Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Lionel Beyeke adds 27lbs in ONE year--heres how

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Lionel Beyeke adds 27lbs in ONE year--heres how

    Growth Spurt: 30 Pounds Of Muscle In One Year.



    The plan that packed 30 pounds of muscle onto IFBB pro Lionel Beyeke.






    by Flex, Sean Andros And Hany Rambod Dec 02, 2011



    The is what IFBB pro Lionel Beyeke packed onto his frame heading into the 2011 contest season; not a guy who never trained before, not a guy with no concept of nutrition, but a 225-pound pro. If he had room to grow, then you do, too, and we've got the plan for your next growth spurt.

    This isn't about some crazy new training technique, cutting-edge supplement or revolutionary diet. Those aren't what Beyeke got when he called on leading industry trainer/nutritionist Hany Rambod. Instead, he got a prescription for hard work and the knowledge to grow.
    And we're going to share it with you.

    Rambod takes you back to basics, and then teaches you how to change the program along the way because change is what will keep your body growing. We can't promise you'll put on 30 pounds every year, but if you learn this program, the results will be your first
    growth spurt of many to come.

    Dangerous Potential

    Beyeke's unrefined physique displayed genetic gifts and limitless potential when he placed sixth in his pro debut at the 2010 Phoenix Pro. With full, round muscle bellies and a flowing X frame, this guy had all the tools but just not enough lumber.



    Beyeke realized he lacked the knowledge to reach his potential. As a resident of France, he had never been exposed to the training and nutrition resources that some people in the United States take for granted. All he needed was a solid plan, so the day after his sixth-place finish, he called on the best in the business: Hany Rambod, the man guiding the contest prep for guys like Jay Cutler and Phil Heath.

    Rambod's three-pronged attack focused on basic exercises, sound technique and consistent progress. He also formulated a diet that was sure to fuel Beyeke's workouts without making him an overstuffed mess.

    The result? Beyeke showed up at the 2011 New York Pro with 252 pounds of flowing muscle. He placed fourth there and qualified for the Mr. Olympia. A few weeks later, he placed second at the Toronto Pro and proved himself a future threat on any stage.


    CURRENT STATS

    BIRTHDATE
    September 10, 1980
    BIRTHPLACE
    Cameroon
    CURRENT RESIDENCE
    Paris, France
    HEIGHT
    5'10"
    WEIGHT
    252 pounds (contest);
    285 pounds (offseason)
    CONTEST HIGHLIGHTS
    2011 IFBB Toronto Pro, 2nd;
    2011 IFBB New York Pro, 4th;
    2009 Arnold Amateur, super-heavyweight, 2nd

    Training

    Guidelines





    Most sets are 8-10 reps, the ideal range for muscle growth.

    The first two sets of the first exercise for each bodypart are warm-ups. The last two are working sets. The first working set comprises 8-10 reps to failure, plus 2 forced reps. The last working set will include 8-10 reps to failure, 2 forced reps and 3-5 partial reps at the end.

    Rest between sets will be 90.120 seconds, except for leg exercises, which can be a little higher.

    Cardio is to be performed three or four times per week, 20-30 minutes per session, first thing in the morning. Use a stair-climber machine and maintain a heart rate of 135 beats per minute.




    Rambod's Rules

    1. CHANGE IT UP Don't let your body get used to anything. Every three to four weeks, change the exercises and the order in which they are done. Change the angles by using different hand/foot positions. Rest periods can also change; this is an often-overlooked training variable.

    2. REST On at least two days per week, stay completely out of the gym. This means no lifting! And don't neglect sleep - this is one of the most overlooked factors in muscle growth. Sleep equals time to grow.

    3. GOALS Create mini goals. Don't just expect to put on a ton of muscle in one year without checking yourself along the way. Set weight-gain goals every 2-4 weeks and evaluate the results. If you fall short, make an adjustment for the next goal. When you stop setting goals, you stop critical thinking and stop making gains.

    4. MAINTAIN Every 8-10 weeks, take a couple of weeks to prevent a plateau. Don't stop training, but back off a little and let your body recover. Stop trying to get stronger and don't push sets to failure. After two weeks of maintaining your previous gains, go back to 110%. Reduce your calories during this back-off phase as well. This gives your body a break from digesting and utilizing all the food you need for growing.

    5. FST-7 This is the advanced training technique I've used with all my athletes. It stands for fascia stretch training, and the seven refers to the number of sets performed usually as the final exercise of a targeted bodypart. Basically, you train that bodypart heavy as you normally would on any given day, keeping the rep range at 8-12, but on the last exercise you perform the 7 sets to finish off that particular muscle, with minimal rest in between to get the best pump possible.

    For example, at the end of your shoulder workout, you could do seven sets of laterals, resting 30 seconds between sets. The resulting pump is insane!

    We don't list FST-7 exercises in this program because it should be used as an intensity-boosting technique as needed, and not in every single workout.

    Chest


    Chest Workout

    Flat Dumbbell Presses
    4 sets of 8-10 reps

    Hammer Strength Incline Presses
    3 sets of 8-10 reps

    Machine Flyes
    3-7 sets of 8-10 reps

    Weighted Dips
    3 sets of 8-10 reps
    Printable Page PDF Document
    Tips
    1.Alternate the first exercise between dumbbells, barbells and machines. Use them all each workout, but change the order and angle.
    2.On all chest moves, you must arch your back, throw your chest high and keep your shoulders back. This takes the shoulders out of the movement.
    3.Low-rep flat-bench presses (fewer than eight reps) are a quick way to tear a pec.
    4.Use a full range of motion on all exercises. The only exceptions are intensity multipliers used on the last set. When you reach failure, push your muscles further with assisted negative reps or partials.
    5.Lean forward on dips to emphasize chest.

    Legs


    Hamstrings AM Workout

    Stiff-Leg Deadlift
    4 sets of 8-10 reps

    Seated Leg Curls
    3 sets of 8-10 reps

    Lying Leg Curls
    3 sets of 8-10 reps

    Quads PM Workout

    Leg Extensions
    4 sets of 12-15 reps

    Squats
    5 sets of 8-10 reps

    Hack Squats
    4 sets of 8-10 reps

    Leg Presses
    6-7 sets of 8-10 reps

    Walking Lunges
    3 sets of 8-10 reps
    Printable Page PDF Document
    Tips
    1.Change your stance on squats, hack squats and presses. This is like using a different handle on a cable for arms.
    a.Shoulder-width stance with toes forward for outer sweep
    b.Wide stance with toes out (sumo style) for inner quads
    2.Change your foot position on leg extensions to produce soreness (stimulation) in all areas of your quads.
    a.Toes in for outer quads
    b.Toes out for inner quads
    3.Change your total set count.
    a.High-intensity training (one or two warm-ups and one all-out set to failure)
    b.Volume training (one or two warm-ups and 2-4 working sets using reps ranging from 8-20)
    4.Stay away from single-rep sets and weights you can't handle for at least 5-6 reps at the heaviest.
    5.A great alternate workout for hamstrings is the old 5 x 5 set/rep scheme with the stiff-leg deadlift. Using the same weight, do five sets of five reps, all to failure. Stiff legs are the only true compound movement for hamstrings.

    Back


    Back Workout

    Wide-Grip Pullups
    4 sets to failure

    Reverse-Grip Pullups
    3 sets to failure

    Deadlifts
    5 sets of 8-10 reps

    Wide-Grip Pulldowns
    3 sets of 8-10 reps

    Barbell Rows
    3 sets of 8-10 reps

    Close-Grip Pulldowns
    3 sets of 8-10 reps

    Back Extensions
    3 sets of 10-12 reps (holding 25-pound plate)
    Printable Page PDF Document


    Tips
    1.Form, form, form. Always arch your back and throw your chest high. Rounding your back puts pressure on your lower erectors and leaves you prone to injury. Wear a belt on your heaviest sets.
    2.Pull with your elbows. Think of your arms as hooks; don't squeeze and pull with your hands, squeeze from your back and drive your elbows down and back.
    3.Don't worry about the weight. The back is very strong and it's easy to have an ego trip, but hard to grow a great back. If the weight is too heavy you'll be pulling with your arms and rounding your back.
    4.Pullups are the best exercise for back development. Use them in every workout. If you can get more than 10-12 reps for three sets, start adding weight (use a "dip belt").



    FST-7 MYTHS ■It doesn't have to be seven sets, so don't be afraid to experiment. It could be five, nine or anything in between. It's all about getting the maximum pump, so experiment until you find it.
    ■Sevens don't mean light training. You go as heavy as possible to hit failure at each set without breaking the proper form. Anyone can do seven light sets; the challenge is to do them with a weight that makes it hard!
    ■The stretching part of the exercise (the top of a pulldown, the bottom of a leg extension, etc.) is not more important than the contraction. The squeeze or flex of the movement is the critical point. Contract hard on every rep to get the most blood flow.
    ■It doesn't have to be done at the end of a workout. Sometimes I have my athletes start a workout with what I call preloaded FST-7. A great bodypart for this technique is biceps and the pump is unreal. Pick a biceps exercise that really isolates the biceps and takes out any shoulder involvement, like a preacher curl. Perform seven sets of 10-12 reps, resting only 30 seconds between sets. Then continue on with your biceps workout.
    ■Sevens don't have to be done on machines - free weights, cables and Smith machines can be used just as effectively. I recommend machines to beginners for safety reasons. The machine puts you on a fixed plane of movement and you can't get sloppy as you fatigue. If you decide to use free weights, you must pay extra attention to form.

    Shoulders


    Shoulders Workout

    Seated Dumbbell Presses
    4 sets of 8-10 reps (one notch below perpendicular)

    Bent-Over Cable Laterals (one-armed version shown)
    4 sets of 8-10 reps

    Incline Bench Rear Laterals
    3 sets of 8-10 reps

    Behind-The-Back One-Arm Cable Laterals (front version shown)
    3 sets of 8-10 reps

    Prone Incline Bench Front Raises (standing version shown)
    3 sets of 8-10 reps

    Dumbbell Shrugs
    3 sets of 8-10 reps

    Machine Shrugs
    3 sets of 8-10 reps
    Printable Page PDF Document
    Tips
    1.Work the angles. There are three sides to the shoulder muscles and countless angles to hit them. Sit, stand, lean; barbell, dumbbell, machine; use them all.
    2.Start the workout with a press. Hit the big compound movement while you're strongest.
    3.Don't be afraid to work your rear delts near the beginning or middle of the workout. If you always do them at the end they will never grow!
    4.Warm up your shoulders, chest, triceps and rotator cuffs before training. The shoulders are vulnerable to injury.
    5.Try seated lateral raises to really isolate the side delts. This is my favorite move to build round shoulders!

    Arms


    Biceps Workout

    Dumbbell Preacher Curls
    4 sets of 8-10 reps

    Spider Curls
    3 sets of 8-10 reps

    Concentration Curls
    3 sets of 8-10 reps

    Hammer Curls
    3 sets of 8-10 reps

    Triceps Workout

    Pressdowns
    4 sets of 8-10 reps

    Close-Grip Bench Press
    3 sets of 8-10 reps

    Bench Dips
    3 sets of 8-10 reps

    Lying Extensions
    3 sets of 8-10 reps
    Printable Page PDF Document
    Tips
    1.Keep your shoulders back on all biceps curls; it's very easy for your shoulders to take over and move the weight.
    2.For dumbbell curls, supinate your wrist as you curl up. Think about turning your pinky outward for maximum biceps stimulation.
    3.Don't be afraid to mix up your arm training and throw a triceps movement in the middle of the biceps workout or vice versa. You can also occasionally try supersetting biceps and triceps.
    4.Triceps grow best from old-school movements like close-grip bench presses, lying extensions and cross-bench dips (with weight on your lap).
    5.Preloaded FST-7 (see the sidebar "FST-7 Myths" for an explanation of this technique) is designed for arm training. It makes for a great mind-muscle connection that will blow up your arms!

    Calves & Abs


    Calves Workout

    Standing Calf Raises
    3 sets of 10-20 reps

    Seated Calf Raise
    4 sets of 10-12 reps

    Leg Press Calf Raises
    3 sets of 15-20 reps

    Abs

    Reverse Crunches
    3 sets to failure (knees to elbows)

    Hanging Knee Raises
    3 sets of 15 reps

    Machine Crunches
    3 sets to failure
    Alternate Option:
    Rope Crunches


    Tips
    1.Calves are trained twice per week at the start of the workout: on Monday before chest and Friday before shoulders.
    2.Don't train calves before your quad and hamstring workout. You might not realize it but calf training fatigues your legs.
    3.Train abs twice per week at the start of the workout: on Thursday before back and Saturday before arms.
    4.Use short rest periods for abs and train each set to failure.
    5.Change the order of exercises for both calves and abs.
    a.a. For abs, rotate exercises so the focus of the first exercise changes - sometimes start with upper abs, sometimes start with lower abs.
    b.b. For calves, rotate the fi rst exercise between standing (legs straight) and seated movements.

    Nutrition

    Even if your training is perfect, an incomplete diet will prevent any muscle gains. If you want to grow, you've got to eat, and the most important key to growth is a caloric surplus. The excess calories will fuel growth and provide the energy to train. Rambod breaks down the guidelines on how to eat and supplement for maximum size.

    Rambod's Rules
    ■BALANCE YOUR PROTEINS: Take in protein of all types from all sources — fast acting, slow acting, whey, casein, egg, fish and animal proteins (beef, chicken, turkey, etc.).
    ■WHERE'S THE BEEF: Beef is great for offseason growth. In addition to the amino acids, you get tons of B vitamins, iron and testosterone-boosting fats.
    ■JUNK IT UP: Don't be afraid to eat some junk food once or twice per week. This boosts your metabolism and gives your body a different type of fuel. Stick to the "clean junk." These are calorically dense, but not super greasy foods. Examples are pasta, burgers, steak, sweet potato fries and cheesecake.
    ■BALANCE YOUR CARBS: If you want to grow, insulin spikes are your friends. You just have to time them correctly, like breakfast and postworkout. These are the times to have some fast-acting carbs that quickly replenish glycogen stores.

    Beyeke's Offseason Meal Plan


    Meal 1 - 10 AM

    Whole-Grain Pancakes

    5 pancakes


    Natural Peanut Butter

    1 tbsp


    Egg Whites With Filet Mignon

    1 cup whites, 4 ounces filet mignon


    Fruit

    2 servings (any fruit, such as berries, banana, grapefruit)


    Meal 2 - 1 PM

    Chicken Breast Tenders

    10 ounces


    Sweet Potato

    12 ounces


    Avocado

    1/2 avocado


    Pineapple

    1 cup


    Meal 3 - 4 PM

    Filet Mignon

    10 ounces


    White Rice

    1 1/2 cups (cooked)


    Avocado

    1/2 avocado


    Pre-Workout - 5:15 PM

    Carb Supplement

    1 scoop

    Should contain Vitargo, Karbolyn dextrose, or maltodextrin.


    Pre-Workout Supplement

    2 scoops

    Should contain NO boosters, creatine, beta-alanine and glutamine.


    Train - 6 PM



    Post Workout - 7:30 PM

    Recovery Supplement

    2 scoops

    Should contain BCAAs, creatine, glutamine, and NO boosters.


    Carb Supplement

    1 scoop

    Should contain Vitargo, Karbolyn dextrose, or maltodextrin.


    Meal 4 - 8 PM

    Filet Mignon

    10 ounces


    Gluten-Free Pasta With Olive Oil

    3 ounces pasta 1 tbsp olive oil


    Meal 5 - 11 PM

    Salmon, Tuna or Chicken

    10 ounces


    Potato or Pasta With Olive Oil

    10-12 ounces with 1 tbsp olive oil


    Meal 6 - 1 AM

    Whey Protein With Natural Peanut Butter

    75 grams whey with 1 tbsp peanut butter


    Totals


    6,098 Calories
    351 grams Protein
    502 grams Carbs
    283 grams Fat

    Supplements



    Training and diet will make up the most of your program, and if you nail them both the gains are sure to follow. But with all that effort, you'd be selling yourself short if you didn't add in the proper supplementation. This final 10% will set you apart from the rest.
    1.Avoid stimulant-based products preworkout when you are trying to grow. Stimulants like caffeine restrict blood flow and kill your pump. They can also screw up your sleep pattern and ruin your appetite.


    STAY LEAN

    Rambod's method to keep you lean is simple: take progress pictures every two weeks. When you compare your photos to the previous set, you'll see what really changed. If you see more new fat than muscle, then it's time to reduce the calories and add in some cardio. It's hard to be objective in the mirror each day, so take pictures - they don't lie!
    2.Branched-chain amino acids are great for building muscle. Try 5-10 grams of pure BCAAs three times per day: preworkout, postworkout and before bed.
    3.If you can't get enough calories from food, then drink the rest. Weight-gaining shakes have a place, but don't depend on them. Whole foods should always be the primary source of calories.
    4.Creatine should be part of any muscle-building plan. Five grams per day is perfect for cell volumization and a strength boost.
    5.A fast-acting carbohydrate drink postworkout will spike insulin and aid in nutrient transport. Your creatine and BCAAs will get to the muscles quicker to start building and repairing.

  • #2
    Longest post in the history of the site!

    Comment


    • #3
      Not to stroke this, but definitely worth reading through all the way IMO. There are some good pearls in there...

      Comment


      • #4
        The diet is most intriguing to me; over 6kcal. Nearly half from fat sources.

        Comment


        • #5
          They left out the most important part. The part that ties everything together and utilizes all those cals to be used for muscle building purposes.... DRUGS. Eating and training like that will do nothing at all but get you fat and over trained if you don't incorporate the drugs.

          Comment


          • #6
            tons of people that dont know any better will follow his routine and diet and turn into a sack of shit because of the dishonesty of the mags that write this stuff up.

            i agree, good post and read but in a way its BS without the main ingratiation.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by FitnessBrat
              Longest post in the history of the site!
              Downside of browsing with your phone. It's really not that long a post if viewed on computer.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by rado

                Who you kidding...It's pretty long bro lol.
                On the app she is using it looks like its 10 pages long.

                Comment


                • #9
                  That's some serious volume there... not for the drug-free, that's for sure.

                  I remember when I first started lifting weights... I think in the late eighties. All these routines and calories from the pros used to be in the magazines then (as they are now). There was a guy in the gym who kept claiming he ate 6000 calories a day. He was in the gym when I showed up and he was there when I left - not sure how many sets and exercises he would do. Now that I think about it, he just looked like shit - no definition, just a medium sized lump.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    He looked better smaller

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Mr incredible
                      He looked better smaller
                      False, every muscle is fuller and he compromised nothing.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Man u guys know FLEX aint going to put the drugs in there but the diet...goddamn that gets me salivating.

                        A couple grams of test, half gram of tren, 3/4 abombs/day, gh, slin like a muthafucka???????????????????????????????????????? ?????????????????????????????????????????????????? ???????????????????????????????????????????????

                        Mr I., Come on bro?? Seriously looked better smaller?

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Fuckin french niggy looks like curtis jackson 50cent lol

                          Comment

                          Working...
                          X