energy.
Overall champion and
national light heavy weight winner (87) Shawn Ray performs many of the
basic exercises in strict isolation to sculpture his shape, with many
Cable Pulldowns in front for Lats, cable cross-overs for the lateral
deltoids, coupled with dumbbell laterals to pre-exhaust the shoulders
before going onto overhead presses.
Dave Hawk favours hack
slides, leg extensions, and single leg squats for thighs, with plenty of
pulley work for triceps. Makkaway, like Reeves enjoys incline dumbbell
curls for those full rounded biceps.
Many top physiques
evolve from the technique of developing a foundation of muscle mass with
powerlifting using abbreviated routines, heavy poundages and low reps,
high sets. This basic framework added upon with the selective muscle
shaping exercise routines. Bob Paris on the contrary trained right from
the beginning with a finished picture in mind. Paris, who currently
disappointed with his latest attempt to re-enter the show circuit, has his
mind set on the movie scene. Bob said in an interview with Greg Zaluk
(M.M.I.) that his goal in bodybuilding was “Not to build the biggest
freakiest physique – but rather to make the male physique look as
beautiful as possible, training with shape and aesthetics in mind – an
artist with his body”.
Suggestions for various
body parts most suitable for that Paris style physique are:
For arms, (biceps) make
it a point to use full extension and contraction to encourage development
of those full-bodied biceps. A good bicep exercise being Preacher curls,
and the Incline Bench Curl with dumbbells. For triceps especially the
outer head, which when fully developed gives a more distinct ‘horse shoe’
shape, try the Triceps Extension with dumbbell on bench. Lie on a bench
and using a moderately light dumbbell, extend the arm with the palm to
front. Bend the arm at the elbow, lowering it across the body until it
touches the pectoral muscle on the opposite side. Raise again to arms
length, being careful not to change the position of the elbow.
Further ideas are Cable
Push Downs and Triceps Kick Backs. Experiment by using one dumbbell at a
time for high reps of 12 to 15. Exercise one arm, then swap arms,
alternatively without rest until the last couple of reps are almost
impossible to complete.
For Upper Chest and
deltoid tie in, do plenty of Incline Dumbbell Bench Presses. For that
envied lower square pectoral shape, do parallel bar dips. Hold the body
in a slightly concave position with the chin tucked in, resting on the
chest throughout the exercise, the feet in line with the face. Keep the
elbows wide and lower as far as possible, fully stretching the pecs, push
up to full lock and repeat. For variety, at times, don’t fully lock out
and thereby keeping continuous stress (tension) on the chest and triceps.
When sculpturing Back
use Single Arm dumbbell rows, one of the best shaping exercises for the
lats, allowing fullest extension and flexion, with most stars adding Cable
or Lat Machine Pulldowns to their schedules.
For Legs, instead of
the standard version of squats, exchange for Hack lifts or slides, or
experiment with Front Squats. To perform front squats, stand erect with
your feet mediumly spaced about 35 cms. apart. For balance rest your
heels on a couple of disks or a plank. Use fairly light weights for
starters, and hold the barbell in the ‘clean position’ high on the chest,
palms upwards. Squat down to a full deep knee bend, the position of the
bar ensures you keep a straight back. Use medium to high reps.
Well, that’s the main
idea – create the illusion – and use all the assistance you can get. An
all over suntan suggests obvious good health and vitality. Good posture is
essential, whether you are tall or short. For that extra wide shoulder
effect, keep hair cut short, neck medium developed and include plenty of
dumbbell flyes or laterals. Avoid over developed traps by going steady on
such lifts as heavy upright rowing, cleans and deadlifts. Keep the waist
small mainly by diet. Mike Ashely reduces to 3,000 calories a day for
months before a show and trains most mornings with high rep, aerobic type
leg raises and crunches.
Let’s give the final
word to Bob Paris, regarding Selective bodybuilding. Bob says (in
M.M.I.). “Get the balance right in the muscle you train, get the balance
right in the number of fibres you train and get the balancer light between
bodybuilding and the rest of you life”.
Acknowledgements to:
Bob Paris
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A
Rachel McLish, IFFB Hall of Fame
Inductee 1999
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Steve
Reeves in his Hercules heyday |

Even big Lee Haney who can hardly be
called lithe says: “Keep a close eye on
proportion when training”.

The magic Egyptian Mohammed Makkawy
almost sculptured his physique

Steve Reeves' philosophy was to
work for Proportion and symmetry
Photo Lanza

For Arms, (biceps) make it a point to use
full
extension and contraction to encourage
development.

Chris Dickerson

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Selective Bodybuilding
© Copyright
by David Gentle
All Rights Reserved |
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