Curious for those lifters out there if anyone is splitting up quads and hamstrings into 2 days, then hitting both harder than if they were combined.
Issues I’m trying to fix and schedule I’m trying to build a routine around:
1) I bench more than I squat as of last week. Clearly my chest workout is working, I haven’t made gains on legs in well over a year. Wondering if creating 2 specialized leg days will help
2) Currently squat on leg day, then deadlift on back day. Think by doing them sequential days I screw whichever one happens the following day. Obviously same day will impact intensity
3) Dont want to squat or deadlift after Wednesday because it screws my Saturday hiking or hunting
4) Want to increase my work capacity hiking/hunting. 7 miles with light pack on trail or 20 pound pack for about 3-4 miles off trail wears me out, terrain is relatively steep and lots up and down, but certainly not mountain elevations
5) Lungs typically fail before my legs, but I’m assuming the more load they can handle the less blood flow I need to steal from my legs
6) Continuing to run needs to be prioritized over leg gains. Down 30 pounds this year, 8 more to go to get to my goal weight. Also, as referenced above, my lungs fail before my legs typically
Current Routine:
- M: Chest, 24 minute run
- T: Back (includes deadlift), 16 minute run
- W: Legs, walk 3 miles
- R: Shoulders, 16 minute run
- F: 24 minute run
Leg day consist of:
- Squat - 4x6 250
- Dumbbell Lunge - 3x8 60s (1 in each hand, 120 total)
- 1 legged RDL - 3x8 45
- Calf Raise - 3x10 100
Thinking about splitting it as follows:
- M: Quads, run 16 minutes
- T: Back, run 24 minutes
- W: Hammies and lower backrun 16 minutes
- R: Upper Back/lats, run 24 minutes
-F: run 24 minutes
On quad day my plan would be:
4x8 Squat
3x10 lunge
3x10 leg press
3x10 leg extension
3x10 calf raises
Hamstring day:
5x5 deadlift
3x8 1 legged rdl
3x8 Straight leg deadlift
3x8 hamstring curl
3x8 back extension
Any issues/gaps you see? Does it actually benefit me to split legs like this or am I playing with diminishing returns?
Issues I’m trying to fix and schedule I’m trying to build a routine around:
1) I bench more than I squat as of last week. Clearly my chest workout is working, I haven’t made gains on legs in well over a year. Wondering if creating 2 specialized leg days will help
2) Currently squat on leg day, then deadlift on back day. Think by doing them sequential days I screw whichever one happens the following day. Obviously same day will impact intensity
3) Dont want to squat or deadlift after Wednesday because it screws my Saturday hiking or hunting
4) Want to increase my work capacity hiking/hunting. 7 miles with light pack on trail or 20 pound pack for about 3-4 miles off trail wears me out, terrain is relatively steep and lots up and down, but certainly not mountain elevations
5) Lungs typically fail before my legs, but I’m assuming the more load they can handle the less blood flow I need to steal from my legs
6) Continuing to run needs to be prioritized over leg gains. Down 30 pounds this year, 8 more to go to get to my goal weight. Also, as referenced above, my lungs fail before my legs typically
Current Routine:
- M: Chest, 24 minute run
- T: Back (includes deadlift), 16 minute run
- W: Legs, walk 3 miles
- R: Shoulders, 16 minute run
- F: 24 minute run
Leg day consist of:
- Squat - 4x6 250
- Dumbbell Lunge - 3x8 60s (1 in each hand, 120 total)
- 1 legged RDL - 3x8 45
- Calf Raise - 3x10 100
Thinking about splitting it as follows:
- M: Quads, run 16 minutes
- T: Back, run 24 minutes
- W: Hammies and lower backrun 16 minutes
- R: Upper Back/lats, run 24 minutes
-F: run 24 minutes
On quad day my plan would be:
4x8 Squat
3x10 lunge
3x10 leg press
3x10 leg extension
3x10 calf raises
Hamstring day:
5x5 deadlift
3x8 1 legged rdl
3x8 Straight leg deadlift
3x8 hamstring curl
3x8 back extension
Any issues/gaps you see? Does it actually benefit me to split legs like this or am I playing with diminishing returns?