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Learnings, teachings and tips & tricks for anyone to reference during difficult times, stressful workdays and moments when manifesting your true self.

Jacob Harcoff Jacob Harcoff

The Myth of Specific Rep Ranges in Resistance Training

Many believe that performing 8-12 reps per set is the golden range for hypertrophy. While this rep range can indeed stimulate muscle growth, it's not the only way. Muscle growth primarily depends on creating tension and fatigue within the muscle, and this can be achieved through various rep ranges.

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Jacob Harcoff Jacob Harcoff

Kinesiology and Physiotherapy: What's the difference?

More specifically, physiotherapy is focused on treating specific conditions and restoring function, while kinesiology is concerned with the study of movement and physical activity in a broader sense. In my point of view, may kinesiologists are more concerned with the former, treating and restoring function with corrective exercise, instead of using their knowledge of movement to help the individuals they work with get stronger, and more robust than they were prior to their injury.

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Jacob Harcoff Jacob Harcoff

Movement Patterns: Programming for specific populations.

Exercise prescription will look a little bit different depending on the population that I'm working with. If I'm working with an athletic population the exercises are going to look a lot different than if I'm working with general or special population. When programming workouts, the exercises I select for each of these demographics comes down to individual need, and the movement patterns which best suit those needs.

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Jacob Harcoff Jacob Harcoff

Squat machines for leg development.

In my training model, knee flexion is one of the “big stone” trainable movement patterns that should be featured in most workout programs in one form or another. Probably the most common form of knee flexion exercises found in training programs, other than the leg press, is the squat, and rightfully so as it is just so versatile as a training method for a lot of different populations.

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Jacob Harcoff Jacob Harcoff

Is butt wink wrecking your squat, and your back?

Based on previous research it was commonly thought that butt winking during a squat was inherently dangerous and likely to result in the lifter injuring their back. However, it is now accepted that the butt wink is a necessary movement that must occur when someone with a more hingey squat pattern is attempting to get all the way down.

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