Staying injury free

What can send make a big, bad bodybuilder quake with terror and frantically scramble for help? The specter of injury—a twinge that’s not supposed to be there, an inexplicable loss of strength, a pin-prick pain that intensifies through the set, or one that starts throbbing long after you leave the gym—can curtail your progress for months or even end your career. To avert such disasters, alert yourself to the real-life advice from these four pro champions; then, put it into practice, not as a casual habit but as a continuous, conscious constitutional for every workout.

Vince Taylor “I once tore my biceps tendon loose from doing curls with warm-up weight; another time, I had such a tendon problem with my wrist that I couldn’t move my thumb. Consequently, I decided to train as heavy as I safely could. Maniacal workouts are injuries waiting to happen. If you feel a twinge in your back or knee with squats, switch to leg presses for a while; if your heavy benches produce a warning sensation, lighten them, and use higher reps.”

Shawn Ray “I like 8-15 reps, performed smoothly and hard, but if fall short of that final, extra burn before asking for a spotter to help me with a few more, I feel I’m also falling short of some injury potential. I’ll take the latter. In the long run, I’ll be ahead. My advice: Use perfect form all the time.”

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The Road Back

This was different.

Sure, he had finished third only six months before at the 2006 Australian Pro Grand Prix, a contest that ended his fouryear layoff from competitive bodybuilding. It wasn’t the upper-abdominal cramps they always came, especially at the big contests. And it wasn’t that he hadn’t been on an Olympia stage before. He had. Five times before this, to be exact, in competitions spanning the globe: in Rimini, Italy, in 1989, when Lee Haney won his sixth Olympia title; in Helsinki, Finland, in 1992, when Dorian Yates won his first; and three times in the United States the last one, in Las Vegas in 2001, for Ronnie Coleman’s fourth victory.

But this was different. He had been away from the game, and he was older now. They were young. They were hungry.

And Vince Taylor, at 50 years old, wasn’t sure he belonged.

TIME TO HANG IT UP

There was a time, in the early 1990s, when Vince Taylor the light-heavyweight and overall winner at the 1988 NPC National Championships was a threat to win any contest he entered. There was a time when he nearly did.

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