Muscle & Fitness logo Muscle & Fitness

  • Workouts

    Workouts

    • Workout Routines
    • Workout Tips
    • Fitness
    • Athlete/Celebrity Workouts
    • Exercise Videos
    Find Exercises Targeting…
    • Abs and Core Exercises
    • Arm Exercises
    • Back Exercises
    • Chest Exercises
    • Leg Exercises
    • Shoulder Exercises
  • Nutrition

    Nutrition

    • Healthy Eating
    • Lose Fat
    • Gain Mass
    • Supplements
    • Performance Nutrition
    Man using tongs grilling high protein foods on the barbecue
    Healthy Eating

    4 Under-the Radar, High-Protein Foods Great for Grilling

    Carbs like pasta and macaroni on a scale
    Healthy Eating

    Here’s Why Carb Quality Counts As We Age

    Female scientist testing for food additives in various types of foods in a lab
    Healthy Eating

    3 Food Additives You Should Be Worried About

    Person ordering from a one of the healthiest fast-food orders from the drive thru
    Healthy Eating

    The Healthiest Fast-Food Orders, According to a Dietitian

  • Athletes & Celebrities

    Athletes & Celebrities

    • News
    • Interviews
    • Women
    • Pro Tips
    • Behind-the-Scenes
    • Videos
    Chris Fowler taking a cold plunge after his workout
    Interviews

    Chris Fowler Stays Strong Over 60 with “Prudent Aggression”

    Connor Curnick lifting heavy weights at the gym after rehabilitation from injuries from his armed forces deployment
    Pro Tips

    This Naval sailor's Inspiring Journey to Squatting 405 pounds

    Charles Flanagan performing biceps curls to keep his addictions at bay
    Pro Tips

    How I Beat Addiction—and Came Back Stronger Than Ever

    Actor Mark Tallman in Apple TV+ Your Friends and Neighbors
    Interviews

    Mark Tallman Brings His Athletic Edge to 'Your Friends & Neighbors'

  • Features

    Features

    • From our Partners
    • Active Lifestyle
    • M&F: Fit to Serve
    • Gear
    • News
    • Opinion
    Actor and Broadway star Hugh Jackman perfroming a heavy weight trap bar deadlift at 56 years old
    News

    Hugh Jackman Perfects His Heavy Trap Bar Deadlifts

    Recruiter Games participants on the beach before the competition
    News

    The Recruiter Games Shines a Spotlight on Being Fit To Serve

    Elderly woman smoking marijuana and feeling the healing effects of cannibus
    News

    The Surprising Demographic Experiencing Record Cannabis Use

    WEBH15769-original
    From our Partners

    Could Low Iron Be Slowing You Down? What Every Female Runner Should Know...

  • Anti-Aging

    Anti-Aging

    • Functional Medicine
    • Hormone Optimization
    • Recovery
    • Wellness
    Over 40s couple performing mobility workouts and stretches outdoors
    Wellness

    2 Simple 15-Minute Mobility Workouts to Help Reduce Pain

    A group of young adventurers using travel and outdoor adventures to keep health and fit
    Wellness

    Traveling and Adventuring: Your Path to Staying Young, Fit, and Healthy

    Medical professional examining a xray of the knee due to popping joints
    Wellness

    Are Your Joints 'Popping'? This Is What It could Be

    Female Massaging Her Feet And Doing Shin Splint Stretches for good foot health
    Recovery

    Here's Why Your Feet May Be Halting Your Training Gains

  • Flex

    Flex

    • Olympia Coverage
    • Athletes
    • Nutrition
    • Training
    • Videos
    United States Air Force Staff Sergeant Joshua Alvord performing a behind the neck squat
    Pro Tips

    This Air Force Honor Guard Member Takes Being Fit To Serve Seriously

    Bodybuilders Sam Sulek, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and Ronnie Coleman at the premiere of Netflix's Fubar Season 2 and working out at Gold's Gym Venice Beach
    News

    Sam Sulek Gets to Work Out with Arnold and Ronnie in Dream Collab

    236
    News

    Blessing Awodibu Dissects Disappointing Legion Pro Result on TMP

    Bodybuilder Nick Walker performing Weighted Tricep Dips for his massive arms training for 2025 Mr. Olympia competition
    Training

    Nick Walker’s Training For Olympia 2025: Weighted Tricep Dips

  • Hers

    Hers

    • Workouts
    • Nutrition
    • Supplements
    • Athletes & Celebrities
    • Features
    Jess Evans
    Hers Athletes & Celebrities

    Jess Evans Has Created Her Own 'Cinderella Man' Story

    Nicole Young posing with light weights
    Hers Athletes & Celebrities

    This 'Selling Sunset' Star Is ‘Sold’ on Making Fitness Gains

    Lamborghini female race car driver Lindsay Brewer's full body workout and showing her muscular arms
    Hers Workouts

    Lindsay Brewer’s Full Throttle, Full-Body Workout

    Healthy vegetables and fruits incorporated in the PCOS diet for women
    Hers Nutrition

    The PCOS Diet For Beginners: Is It Right for You?

  • Olympia

    Olympia

    • Olympia Coverage
    • Buy Tickets
    Caesar Bacarella performing a dumbbell workout with biceps curls
    Pro Tips

    Caesar Bacarella Is Building a Fitness Empire at Full Speed

    Olympia-2019-Whiteny-Jones-Press-Conference
    Interviews

    Whitney Jones Can Break, But Can Never Be Broken

    IFBB Wellness Pro Yarishna Ayala
    Interviews

    Yarishna Ayala Shares Advice for Future Wellness Division Competitors

    2021 Mr. Olympia Top 3 winners Brandon Curry, Big Ramy, Hadi Choopin
    News

    BIG RAMY WINS THE 2021 OLYMPIA!

Subscribe to YouTube Subscribe to the Newsletter Terms of Use Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Accessibility Statement Do Not Sell
  • Workouts
    • Workout Routines
    • Workout Tips
    • Fitness
    • Athlete/Celebrity Workouts
    • Exercise Videos
  • Nutrition
    • Healthy Eating
    • Lose Fat
    • Gain Mass
    • Supplements
    • Performance Nutrition
  • Athletes & Celebrities
    • News
    • Interviews
    • Women
    • Pro Tips
    • Behind-the-Scenes
    • Videos
  • Features
    • From our Partners
    • Active Lifestyle
    • M&F: Fit to Serve
    • Gear
    • News
    • Opinion
  • Anti-Aging
    • Functional Medicine
    • Hormone Optimization
    • Recovery
    • Wellness
  • Flex
    • Olympia Coverage
    • Athletes
    • Nutrition
    • Training
    • Videos
  • Hers
    • Workouts
    • Nutrition
    • Supplements
    • Athletes & Celebrities
    • Features
  • Olympia
    • Olympia Coverage
    • Buy Tickets
  • Resources & Highlights
    • Topics
    • Videos
    • Podcasts
    • Contact
    • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • Cookie Policy
    • Accessibility Statement
    • Do Not Sell

Stay Connected

Newsletter Signup

Stay up to date

Sign up below to receive our newest workout routines, recipes, news stories, and offers from our partners

Facebook Twitter Youtube Pinterest
Open menu button
Open search bar button
×

Search M&F

Featured Articles
Lean Muscle
Healthy Eating

28-Days-to-Lean Meal Plan

With the right plan and the right discipline, you can get seriously shredded in just 28 days.

Read article
Kate Upton Attends the 2016 Vanity Fair Oscar Party
Women

The 20 Hottest Female Celebrities

Talented stars, killer physiques.

Read article
Bench press record holder Bill Gillespie breaking the world record at age 62
Pro Tips

The 'Dos' and 'Don’ts' of Bill Gillespie’s Record-Breaking Bench Press

At age 62, "Big Bill" shares his wisdom to dominate one of the ultimate strength marks.

Read article
The 50 Best Female Fitness Influencers on Instagram
Girls

The 50 Best Fitness Influencers on Instagram

Follow these fit women we're crushing on for inspiration, workout ideas, and motivation.

Read article
Workout Tips

Size Training Tricks You Probably Haven’t Tried

Eat protein, get more sleep (blah blah). Here are some other things you should do.

by Lee Boyce
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
mass program failures
View Gallery

Size Training Tricks You Probably Haven’t Tried

Close gallery popup button
1 OF 12

1 of 12

mass program failures

Regroup and Resize

Putting on size can be an uphill battle. Books say it’s a matter of training for sets of eight to 10 reps with heavy loads. But ask anyone who’s been doing that for years and is still a pencil-neck, and they’ll be quick to say it can’t be that simple. They’d be right.SEE ALSO: Essential Moves for Strength TrainingThere are plenty of “tips” articles out there that tell you to: lift big, get more sleep, add more volume and eat a lot of chicken. Here are some things you might not have tried. We all know the importance of the squat, deadlift, overhead press and pullup. People often switch to exclusively training using machines; that’s fine, as long as they take second place to the big lifts. Don’t drop them off – they’re too important.

2 of 12

Rest water bench

: Tone it Down

Lee Haney used to say “stimulate, not annihilate” referring to muscles. Just because a workout doesn’t leave you crippled for 4 days following, it doesn’t mean it wasn’t effective. Be sure to have workouts that groove your patterns, and make you feel stronger. Every workout shouldn’t kill you.

3 of 12

Dumbbells Basic

: Isolate Muscle Groups

Like the last subheading mentioned, hitting up a machine has its place. To play devil’s advocate, there are many camps who think the “big 3” are all you need to get muscle, and that’s not true either. To zero in on muscle size, it sometimes means zeroing in on the muscle.

4 of 12

cube-rotater

: Pull More Than You Push

Having a good foundation of strength comes from training for it, and pulling motions are more important than pushing movements to avoid injury and develop a base. Plenty of your body’s potential lies in the strength of your posterior chain, so row, deadlfit, and chinup to oblivion.

5 of 12

Low Carb Burger

: Go ‘High-Carb’

If you want to get big, you’ll have to eat big at some point.  A “clean bulk” may add you a cool 10 pounds, but you have to be OK with losing your razor-sharp abs if you want to add appreciable size. That means you have to be OK with going high carb at times, and packing down some calorically dense meals. Any pro bodybuilder will tell you the same thing.

6 of 12

Light Dumbbell Curls

: Go Light

Contrary to what many think, it’s not all about lifting heavy when you want to get bigger. Increasing the rep range using lighter weight (especially on certain movements) can cause muscles to respond very well and produce a serious pump. Give it a try.

7 of 12

Deadlift barbell standing

: Drop the Straps

Speaking of pulling, remember that you can only lift as much as you can hold. Wearing straps may be good for isolation, but they can cut off plenty of activity of the forearm, upper arm, and even shoulder capsule. That can actually hold back gains in favor of completing a heavy set. Rely on your own grip strength.

8 of 12

Straight up biceps hero

: Chase the ‘Pump’

On paper, many exercises may be said to be “not worth the time”. In truth, after you’ve done the meat and potatoes of your workout, it’s not a bad idea to add in “finishers” that do nothing more than amplify a pump you’ve created over time. For instance, after a good chest/triceps workout, throwing in some pressdowns on the gravitron dip machine can be the best fit for you.

9 of 12

barbell squat

: Add Weekly Volume

There’s no harm in repeating an exercise twice in one week. No one made a rule that you have to train only once. If you want your legs to grow, you’ll have to hit them harder than just once every seven days. Doing this will apply the SAID principle (specific adaptation to imposed demands), and the legs will respond by growing bigger and stronger to handle the added volume. You may notice they recover faster too.

10 of 12

Stopwatch

: Rest Less

Properly exhausting muscle is also a product of making light weight feel heavy. That can easily be accomplished by simply giving yourself less time to recover. Lower your rest interval and it’ll up your rate of perceived exertion.

11 of 12

Blood Flow Restriction Training

: Train Frequently

Repetition is the key to success. That means working out 3 days a week probably won’t cut it. That’s not even half. Get into the habit of getting in to lift most of the week, and make sure you’re eating and sleeping well enough to accommodate that. Your body will have no choice but to grow.

12 of 12

10 Practically Useless Exercises

: Train Intuitively

Last but not least, know your body. There are going to be days where you don’t feel as strong or energized as others – it happens to the best athletes too. Rather than run the risk of a horrible workout, or worse, an injury, it may be a smart call to lower the intensity for the day, and possibly scale back on the volume a bit. You’ll have more workouts to follow, and PR’s will always be there to set.  Don’t forget that.

Back to intro

Regroup and Resize

Putting on size can be an uphill battle. Books say it’s a matter of training for sets of eight to 10 reps with heavy loads. But ask anyone who’s been doing that for years and is still a pencil-neck, and they’ll be quick to say it can’t be that simple. They’d be right.

SEE ALSO: Essential Moves for Strength Training

There are plenty of “tips” articles out there that tell you to: lift big, get more sleep, add more volume and eat a lot of chicken. Here are some things you might not have tried. We all know the importance of the squat, deadlift, overhead press and pullup. People often switch to exclusively training using machines; that’s fine, as long as they take second place to the big lifts. Don’t drop them off – they’re too important.

: Tone it Down

Lee Haney used to say “stimulate, not annihilate” referring to muscles. Just because a workout doesn’t leave you crippled for 4 days following, it doesn’t mean it wasn’t effective. Be sure to have workouts that groove your patterns, and make you feel stronger. Every workout shouldn’t kill you.

: Isolate Muscle Groups

Like the last subheading mentioned, hitting up a machine has its place. To play devil’s advocate, there are many camps who think the “big 3” are all you need to get muscle, and that’s not true either. To zero in on muscle size, it sometimes means zeroing in on the muscle.

: Pull More Than You Push

Having a good foundation of strength comes from training for it, and pulling motions are more important than pushing movements to avoid injury and develop a base. Plenty of your body’s potential lies in the strength of your posterior chain, so row, deadlfit, and chinup to oblivion.

: Go 'High-Carb'

If you want to get big, you’ll have to eat big at some point.  A “clean bulk” may add you a cool 10 pounds, but you have to be OK with losing your razor-sharp abs if you want to add appreciable size. That means you have to be OK with going high carb at times, and packing down some calorically dense meals. Any pro bodybuilder will tell you the same thing.

: Go Light

Contrary to what many think, it’s not all about lifting heavy when you want to get bigger. Increasing the rep range using lighter weight (especially on certain movements) can cause muscles to respond very well and produce a serious pump. Give it a try.

: Drop the Straps

Speaking of pulling, remember that you can only lift as much as you can hold. Wearing straps may be good for isolation, but they can cut off plenty of activity of the forearm, upper arm, and even shoulder capsule. That can actually hold back gains in favor of completing a heavy set. Rely on your own grip strength.

: Chase the 'Pump'

On paper, many exercises may be said to be “not worth the time”. In truth, after you’ve done the meat and potatoes of your workout, it’s not a bad idea to add in “finishers” that do nothing more than amplify a pump you’ve created over time. For instance, after a good chest/triceps workout, throwing in some pressdowns on the gravitron dip machine can be the best fit for you.

: Add Weekly Volume

There’s no harm in repeating an exercise twice in one week. No one made a rule that you have to train only once. If you want your legs to grow, you’ll have to hit them harder than just once every seven days. Doing this will apply the SAID principle (specific adaptation to imposed demands), and the legs will respond by growing bigger and stronger to handle the added volume. You may notice they recover faster too.

: Rest Less

Properly exhausting muscle is also a product of making light weight feel heavy. That can easily be accomplished by simply giving yourself less time to recover. Lower your rest interval and it’ll up your rate of perceived exertion.

: Train Frequently

Repetition is the key to success. That means working out 3 days a week probably won’t cut it. That’s not even half. Get into the habit of getting in to lift most of the week, and make sure you’re eating and sleeping well enough to accommodate that. Your body will have no choice but to grow.

: Train Intuitively

Last but not least, know your body. There are going to be days where you don’t feel as strong or energized as others – it happens to the best athletes too. Rather than run the risk of a horrible workout, or worse, an injury, it may be a smart call to lower the intensity for the day, and possibly scale back on the volume a bit. You’ll have more workouts to follow, and PR’s will always be there to set.  Don’t forget that.

Topics:
  • Body Composition
  • Bodybuilding
  • Strength Training
Peptides.org logo
Written by Lee Boyce
Also by Lee Boyce
Advanced lifter suffering from back pain due to an exercise mistake
Workout Tips

Subtle Mistakes Even Advanced Lifters Should be Aware Of

Person suffering from lumbar spinal pain
Workout Tips

Two Common Training Mistakes That Can Cause Back Pain

Newsletter Signup

Stay up to date

Sign up below to receive our newest workout routines, recipes, news stories, and offers from our partners

Muscle & Fitness logo

Follow us

Facebook Twitter Youtube Pinterest

More news

Muscular bodybuilder practicing fitness and wellness by doing yoga after a workout in the gym
Workout Tips

Closing the Gap Between Wellness and Fitness

Although some may think the terms are interchangeable, there are significant differences.

Read article
Muscular fit man who utlized the No pain No Gain mentality suffering from DOMS after an intense workout
Workout Tips

Is 'No Pain No Gain' Really a Sign of Muscle Growth? The Truth About DOMS and Building Muscle

Constant soreness from one workout to the next may not be a sign of progress you’d hoped.

Read article
Former Hyrox champion Hunter McIntyre drinking a can of CELSIUS
Workout Tips

Want to Enter a Hyrox Race? Follow These Training Tips

World champion and CELSIUS athlete Hunter McIntyre shares tips to excel at this rapidly growing fitness sport.

Read article
All Workout Tips
  1. Home
  2. /
  3. Workouts
  4. /
  5. Workout Tips
  6. /
  7. Size Training Tricks You Probably Haven’t Tried
Muscle & Fitness logo
  • Workouts
  • Nutrition
  • Athletes & Celebrities
  • Features
  • Recipes
  • Topics
  • Videos
  • Exercise Videos
  • Podcasts
  • RSS Feed
  • Buy Olympia Tickets
  • Archives
  • Sitemap
Facebook Twitter Youtube Pinterest

Newsletter Signup

Stay up to date

Sign up below to receive our newest workout routines, recipes, news stories, and offers from our partners

JW Media, LLC

Copyright 2025 JW Media, LLC, parent company of Muscle & Fitness. All rights reserved.

Contact Us Terms of Use Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Do Not Sell Accessibility Statement