Push ups and it's variations are the best P4P upper body body excercises there are. If anyone has any info studies proving otherwise, then please.
^^^ right... How about you do some research yourself? Why don't you find us an article that supports your position, and then I'm sure we can dig up several hundred articles that say differently.
That was not your argument. Nor is what you said true. So you take several months to do as many pushups as you want, and then see if your 'core' can handle a several hundred pound deadlift for multiple repetitions...
So holding isometric exercises will not help you strengthen your core? The plank is the most popular isometric exercise and guess what when you're in pushup position that's a plank. You can hold this for 30 secs then do a pushup, or two, or ten. Or hold the position at the bottom of your pushup with your chest hovering inches from the ground. Try doing this for time 2-3min or whatever, do mutiple sets, then get back to me about how it doesn't do anything for strength gains.
I would say a plank would be good for strengthing the core of a person who doesn't exercise at all, or an 80 year old woman.So holding isometric exercises will not help you strengthen your core? The plank is the most popular isometric exercise and guess what when you're in pushup position that's a plank. You can hold this for 30 secs then do a pushup, or two, or ten. Or hold the position at the bottom of your pushup with your chest hovering inches from the ground. Try doing this for time 2-3min or whatever, do mutiple sets, then get back to me about how it doesn't do anything for strength gains.
What about half to death? Like when you get scared half to death...
What is this math you speak of?1. Everyone knows that half of Death is Silliness... did you not have math class in school?
Sorry, pleast don't kill me with your super-human-like strength you developed in your core from planks and push ups.2. I don't get scared and I don't appreciate you implying otherwise.
You guys are right, it's about lifting mass amounts of weight and not TUT(time under tension) which is exactly what tempos are. How stupid of me to think that holding a push up(static hold) at the bottom, would have more benefit than the actual pushing up. It obviously makes no sense to focus on the eccentric movement for strength gains. Thank you all so much I have been working out wrong, until now. Yeah and doing deadlifts for sure works the core much better than planks where almost the entire body is engaged for periods of time, where every my muscle is simultaneously firing.