How to Use Progressive Overload for Off Season Hypertrophy
I am focusing on the basics this year and I want to master how to use progressive overload for off season hypertrophy. I have been stuck on the same weights for my bench press and deadlift for way too long. I am starting to track every single set and rep in a logbook to make sure I am actually getting stronger.
I am using a double progression model where I aim to hit a certain rep range before I increase the weight on the bar. I find that this keeps me accountable and prevents me from just going through the motions. I am also focusing on my tempo and ensuring I am not using momentum to move the weight.
Do you have a favorite app for tracking your lifts? I have been using a simple notebook but I am looking for something more modern. I also want to know if you find that de-load weeks are necessary every six to eight weeks to keep the progress coming. I am determined to hit some new personal records this year.
Welcome to the grind, Jersey! The biggest thing people miss is that progressive overload isn't just adding weight to the bar. In the off-season, I focus on 'quality' reps. If you add 5lbs but your form goes to rubbish, you didn't actually overload the muscle, you just used more momentum.
Bang on, Mike. I’ve been using a double progression system lately. I pick a rep range, say 8-12, and I don't touch the weight until I can hit all sets for 12 with perfect control. It stops you from ego lifting when the calories are high and you feel like Superman.
Totally agree! Ego lifting is the fastest way to a snapped tendon. Down here in my gym, I see guys jumping up 20lbs a week on bench and then wonder why their shoulders are trashed by November. Micro-loading with 1.25lb plates is a game changer for sustainable growth.
Has anyone tried focusing on 'eccentric' control as a form of overload? I’ve started doing 3-second negatives on all my accessory work. Even if the weight stays the same for a few weeks, the time under tension is much higher, and my soreness (the good kind) is through the roof.
I disagree that eccentric focus is 'overload' in the traditional sense, but it definitely increases the stimulus. For a true off-season push, I prefer adding a set before I add weight. Going from 3 sets to 4 sets of the same weight is a massive increase in total volume.
I’m with Dave on the volume. If I can’t add weight, I add a rep to every set. Once I’m at the top of my range, I add a set. It’s a slow build, but it keeps the joints from feeling like they're full of glass during a heavy bulk.
Does anyone use a logbook or app? I’ve been using an old-school notebook for a decade. There is something about physically writing down that you beat your previous week that keeps the motivation high when the 'prep' excitement wears off.
Notebook all the way, mate. Apps are a bit of a faff when your hands are chalky. Plus, you can't throw your phone across the gym after a PB quite like you can a pen and paper lol.
I use an app just so I can see the graphs. Seeing that upward trend over 6 months is great for the ego. JerseyJock, are you focusing on the big compound movements or trying to overload everything at once?
I find it impossible to overload 'everything.' I usually pick two main movements per session to really push the numbers on, and the rest is just about maintaining the mind-muscle connection and getting a pump.
That's a smart move, NorthernLass. Trying to add weight to lateral raises every week is a fool's errand. You'll just end up swinging the weight with your traps. Keep the heavy overload for the presses, rows, and squats.
Totally agree! Small muscle groups don't handle linear load increases well. For biceps and shoulders, I find that reducing rest periods is a better way to 'overload' without destroying the joints.
Actually, I disagree with reducing rest in the off-season. If you want maximum hypertrophy, you need enough rest to move the heaviest weight possible for the next set. Save the short rests for when you're cutting and just chasing a burn.
London has a point. 2-3 minutes between sets is my sweet spot in the off-season. I want my heart rate to settle so my muscles are the limiting factor, not my lungs.
What do y'all think about 'intensity techniques' like rest-pause or drop sets as overload? My coach has me doing one 'all-out' rest-pause set for my final exercise. It's brutal but the numbers are climbing.
Rest-pause is incredible for hypertrophy. It allows you to hit 'effective reps' (those last few before failure) more often in a single set. Just don't do it on squats unless you want to meet your maker.
Haha, truth! I keep rest-pause to machines only—hack squats or chest press. It’s much safer when you’re pushing that close to the edge.
Does anyone ever cycle their overload? I find I can push for about 6 weeks and then I need a deload week where I drop the weight by 20% just to let my nervous system recover.
Deloads are essential. If you don't schedule a deload, your body will schedule one for you in the form of an injury. I usually go 4 weeks on, 1 week easy.