EXERCISES
Transcription
EXERCISES
JUNE 2010 / IRON MAN MAGAZINE— MAGAZINE—WE KNOW TRAINING™ BIG 10: STEROID-LIKE MASS SPIKE WITHOUT DRUGS ™ LOST EXERCISES Muscle-Rocking, Size-Shocking Forgotten Moves to Get You Huge! Stan McQuay Grow With a Pro: His Winning Workout and Diet LOST EXERCISES / STAN MCQUAY Decahedron Delts A Simple Solution for Wide, Wild Shoulders PLUS: • Arnold Classic—Full-Page Pics of Monster Muscle • Whey Research: How to Load Up on Amino Ammo • Bill Starr’s Midlife-Muscle Plan FC_SM102_June2010_F.indd 1 JUNE 2010 $5.99 www.IronManMagazine.com Please display until 6/1/10 4/1/10 11:36:32 AM WE KNOW TRAINING™ CONTE N JUNE 2010 FEATURES 60 TRAIN, EAT, GROW 128 118 STAN McQUAY Power-density Size Surge—complete workouts. 90 LOST EXERCISES David Young talks with top bodybuilder Dan Decker about his weird moves that you can use to get huge. 118 FROM THE CAN TO THE MAN Lonnie Teper interviews IFBB pro and former gangbanger Stan McQuay—plus, Stan’s winning diet and training program. 134 DECAHEDRON DELTS From the Bodybuilding.com archives, Clayton South outlines a simple shoulder solution for creating a wide illusion. 142 STEROIDLIKE MASS SPIKE Steve Holman and Jonathan Lawson analyze the data on why steroids work and give you 10 ways to synergize for more muscle size without them. 158 BODYBUILDING.COM L.A. FITNESS EXPO EVENTS A photographic look back at all the contests that had the Los Angeles Convention Center rocking. 158 L.A. FITNESS EXPO EVENTS Contents_F.indd 18 4/1/10 12:38:33 PM Vol. 69, No. 6 Jerry Brainum delves into the pros and cons of the king of bodybuilding proteins, with tips on getting the most bang from its amino ammo. 188 HEAVY DUTY John Little continues his insightful overview of Mike Mentzer’s Heavy Duty principles. This month: workout duration. 206 IFBB ARNOLD CLASSIC Freaky full-page photos: A big-picture look at the body combat in Columbus, Ohio—big names, big money, big show! BIG 10: STEROID-LIKE MASS SPIKE WITHOUT DRUGS ™ LOST EXERCISES Muscle-Rocking, Size-Shocking Forgotten Moves to Get You Huge! Stan McQuay Grow With a Pro: His Winning Workout and Diet LOST EXERCISES / STAN MCQUAY 174 WHEY AHEAD JUNE 2010 / IRON MAN MAGAZINE— MAGAZINE—WE KNOW TRAINING™ NTS Stan McQuay appears on this month’s cover. Photo by Michael Neveux. Decahedron Delts A Simple Solution for Wide, Wild Shoulders PLUS: JUNE 2010 $5.99 • Arnold Classic—Full-Page Pics of Monster Muscle • Whey Research: How to Load Up on Amino Ammo • Bill Starr’s Midlife-Muscle Plan www.IronManMagazine.com Please display until 6/1/10 FC_SM102_June2010_F.indd 1 4/1/10 11:36:32 AM 90 LOST EXERCISES 228 PROFILES IN MUSCLE: BRANDON BECKRICH How the up-and-coming national-level flexer strives for muscular success— including his complete workout and nutrition plan. 240 FEMME PHYSIQUE Steve Wennerstrom, IFBB women’s historian, takes a revealing look at two game-changing phenoms from the world of female muscle. 250 ONLY THE STRONG SHALL SURVIVE Part 2 of strength coach Bill Starr’s program for midlife muscle and power. 206 IFBB ARNOLD CLASSIC 134 DECAHEDRON DELTS Contents_F.indd 19 4/1/10 12:39:23 PM DEPARTMENTS DEPARTMENTS 30 TRAIN TO GAIN The real secret to building muscle, plus squats and arm size. 44 SMART TRAINING Coach Charles Poliquin outlines how to train for wrestling strength. 48 EAT TO GROW 30 TRAIN TO GAIN Energy in a bottle, fat-to-muscle reshuffle and wheat can make you weak. 72 NATURALLY HUGE John Hansen lays out the complete push-pull intermediate split for packing on serious size. 80 SHREDDED MUSCLE Drug-free pro Dave Goodin talks with Chef Jay about his rags-to-riches journey. 86 CRITICAL MASS Steve Holman’s strategy for losing fat, gaining muscle and unveiling fab abs. 196 BODYBUILDING PHARMACOLOGY Jerry Brainum’s follow-up look at anabolic steroids and kidney function. 220 NEWS & VIEWS Lonnie Teper’s full report from the megashow in Columbus. Plus, Teper’s Rising Stars. 232 PUMP & CIRCUMSTANCE Ruth Silverman’s look at how the ladies shook the house in Ohio. In the next IRON MAN: 260 MIND/BODY CONNECTION MANformation information, pop her cork and beer may boost bone health. 272 READERS WRITE Mass from the past, viva Ava and train sane to gain. Contents_F.indd 20 Our July issue kicks off with the inside scoop on how the BodySpace winners grabbed the gold at the Los Angeles Fitness Expo—from their diets to their workout programs to their winning attitudes. Also, Lonnie Teper talks with legendary pro bodybuilder John Terilli about how he stays big and lean at 50. This Aussie’s still got mass, class and his foot on the gas. And if you’re interested in growing gargantuan guns, you’ll want to check out how Todd Jewell builds his bi’s and tri’s to freaky proportions—tips, tricks and programs included. Find your July IRON MAN on newsstands the first week of June. 4/1/10 12:39:55 PM by John Balik Time Flies When You’re Having Fun The above is a popular refrain, but the reality is that time just flies. No matter what you do with that hour, it’s still an hour. There are only 24 of them in any day, and that’s the limit for everyone. It sounds trite, but time rules. When my children get stressed out over having too much to do and not enough time, I try to explain the unique nature of that finite—and infinite—quantity. It moves even if you don’t, and it can drag you along or positively push you into uncharted territory. Time is in the mind as much as it is on the face of the clock. One of the mysteries of time is how we feel it. Everyone’s experience is different, but everyone gets the same 60 minutes. The finite nature of time shapes us and gives an urgency to our plans. Some people see life as “one day at a time,” but I think that’s way too macro a measurement. A day is made up of many decisions. Whether we’re aware of them, we’re making them. For many people the time it takes to work out is always “too much”—they never seem to fit it in. “I’m too busy!” they claim. How do you measure a productive day? Everyone will have a different answer to that question. Arnold was and is a master of the first-things-first rule. He has the ability to strip away all of the distractions that surround us in our daily lives and clearly see not only what to do now but also what to do next. Arnold always finished the now before he moved on to the next. It sounds simple, but often we’re pushed by the movement of time and lose our focus. As a result, the followthrough of getting the now done well can be an ongoing struggle. Just getting it done is not enough, either. I say to my children, good enough is never good enough! As John Wooden, legendary UCLA basketball coach, famously asked, “If you don’t have time now to do it right, when will you have time to do it over?” Time is never “done over”; it’s gone. Time doesn’t care whether you work out in that hour or not. I don’t always have Arnold’s mastery of the firstthings-first rule, but I do have the same hour to train each day. For me the workout is always a source of pleasure—a version of Nike’s “Just Do It.” Every day our distractions try to push the workout into the optional category. Understand its power, relish it, and just do it! IM Founders 1936-1986: Peary & Mabel Rader Publisher/Editorial Director: John Balik Associate Publisher: Warren Wanderer Design Director: Michael Neveux Editor in Chief: Stephen Holman Art Director: T.S. Bratcher Senior Editor: Ruth Silverman Editor at Large: Lonnie Teper Articles Editor: Caryne Brown Assistant Art Director: Fernando Carmona Webmaster: Brad Seng IRON MAN Staff: Sonia Melendez Contributing Authors: Jerry Brainum, Eric Broser, David Chapman, Teagan Clive, Daniel Curtis, Dave Draper, Michael Gündill, Rosemary Hallum, Ph.D., John Hansen, Ron Harris, Rod Labbe, Skip La Cour, Jack LaLanne, Butch Lebowitz, John Little, Stuart McRobert, Gene Mozée, Charles Poliquin, Larry Scott, Jim Shiebler, Roger Schwab, C.S. Sloan, Bill Starr, Bradley Steiner, Eric Sternlicht, Ph.D., Randall Strossen, Ph.D., Richard Winett, Ph.D., and David Young Contributing Artists: Larry Eklund, Ron Dunn Contributing Photographers: Ron Avidan, Roland Balik, Reg Bradford, Jimmy Caruso, Bill Dobbins, Jerry Fredrick, Isaac Hinds, Dave Liberman, J.M. Manion, Merv, Gene Mozée, Ian Sitren Marketing/Web Producer: Helen Yu, (805) 385-3500, ext. 313 Accounting: Dana Glore, (805) 385-3500, ext. 323 Advertising Director: Warren Wanderer (805) 385-3500, ext. 368 (518) 743-1696; FAX: (518) 743-1697 Advertising Coordinator: Jonathan Lawson, (805) 385-3500, ext. 320 Newsstand Consultant: Angelo Gandino, (516) 796-9848 Subscriptions: 1-800-570-4766 or (714) 226-9782 E-mail: subscriptions@ironmanmagazine.com We reserve the right to reject any advertising at our discretion without explanation. All manuscripts, art or other submissions must be accompanied by a selfaddressed, stamped envelope. Send submissions to IRON MAN, 1701 Ives Avenue, Oxnard, CA 93033. We are not responsible for unsolicited material. Writers and photographers should send for our Guidelines outlining specifications for submissions. IRON MAN is an open forum. We also reserve the right to edit any letter or manuscript as we see fit, and photos submitted have an implied waiver of copyright. Please consult a physician before beginning any diet or exercise program. Use the information published in IRON MAN at your own risk. IRON MAN Internet Addresses: Web Site: www.ironmanmagazine.com John Balik, Publisher: ironleader@aol.com Steve Holman, Editor in Chief: ironchief@aol.com Ruth Silverman, Senior Editor: ironwman@aol.com T.S. Bratcher, Art Director: ironartz@aol.com Helen Yu, Marketing: helen@ironmanmagazine.com Warren Wanderer, Advertising: warren@roadrunner.com Jonathan Lawson, Ad Coordinator: ironjdl@aol.com Brad Seng, Webmaster: brad@ironmanmagazine.com 22 JUNE 2010 \ www.ironmanmagazine.com PubLtr_F.indd 22 4/1/10 11:07:37 AM