| A
Chest Workout for Men
Looking to Develop Masculine "Square" Pecs
By Rusty Moore
If you want to come up with a great chest workout, it is important
to define your goals. In this article, I am focusing a chest workout
with the goal of developing a chest along the lines of what a Calvin
Klein Model might have. If you are purely after bench pressing power,
then you would obviously want to use a different chest workout.
This chest workout will develop some strength, but it isn't the
main focus of the workout.
What Should
a "Masculine Chest" Look Like?
A masculine
chest should have a square and angular look to it, not a rounded
and soft look to it. The traditional chest workout focuses on the
basic bench press. While the bench press is great in developing
size and power, it can develop the lower part of the chest too much.
A chest workout focused around the bench press develops the lower
pecs so much that they can begin to look like breasts. The part
of the chest that is underdeveloped in most men is the upper chest.
If your chest workout focuses on the upper chest and not so much
on the middle to lower part of the chest, then you will develop
square looking pecs.
How to Build
the Upper Pecs.
In order to
fill out the upper pecs, you need to include a variety of incline
pressing movements in your chest workout. You should make sure your
chest workout begins with an incline press of some sort. I recommend
beginning your chest workout with incline dumbbell presses on an
adjustable bench. I like dumbbells, since you can really work that
hard-to-hit inner part of the upper pecs. If you develop this part
of your chest, you will get that "line" up the middle
of your chest all the way to your collar bone.
Here is a Great
Chest Workout Which Focuses on Hard the to Develop Areas.
1) Incline Dumbbell
Presses: Adjust the bench to about 20-30 degrees above the flat
setting. Pick a weight that you can press 10 -12 times. Click the
bench up the the next higher angle setting. With the same weight,
try to do 8-10 reps. Click the bench up to a steeper angle and try
to get 6-8 reps. Keep clicking to a higher angle until you are either
close to upright, or until you can't get more than 5 reps. I like
starting my chest workout with this exercise, because it hits every
part of the upper chest.
2) Smith Machine
Incline Presses: I then take this same adjustable bench and bring
it over to the smith machine. I setup the bench so that the bar
hits my collar bone at the bottom of the lift. I will choose about
a 20-45 degree angle. I put on a pretty light weight and mainly
aim for higher reps to really fatigue the muscle. This is more of
a finishing move. The smith machine insures that I keep all stress
on the upper pecs. I find that if I use a regular incline bench
press in my chest workout, then I can cheat and take the stress
of my upper pecs. Include the incline smith press in your chest
workout if you have access to this piece of equipment.
3) Cable Crossovers:
You need the include cable crossovers into your chest workout if
you want to develop the line that defines the mid part of your chest.
You can also get a similar effect using machine flyes. Dumbbell
flyes are a great mass movement, but you won't get enough tension
in the middle of your chest. Make sure when doing machine flyes
or cable crossovers that you really flex the mid part of your chest
hard when your hands meet at the end of the movement.
Avoid All Flat
Bench Movements in Your Chest Workout for a While.
If you are like
most guys in the gym, your upper pecs probably need to catch up
with your mid and lower pecs. You should consider dropping all flat
bench movements out of your chest workout for a while. I dropped
all the flat bench exercises for aver two years and the look of
my chest improved dramatically. Another nice benefit of incline
movements is that your shoulders will also take on a better appearance.
Keep The Main
Points in Mind When Setting Up Your Chest Workout.
When setting
up your chest workout, you can be flexible on the exercises you
use. Just make sure that you focus on the angular and square look.
Having great pecs is less about size and more about proper proportion
and definition.
About the Author:
Rusty Moore is an avid trainer who gives advice to men and women
who want a physique that attracts the opposite sex. While most trainers
focus on gaining as much muscle mass as possible, Rusty focuses
on the lean "sleek model look". For men who want the build
of Brad Pitt -or- Matthew Mcconaughey and women who want the build
of Jessica Alba -or- Jessica Beil, Visit his Website by Clicking
this link... Lean Muscle Fitness
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Rusty_Moore
|