Nutrition Intermittent Fasting for Lifters: Useful Tool or Muscle Killer? 16:8 in trained lifters performs similarly to a normal eating pattern in controlled studies. The practical wins usually aren't worth the adherence cost.
Supplements The Truth About Pre-Workout Supplements A typical pre-workout tub has 15 ingredients. Three have real evidence — caffeine, creatine, and beta-alanine. The rest is margin.
Caffeine Caffeine and Training: Dose, Timing, and When to Cycle Off Three to six milligrams per kilo gives you the full performance bump caffeine can offer. More doesn't stack, and chronic users need a cycle-off every quarter.
Protein Whey vs Casein vs Plant Protein: The Differences That Actually Matter At 40 grams, all three proteins hit the leucine threshold for muscle protein synthesis. The differences shrink significantly at adequate doses.
Nutrition Macro Math: How to Set Protein, Carbs, and Fat in 10 Minutes Protein: 1 gram per pound of lean mass. Fat: 0.3 to 0.4. Fill the rest with carbs. That math takes ten minutes and lands within five percent of optimal.
Accessory Work Accessory Lifts That Actually Move the Compound Numbers Most accessory lifts are filler. Five of them — paused squats, close-grip bench, deficit deadlifts, front squats, weighted dips — move the compounds directly.
Injury Prevention How to Program Around a Bad Back A bad back doesn't force you to stop lifting. It forces you to pick smarter lifts for four to six weeks while the tissue sorts itself out.
Renaissance Periodization Renaissance Periodization: What RP Actually Gets Right RP's MEV/MRV model is the most useful hypertrophy concept of the past decade. The rest of the brand is less interesting than the math behind it.
Texas Method Texas Method: The Intermediate Program Most Lifters Screw Up The Texas Method breaks down for most people at the volume day, not the intensity day. Five-by-five at 90 percent is not always a weekly event.
Periodization Block Periodization vs DUP: The Two Models That Actually Work Linear periodization hasn't been competitive since the 90s. Blocks and DUP are the two models worth your time as an intermediate-advanced lifter.
Programming Push/Pull/Legs vs Upper/Lower: Which Split Wins PPL at six days a week out-assumes most lifters' recovery. Upper/lower at four days hits the same frequency per muscle with better sustainability.
Starting Strength Starting Strength Revisited: Is Rippetoe's Program Still Relevant? Starting Strength is still the correct answer for a true beginner. For intermediate lifters, the case for it has weakened considerably.