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Old 02-25-2020, 05:12 PM   #154
Nage Waza
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Quote:
Originally Posted by OMG!WTF! View Post
I'm just on my phone but it's pretty simple. Imagine a biceps curl. Starting from close to the bottom and curling up is a concentric motion. It does not tear the muscle fibers or cause any soreness. But it does increase strength. And you can do that motion every day so you gain quickly. Lowering the weight in a biceps curl is an eccentric motion and like pulling a rubber band apart will lead to the small tears that cause soreness. That you must rest to recover from. Deadlifting is comprised of both as are most compound movements. Lifting is concentric whole lowering is eccentric. Lifting lighter weight more often in concentric lifts is what most heavy lifters are doing now to gain size and strength.
I think in english is that the lift is sometimes considered the important part of the work and returning to the ground isn't as important, and so why tire yourself out? Some places with the correct floor allow you to drop the weight. I usually don't drop it but don't go for max weights either, at least not in years.

I seem fine lowering it to the ground, just be cautious with how you do the work, maybe get someone to watch for a few sets till you get it.
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