Train your WEAKNESS first, like you said, your nearly there on the upperbody, why create a BIGGER gap.
This is what I've been doing. Bench press I got bodyweight lifts on, I wasn't sure if I could get more, but I was enjoying it
too much, so I decided that I wouldn't lift any more on bench until I could lift as much on barbell row and squat. It was very much, "Kyle you lazy prick, you are not allowed to improve your strengths until your weaknesses are strengths, too."
This makes me drive harder on my weaknesses, I'm in a hurry!
trofius said:
So I stop training upper body to concentrate on squats and deads....That does not make sence..
No, just maintain the upper body. Like me, I do three proper workouts a week. I have three basic exercises - one press, one pull, one squat. I add in an exercise on whatever's weak. So my press was relatively strong, but my back relatively weak. Okay, one press,
two pulls, one squat. The press is whatever I'm weakest in,
twice a week, and then I maintain the strength on the strong press by training it
once a week.
For example,
Wed:- Overhead press, Chins, BB bentover rows, squat
Fri:- Bench press, Chins, BB bentover rows, squat
Sun:- Overhead press, Chins, BB bentover rows, squat
I try to increase the weight on everything except the bench. I did this, it brought my back strength up to match my chest. In the beginning I could bench 80kg but only row 40kg or something, now I can bench 80kg and row 80kg both. So now I switch it around and focus on legs. When they get up to a good level I'll allow myself to increase weights on bench again.
I can't honestly say I remember all that when I'm coming out of the hole on a squat, though. I'm just thinking, "fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu..... uuuuuuuu....... ck."
trofius said:
also next week I aim to be doing a few reps at 100kg or more for squats..almost matching my bench, My legs are getting stronger quicker than I thought and hope to be doing 120 squats within 3 months.
Assuming you have no medical stuff stopping you, ideally you want your legs to have about 50% more pushing power than your press. Benching 100kg and squatting 100kg for the same number of reps is not balanced; benching 100kg and squatting 150kg is much more like it.
Really, in order of strength it should be legs, back, and chest. In most blokes it's backwards, though.