Training
ROCKY MOUNTAIN PEAKS
Written by: Greg Merritt
The following is an article from the August, 2006 issue of FLEX Magazine
How phenomenal Phil Heath built his awe-inspiring arms
Bodybuilding has long been a sport
of phenoms. It's easy to forget this during Ronnie
Coleman's extended reign as Mr. O, but his leisurely
hike that placed him at the top at age 34 is an anomaly.
Arnold Schwarzenegger's run of Olympia wins began when he was
23; Lee Haney took home his first Sandow at 24. Rich Gaspari,
Shawn Ray, Kevin Levrone and Jay Cutler, to name four, all scored
pro victories at 26 or younger. To this exalted company, let us now
add another. In Phil Heath, bodybuilding has a phenom again.
Ten hours after the 26-year-old known as the Gift won his
first pro contest and six days before he won his second, FLEX
watched as he trained bis and tris. Follow along with us to the
Mile High City for every rep, quip and tip, as we witness
firsthand how Heath built arms (in a mere four years) that are
already regarded as two of the all-time best - and he's only
getting started.
"SCREW THAT"
Let's begin two
hours after Heath won the Shawn
Ray Colorado Pro, when, $26,000
richer, he pulls into a Burger King
drive-through lane and orders a
victory Whopper. Also in Heath's
Lincoln LS are his nutritionist, Hany
Rambod, my fellow FLEX scribe,
Shawn Perine, and yours truly.
Waiting at his house are
approximately 40 friends and family
members along with countertops
laden with celebratory desserts. By
the time I crawl back into my bed in
a downtown Denver hotel, it's
3:30 AM. The unmerciful wakeup call
comes three hours later. Heath gets
even less sleep.
At 7 AM, photographer Kevin
Horton, his wife, Elaine, and I drive
to Mahany's Club Fit in suburban
Aurora. Despite a name that
connotes the VH1 show about
overweight has-beens, the gym is
probably more hardcore than some
Gold's, but it's quiet on this Sunday
morning, with only a half-dozen
Coloradans training to the drone of
classic rock. "Mama Told Me Not to
Come," Three Dog Night laments.
When the Gift strides through the
door to the gym where he forged
most of his muscle, he's joined by his
live-in girlfriend, Jen Laxson, cousin
Ty Beauchamp, videographer Isaac
Hinds (who is shooting Heath's
DVD) and, on this Mother's Day,
his mom, Rosella Braxton, and her
husband, Jerry. (Heath's mother and
stepfather, who live in Seattle, had
witnessed Heath compete as a
bodybuilder for the first time the
night before.)
"Today, obviously, it's the day after
a contest, so I'll go by how I feel,"
Heath explains. "I believe in
instinctive training, so if I feel I can
go heavy, I'll go heavy. A lot of
people say you shouldn't train after
a contest, but screw that. I ate some
junk last night, so I should be able to
train hard today after being depleted
all those weeks. Sure, I just did a
show, but I'm an athlete, so I should
be able to still lift hard."
"CONSTANT RESISTANCE"
After a
warm-up, Heath performs barbell
curls on the vertical side of apreacher bench. He methodically
pumps out 10 reps with 90 pounds for
his first set, 10 with 100 for his second
and 10 with 110 for his third,
straining for the final few reps.
"I keep them to a minute
precontest," he says of his rest
periods. "If I take longer, I go
heavier, but I like to be breathing a
little hard, so I can get some cardio
out of a workout."
I ask why he stops short of a full
stretch at the bottom of each rep.
"I noticed that when I lock out, I get
this pain in my biceps tendons," he
answers. "It's the same as locking out
the knees in a leg workout; I don't
like to do that. I go by what Lee
Haney talks about, keeping constant
resistance. The same with Ronnie
[Coleman] and Jay [Cutler] - they
keep constant resistance instead of a
full range of motion. I'm not trying to
strain the tendons; I'm just trying to
stimulate the muscles."
"REAL QUALITY REPS"
Although he
holds both dumbbells throughout,
he does all the reps for one side of
incline dumbbell curls at one time
before switching arms. "I used to do them alternating [each rep],
but - I can't lie - I like to
bite everyone else's stuff. I saw
Jay [Cutler] doing them this
way in [the DVD] Battle for
the Olympia, so I tried them,
and I can actually get some
real quality reps by just
focusing on one side instead
of going back and forth.
Alternating is like counting to
20 instead of the way I do it -
counting to 10 and then 10
again. A lot of times, I count in fives
now, so I do five on one side, five on
the other, and then five and five
again right after that. If I focus on
one side at a time, I feel I can go
heavier and I get a better pump."
As Horton snaps photos, I scribble
notes, Hinds zooms in for video
close-ups and Heath's family watches
from just beyond the lights. The
phenom uses the 40s, 50s and 60s for
subsequent sets, keeping his elbows
steady and again stopping short of a
full stretch each time.
"HOW DUMB IS THAT?"
Two-arm
high cable curls are done at the
cable crossover station, replicating
a double-biceps pose with each rep.
"I want those peaks, bro," Heath
says of the strong contraction this
exercise provides. "I know it's
mostly genetics, but I want to
accentuate what I have."
After the initial set with
50 pounds, we all laugh that he left
his water bottle on one of the weight
stacks and, riding up and down, it
somehow stayed upright throughout
the 10 reps.
"That's how controlled
my movement is," Heath deadpans.
It's a joke, not a boast, but, lest
anyone misinterpret, he deflates it a
moment later. "How dumb is that?
Am I full of myself or what?"
Actually, Heath is one of the most
humble of all bodybuilding champs.
Even when Horton, Hinds and I bait
him about the upcoming rematch
with Darrem Charles, the rookie is
always careful to express his respect
for the Trinidadian posedown
veteran who is closing in on 50
pro contests and who first
flexed on a pro stage in 1992 -
when Heath was 12.
In almost every workout, the
Gift is reminded that winning
is never guaranteed, for, in
addition to top Colorado super
heavyweight Ryan Fasano, his
other training partner is Rick
Sosias, the fourth-place light
heavyweight in last year's NPC
USA Championships and the only
man to ever defeat Heath (by one
point, for the overall at the 2003
Colorado State Championships).
"After he beat me, I figured I'd learn
from him," Heath explains. "So we've
been training together ever since."
Heath does another set with
60 pounds. After a set with 70, he
immediately pumps out an additional
10 reps with only his right arm and 10
with his left, again using 70 pounds.
"It just really finishes them off to end
with the one-arms."
"GEOMETRY LESSON"
Heath calls his
first triceps exercise "trisets," and,
although technically they're not, the
term expresses the unique three-step
assault on his tris, done via one
movement - rope pushdowns. Eachset is a 30-rep ascending set. After
10 reps, he immediately increases the
weight 10 pounds for 10 more reps,
after which he immediately increases
another 10 pounds for a final 10. He
also escalates his starting poundage
by 10 each time, going 90-100-110
for his first ascending set, 100-110-120
for his second and 110-120-130 for his
third.
"My next set always starts
10 pounds heavier than the last,
and yet all together it seems like it's
30 pounds heavier because I'm doing
30 reps total, so every rep is heavier
the second time than the first, and
then every rep gets even heavier the
third time. By the end, I'm starting
with as much weight as I ended with
the first time."
Bringing out the wood-grain
striations of his tris, his form is strictand he separates the two rope sides
for a maximum extension at the
bottom. "With the rope, I'm able to
extend. If I keep it close, I still get a
pump, but if I extend out, it makes
it harder. I know that because the
first thing I do when it gets heavy is
keep it in here [hands close together].
It makes for a longer range of motion
to bring it out here [hands
approximately nine inches apart] at
the bottom." He adds with a grin,
"A little geometry lesson there."
"NEW WINDOWS VERSION"
By the
time he completes the pushdowns,
the long and lateral heads of each
triceps resemble the braided ropes
he was gripping, and everyone
marvels at how much his arms have
ballooned, dramatically bigger than
the night before and yet losing none
of their fine details. Flexing, he's
startled himself by what he sees in
the mirror, and he confirms that he
has never looked better than at this
moment in time - and yet he will look better still.
"We're going to trade this one in
for the new Windows version," he
jokes about his physique. "The old
one you saw last night was like
Windows 98, and the one you're
gonna see will be like that new
Vista."
Before his victory at last year's
USA, Heath underemphasized
arm training in order to keep his
physique in balance. Since then, he's
trained arms all-out.
He even plans to work
forearms. "If I have a freaky
bodypart and it happens to be arms,
that's OK, because I'm messing with
some gunslingers now - guys like
Lee Priest and Darrem Charles.
Ronnie, Jay and all those guys have
big arms. Everybody likes big arms.
Still, I don't train tris as hard as I
used to because those will grow out
of control." The last statement
explains why he's the
Gift.
"SUPPOSED TO BE DROPPED"
Standing one-arm dumbbell
extensions are not done textbook style
- elbow straight up and the
working upper arm kept
perpendicular to the floor. Instead,
he lets his elbow drop, pointing his
upper arm out at approximately a
45-degree angle.
"I'm afraid of an injury to my elbow, and I know if I keep it high
and go down, it hurts. I have the
stigma that I have good genetics, so
I don't train hard, but I push it for
10 reps every set. I just don't want
to get an injury. I'm young and
I have plenty of time to fill out,
so I don't want to get in a hurry
and mess myself up. To each his
own, and I don't dog anyone's
form. Yeah, if you do arms and
you're just really swinging it, that's
stupid, but if my elbow is back here
[farther out], it's still staying here,
so I'm keeping the tension on the
tris. If it's up here [straight up], to
me, it just feels too compact and
puts too much pressure on joints.
The next guy might do it straight
up and get big arms out of that.
"My training partners like to do
overhead triceps extensions with
two hands. I use one hand. I like
one-arm movements, and I work
the two arms slightly differently.
You'll notice I'll get more reps with
my left arm when I train triceps
because I want to grow it to the
level of my right."
Indeed, after sets of 10 reps
with a 40-pound dumbbell and a
50-pound dumbbell, Heath grinds
out a final eight with his right arm
and then 12, counting partials, with
his left, using a 70-pound dumbbell.
When he can't move it again, he
drops the 70, and it bounds away.
"One reason I love this gym is
there's no sign saying you can't
drop the weights. You can wreck
yourself trying to set the weight
down gingerly after going all out.
Dumbbells are supposed to be
dropped."
"FRONT TO BACK"
Each of his
three sets of machine dips with
180 pounds is doubled by
performing 10 reps facing forward
and promptly turning for 10 reps
facing backward (toward the seat
back). "Going front to back, I notice
that I'm really stressing the insertion
of the tris near the shoulders. For
these, I like to get a fuller range of
motion, too, to really stretch them
out at the top."
As his workout comes to a close, the curvy fullness of his upper body
looks Levrone-esque - a comparison
Heath rightly sees as a supreme
compliment. "I try to think about
Kevin Levrone whenever I train tris
or shoulders," he says. "I've been
using his workouts from FLEX for
the past three years just because he
has the best trap-shoulder-tri
combination I've ever seen."
"A LITTLE UNREAL"
Afterward, the
Gift takes the person who supplied
half his genes to a Mother's Day
lunch. They have much to be thankful
for. Six days later, he conquers New
York, besting not just Charles again
but a real live Olympia mass monster,
Dennis James. "It all seems a little
unreal," he says backstage. "Just last
year, I was a fan reading about these
guys, and now I'm beating them."
This is only the start of the "unreal"
story - halfway through the first
chapter, with the suspense of his
next contest many pages away.
This tale is only going to improve as
bodybuilding's latest phenom fulfills
his immense promise. FLEX