It happened again this morning, another victim claimed by the flat bench press. My buddy called and told me he tore his pec while benching heavy over the weekend. It didn’t shock me at all. This lift has been destroying shoulders and tearing pecs since the beginning.
Back in the golden days of the Iron Game, when the military press was the upper body exercise of choice, nobody ever heard of rotator cuff injuries or pec tears. It was only after the bench press achieved extreme popularity that shoulders and pecs started getting obliterated at record rates.
The bottom position of a heavy bench press puts your shoulders in a very vulnerable and dangerous position. Some people can tolerate this for decades. For others it will only take a few years. But sooner or later it’s bound to happen. It’s really not a question of if, but when. The flat bench press will eventually lead to some kind of shoulder problems or pec tear in the majority of lifters who do it heavy enough and long enough.
Like a lot of you, I was obsessed with bench pressing for a long time. And I always trained athletes who were getting tested on it. I proudly proclaimed it to be a great size and strength building lift and measure of upper body power. Nothing made me happier than helping one of my guys add 50 pounds to his bench in the off season and watching him go to camp and destroy the competition.
But after 20 years in the game, having been witness to far too many injuries resulting from the flat bench press and getting my own shoulder cut open recently, I have finally had to look myself in the mirror and admit the truth that I have been hesitant to come to grips with for far too long…
Bench pressing sucks!
I have discussed this issue with many of the worlds top shoulder specialists in recent months and they are all in full agreement.
That’s not to say that you can never bench again. I know many of you will refuse to stop and I can relate to that mindset. If you get tested on the bench or compete in powerlifting, of course you have to do it. For the rest of you, who still love to press big weights and impress your friends and gym members I recommend you do so with extreme caution.
Make sure your technique is picture perfect, bringing the bar down under control to your nipple line, with your arms tucked 45 degrees to your side, shoulder blades squeezed tightly together and a crushing grip on the bar. Always drive your feet into the floor and use your lats when pressing the bar back up. Secondly, don’t use the flat bench for more than 4-6 weeks without switching to a safer version of a barbell press like an incline or floor press.
The smartest route, however, is to get rid of this destructive exercise forever. There are far more effective movements that will build mind blowing strength and size in your chest, shoulders and triceps while saving you years of frustrating and costly injuries.
While the bench press is probably the most dangerous exercise most of you are doing on a regular basis, it is not the only harmful one. Unfortunately many of you are probably doing damage to other body parts without even realizing it.
To discover the most effective and safest exercises that will replace the bench press and many other useless movements, check out Muscle Gaining Secrets at http://www.MuscleGainingSecrets.com/ today… before it’s too late.
Train smart,
Jason Ferruggia