26 de Fevereiro, 2010
Treino de força bruta primitiva, à moda de “dinossauros” como o campeão Brooks Kubik, um artista da cultura física tradicional
Autor: O Primitivo. Categoria: Força
Vídeo: Brooks Kubik Bottom Position Squat 200kg
Comecei a ler o "DINOSAUR TRAINING", do famoso campeão Brooks Kubik (não confundir com o KubRick do cinema), proponente de uma filosofia de treino de força e de cultura física tradicional, ao estilo dos homens fortes do antigamente. Ou seja, das "ferramentas do ofício" não fazem parte aquelas máquinas modernas de tipo "aeróbico", mas antes a tradicional barra grossa, de 2 polegadas (para os típicos agachamentos, deadlifts, elevações com uma só mão, arremessos, etc.) ou a barra Gerard, e também sacos de areia, bigornas, barricas, cordas e similares. A preferência vai para exercícios compostos, mobilizando vários grupos musculares, e para cargas muito elevadas, potenciando força explosiva, com repetições mínimas, 3, 2 ou apenas 1. Ou seja, tudo coisas em desuso desde que os modernos "treinadores de sofá", como Kubik os designa, abandonaram os métodos tradicionais, baseados em pura força anabólica, para os transformar em actividades "científicas" semi-aeróbicas e sem transpiração. Eu percebo muito pouco de cultura física, embora já a tenha praticado há 20 anos no Ateneu Comercial de Lisboa, mas é facílimo entender que este Brooks Kubik é um verdadeiro artista da força funcional, um expoente máximo do que dá título ao mais conhecido poema de Bukowski: "Estilo"! Nem é preciso ler o livro para entender isto, basta ver esta filosofia de treino: pura concentração, esforço máximo, com baixas repetições, ausência de drogas e de tecnologia, etc. Este agachamento com barra de 200 kg (440 lb) é todo ele uma obra-prima de força primitiva, qual bela peça teatral meritória de público pagando pelo espectáculo!
DINOSAUR TRAINING
Dinosaur training is a philosophy of weight training / physical culture promoting a return to traditional strongman types of exercises and training, including:
A repudiation of drugs and supplements
High weights for low reps, including singles
Lifting kegs, anvils, medicine balls, sandbags and other heavy awkward objects
Compound exercises with barbells (squats, deadlifts, etc.)
Dinosaur training positions itself in opposition to aerobics exercise culture and to bodybuilding and other training methods geared towards cosmetic purposes. It stresses intensity, hard work, functional strength, power, endurance and mental toughness.
The foremost voice in the Dinosaur training movement is Brooks D. Kubik, although Bob Whelan, Ken Leistner, and John McCallum are counted as allies. Historical lifters like Peary Rader and various late 19th-century and early 20th-century strongmen and physical culture proponents such as Eugen Sandow are regarded as heroes.
Kubik’s book Dinosaur Training became highly acclaimed by the weight-lifting community. It offered simple yet effective routines, which appealed to those who had grown weary of the complex methods offered by many authors. The book was also motivational, and even humorous at times.
For a time Kubik advocated Dinosaur Training using bodyweight exercises, as described in his book Dinosaur Bodyweight Training (2006), using such exercises as pushups, handstand pushups, pullups, neck bridges, hanging leg raises, and two- and one-legged deep knee bends. In recent years however he has returned to writing about and advocating traditional weightlifting modes of training, using such exercises as squats, deadlifts, powercleans, high pulls, military presses, barbell bentover rows, benchpresses, etc. for low to moderate reps.
Kubik has elaborated further on the principles of Dinosaur training literally in a novel format in 2008’s "Legacy of Iron," which told the story of a young man being tutored in basic "old school" training and manhood by the lifters of York Barbell.
The primary texts describing the Dinosaur Training philosophy are Dinosaur Training (1996; 2nd edition, 1998), written by Brooks D. Kubik; Dinosaur Bodyweight Training (2006), written by Brooks D. Kubik; and the Dinosaur Files newsletter, published by Kubik from August 1997 to August 2002, then resurrected, with revisions and updates, in 2006; and Legacy of Iron (2008), written by Brooks D. Kubik. Ironman’s Ultimate Guide To Building Muscle Mass includes a chapter by Kubik on Dinosaur Training.[1]
Ligações recomendadas:
Dinosaur Training - Brooks Kubik
Oldtime Strongman Strength Training
Functional Hand and Grip Strength Training
Super Strength Books
Iron Mind, stronger minds & bodies