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#1 CHEST - Beginner

For most guys, “chest day” is the best day of the week, training-wise.   Read more

#2 CHEST - 15 Minute

Do you always find yourself short on time? No problem — we give a 15-minute workout for every bodypart in this issue, starting with chest.   Read more

#3 CHEST - At Home

Whether you always work out at home, or you have an adjustable bench, a barbell and dumbbells   Read more

Gigas Protein Bar

Elite-quality protein bar manufacturer Supreme Protein® has won a 2010 Protein Bar of the Year Award from the influential European retailer GigasNutrition.com, beating out a number of other top brands   Read more

#1 CHEST - Beginner #2 CHEST - 15 Minute #3 CHEST - At Home Gigas Protein Bar
  • 101 Workouts
  • Product Reviews

101_15_S#15 DELTS - At Home

For a killer shoulder smack in 15 minutes flat, head to the cable station. Start with rear delts, then move on to the middle delts, and finally blast the front delts

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101_14_S#14 DELTS - Beginner Guide

The three-headed shoulder muscle needs attention from multiple angles to fully develop. The anterior head is best hit with front raises. The middle head is worked via standing and seated lateral raises, while the rear delt is targeted when you do bent-over laterals and certain reverse-flye and row-type motions. While presses primarily work the front head, they do involve all three heads in the lift.

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101_6_S

#6 CHEST - Nasser's Workout

One of the most popular competitors in the IFBB, Nasser El Sonbaty has heaved plenty of weight in his 15 years as a pro.

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GSK to strengthen Nutritional Healthcare business with acquisition of Maxinutrition

 

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Gigas_SMALL

Supreme Protein® Nabs Gigas Europe’s Protein Bar of the Year Award for 2010

 

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101 Great Workouts

101_6_L

#6 CHEST - Nasser's Workout

One of the most popular competitors in the IFBB, Nasser El Sonbaty has heaved plenty of weight in his 15 years as a pro. Like most of his peers, he changes his workouts often, but this particular routine is a great example of how he combines presses and flyes for a more intense, and thus more productive, session.

>> “A technique that works well for me is rest/pause,” Nasser explains. “I may do a set of 6–10 reps on an incline dumbbell press, pause for 10 seconds, do another 4–5 reps, rest again and finish with 1–3 reps.”

>> Nasser recommends choosing a heavy weight, but not so heavy that you can’t get at least 6 reps in the set.


FLAT-BENCH DUMBBELL FLYE

START: With a dumbbell in each hand and a slight but unchanging bend in your elbows, lie on a flat bench and allow the weights to travel out and away from your body in a wide arc.

MOVE: Feel the stretch, then contract your pecs to forcefully raise the weights overhead while keeping the angle in your elbows nearly constant.


DECLINE DUMBBELL FLYE

START: When he does the decline press with dumbbells, Nasser will go right into the decline flye as the second half of a compound set. With a weight heavy enough for presses, he doesn’t get a really deep stretch at the bottom but still strives for a decent range of motion. Lie back on a decline bench and hold a pair of dumbbells overhead, keeping your hands in a neutral (palms-facing) position.

MOVE: Maintaining a slight bend in your elbows throughout, power the weights up in a wide arc, keeping constant tension on your chest by not locking out at the top nor allowing the weights

to rest against each other. When lowering the weights, fight gravity to gain the benefit of the negative.


DECLINE DUMBBELL PRESS

START: Lie back on a decline bench and hold the weights directly over your pecs.

MOVE: Resist the negative as you lower the dumbbells until they just touch your lower-chest region. In a forceful movement, power the weights up but don’t lock out. “I think ‘squeeze the pecs’ at the top,” Nasser adds.

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