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Fitness

Programming for the American (Clean and Working) Weightlifter

Here are four weeks of weightlifting programming. Two weeks of a conditioning phase and two weeks of a strength cycle. This is how I program for my athletes.

Ursula Garza Papandrea

Written by Ursula Garza Papandrea Last updated on November 11, 2013

Click Here to Download the Entire Four Weeks in a Printable PDF

Many of today’s American Olympic weightlifting coaches hold degrees in exercise science, having studied biomechanics, exercise physiology, and other sports science subjects with the intent of practical application to our sport. Unfortunately, many college kinesiology or exercise science programs do not specifically address strength sports. Instead, the majority of research is directed towards physiology of conditioning and biomechanics of more popular sports. The result is that the Russian training manuals have become the cornerstone of many coaches’ education. My development as a coach was largely influenced by these manuals. Additionally, I had several coaches of different nationalities, including Hungarian, Bulgarian, Russian, and American. They all added significantly to my practical education.

The Systems

Not able to find any one system that I preferred or felt superior to another, I, like many other coaches, started the trial-and-error practice of programming using basic principles borrowed from the likes of Vladimir Zatsiorsky and R. A. Roman. The simplest of the concepts being progressive overload training, which I learned via my formal education but in practice from John Coffee. This has been overall basis for my programming.

I have also borrowed suggestions from Roman’s The Training of the Weightlifter, in which he suggests training phases of two to three months each. He starts with the preparatory phase, to create a base sporting form. This lasts one to two months and is the cycle characterized as having large volume with a gradual increase in intensity. I usually refer to this phase as the strength conditioning phase and will typically build the load for five to six weeks before lowering. Roman then suggests a transition phase, in which the coach must avoid overtraining the athlete, while maintaining sporting form. As suggested, I use this cycle to raise intensity while maintaining the condition of the athlete.

Then, this is the point at which I introduce the Bulgarian wave method into the program. I usually refer to this second cycle as a strength phase since there are more high intensity lifts attempted, and there has been a transition from lower intensity-high volume work to higher intensity work with a lowering of volume. In the third phase, which Roman calls the competition phase, there is a gradual transition with a goal of a “realization of results.” This is typically called a competition, pre-competition, or power phase, where there is an attempt to have the athlete recover from both the volume and intensity of the previous cycles so that he may perform in competition. The product should be an “improved organism” that can produce better results on the competition platform. Roman also suggests rest after four months of training. I too think this is important in prevention of injury and for both mental and physical recovery of the athlete.

The Challenge of Clean Athletes

Although I attempt to implement principles borrowed from both Bulgarian and Russian systems, I have to also acknowledge one deficiency in the American athletes that I train – they are clean. I think to ignore this obvious difference between my athletes and those who have trained in the aforementioned systems would be a failure on my part to recognize the truth. I have worked to alter and adapt the programs to address the lack of performance enhancing drugs and the benefits that would come from them.

ursula garza papandrea, weightlifting programming, workouts, olympic lifting

In general, if performance-enhancing drugs will make you stronger and better able to recover, we can assume that without them these two areas will suffer. My adjustments to programming therefore include overloading the pulls and squats to make athletes stronger. Second, my athletes train four to five days a week since most work a full-time job and train. Without recovery aids being used regularly, I must rely on their natural abilities to adapt to the various stresses of training and life. I do advocate adaptogens as part of their supplementation but these, although somewhat effective, pale in comparison to the recuperative qualities of banned pharmaceuticals. In response to this difference, I have reduced the number of training sessions from the norm of nine-plus sessions a week down to four or five.

Below are four weeks of workouts, two weeks of conditioning and two weeks of strength. You can also download the entire four weeks in a printable PDF.

Sample Workouts – Conditioning Phase

Here are samples programs from the conditioning phase. These are the working sets and the athlete does warm up to these percentages. The weights, reps, and sets are written in the standard international form with % as the numerator and # of reps as the denominator with the numbers of sets to the right.

Week 1, Day 1
Muscle Snatch 50/3 4
Front Squat 80/2 6
Snatch Strict Press 40-50/5 3
Snatch Pulls with 5 Sec Descent 80/5 5
Week 1, Day 2
Power Snatch + OHS 72/2+3 4
Front Squat + Jerk 77/3+1 3
Clean Pulls with 3 Sec Pause Below Knee 85/4 4
Barbell Low Step Ups 50/8 3
Week 1, Day 3
Close-Grip Snatch 70/2 4
Clean and Jerk 80/1 4
Back Squat 80/4 4
Jerk Drives 85/5 3
Week 1, Day 4
Bench Press 1×10, 1×8, 2×6
Barbell Rows 1×10, 1×8, 3×6
Military Press 1×10, 1×8, 2×6
Bench – Bench dips 3×10
Week 1, Day 5
Hip Snatch 65/3 3
Snatch 85/1 4
Power Clean + Power Jerk 77/2+1 3
Jerk Off Racks 80/2 4
Front Squat 80/2 6
Week 2, Day 1
Muscle Squat Snatch 60/3 4
Front Squat 80/3 6
SnatchPush Press 60-70/5 3
SnatchPulls with 5 Sec Descent 85/5 5
Week 2, Day 2
Power Jerk + OHS 65/2+3 4
Front Squat + Jerk 80/3+1 3
Clean Pulls on Platform with Pause at PF Height 90/4 4
One Leg Squat 55/6 3
Week 2, Day 3
Drop Snatch 85/3 4
Hip Clean 65/2 3
Clean and Jerk 80/2+1 4
Back Squat 85/3 4
Week 2, Day 4
Incline Bench 1×10, 1×8, 2×6
Bent Lateral Raises/Reverse Flyes 3×10
OH Dumbbell Press 1×10, 1×8, 2×6
Pullovers 3×10
Week 2, Day 5
Snatch Blocks 80/2 3
Snatch with Pause Below Knee 75/2 3
Power Jerk Racks 77/2 3
Jerk Behind Neck 85/1 3

Sample Workouts – Strength Cycle

Week 1, Day 1
Snatch with Pause Below Knee 80/2 4
Snatch Pull to Hip with Pause Below Knee 105/2 4
Snatch Hi Hang Pulls 110/3 3
Push Press 75/2 3
Week 1, Day 2
CG Snatch 75/2 3
Clean Block 90/1 3
Back Squat 95-100/1 4
Clean Pull Block 115/3 3
Week 1, Day 3
Snatch Recovery 90/2 3
Front Squat + Jerk 75/11 3
Hip Clean 75/1 5
Seated Good Morning #/5 3
Week 1, Day 4
Snatch 100/1 85/1 90/1 95/1 85/1 90/1
Jerk Behind Neck 100/1 3
Front Squat 95/1 4
Week 2, Day 1
Snatch Pull + Snatch 70/2 75/2 80/2 3
Clean 100/1 85/2 90/1 95/1 85/3
Back Squat 90/3 3
Snatch Pull to Knee + to Hip 110/2+1 4
Week 2, Day 2
Snatch Block 90/1 3
Clean Jerk 85/1 3
Close Stance Back Squat 80/2 3
Snatch Block Pulls 115/2 3
Week 2, Day 3
Drop Snatch No Drive 50/2+3 3
Clean + Front Squat + Jerk 80/111 3
Clean Pull to Expl 110/3 3
Good Morning to Snatch Press #/3 4
Week 2, Day 4
Snatch 90/2 3
Jerk 100/1 80/2 2
Front Squat 100/1 85/2 90/1 95/1 85/3
Snatch 90/2 3

Click Here to Download the Entire Four Weeks in a Printable PDF

Ursula Garza Papandrea

About Ursula Garza Papandrea

Ursula Garza Papandrea has been nicknamed the Queen of Olympic Weightlifting. And this is why: She has been an athlete and coach in Olympic weightlifting for over 25 years. Her career as a lifter started in 1987. She was a two-time national champion, two-time Olympic Festival champion, five-time world team member, former national record holder, many time collegiate champion, and a two-time international (NACACI) champion, having won several international medals for the USA. She revived her career to become master’s national champion and best lifter (Grand Master) in 2009 and national champion again in 2010.

Ursula was an elite athlete who then distinguished herself by becoming the first and only woman to ever attain USA Weightlifting’s highest coaching level, Senior International Coach Level 5. Her athletes have competed at and won national championships at the junior, collegiate, senior, and master levels, as well as Olympic Trials. She has trained and qualified athletes who represented Team USA at the Junior World Championships, University World Championships, Senior World Championships, and Pan Am Games.She has trained and coached athletes to compete at every national championship since 1993. She currently coaches a men’s Olympic weightlifting team, Texas Barbell Club, several women who compete for Coffee’s Gym, and several competitive CrossFitters. She also regularly competition coaches many of USA’s elite athletes as an assistant or in the stead of their own personal coaches.

Ursula earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Exercise and Sports Science, and a Master’s Degree in Political Science both from Texas State University. She started a career as a professor at Austin Community College in kinesiology in 1994, and continues to teach in the government department.

She is and has been a Technical Director on USA Weightlifting’s Board of Directors since 2009. She works as part of the CrossFit Olympic Lifting Certification Staff and instructs the USAW Level 1 Sports Performance courses. She is the owner and operator of WeightliftingWise.com, providing instruction and education to coaches and athletes. She offers her own three-hour introductory Olympic weightlifting courses and wrote the curriculum and instructs The Art of Coaching Weightlifting for aspiring coaches. She is currently awaiting the November opening of her own facility Weightlifting Wise and Texas Barbell Club as part of RedSide CrossFit in Leander, Texas, just North of Austin, Texas.

She has been married to a soccer player since 2005 and they have a nine-year-old son who lifts sometimes and plays soccer a lot.

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