Cutting Weight - Powerlifting, Strongman, Olympic Lifting
Cutting Weight - Powerlifting, Strongman, Olympic Lifting
Both powerlifting and strongman often offer 18-24hr weigh-ins prior to the start of the meet. This creates an opportunity for you to plan and manage your weight class with different objectives that cannot be realized when faced with a 2 hour weigh-in.
You may wonder why an athlete would wait to the last minute to cut weight instead of having the discipline to slowly diet down to the desired weight class over weeks or in some case months. The answer is simple: Performance. Properly managing your weight ABOVE your weight class can actually improve your performance on meet day. In this short piece I’ll detail the approach I take with the lifters that I coach.
In the slowly-dieting-down-to-a weight-class approach there are some negatives that come into play. Let’s take an athlete that’s 10-12lbs over their weight class. At two months out from competition this lifter will begin diet restrictions and slowly get down to their weight class for the meet. Unfortunately this will leave you training at a weight higher than you will be on meet day for majority of your training cycle. Of particular importance is the last 1-4 weeks when you’re finally getting close to your weight class. This is a time for 1) de-loading and 2) handling submaximal weights. These two factors combined give you a false sense of strength and don’t allow you to learn the impact of leverage changes due to weight loss. During the heavy training completed at one month out from competition you’re still quite a bit heavier than you will be on meet day. Additionally, in the last few weeks as you get close to the target weight, heavy lifts are reduced if not all together removed. You won’t get the chance to learn the balance and leverage changes at your meet day bodyweight. This approach may lead to underperforming or unrealistic meet day expectations.
Another important aspect to consider is taking advantage of the supercompensatory effects of both carbohydrate and water restrictions. A small weight cut and re-composition that can be done with an 18-24hr weigh-in can actually INCREASE performance on meet day when properly executed. The restriction period puts the body in a state of supercompensation. The body will take in and hold additional fluids and blood glucose that it wouldn’t normally retain. This is very similar to the supercompensation effect provided by weight training sessions. Typically anything over an 8lb cut isn’t going to net an increase in performance on meet day, and 5lbs for the lighter lifters. If done properly you can actually be a few pounds above your typical walking around weight on meet day after refueling and rehydrating giving the meet day performance boost.
With these factors in mind I like to see my athletes diet until they are 5-8lbs above their weight class at 4-6 weeks out from competition. This gives you the opportunity to spend several heavy weeks training at the weight you will be at on meet day. At one month out you can hit your max attempts (or close to) at your meet day weight and know exactly where you will be. Once the goal weight of 5-8lbs above your weight class is hit that weight must be sustained. If it begins dropping you need to UP your calories and keep your weight at the target.
To execute the weight cut, carbs are slowly cycled down over the last 3-4 days with zero carbs the day prior to weigh-ins. If you’re on the upper end of the weight loss spectrum, consider zero carbs two days prior. Water intake should be at 1 gallon a day the week prior to meet week with supplemented electrolytes (calcium 1000mg, magnesium 1000mg, and potassium 100mg all taken 2 times a day). Water is ramped up by ½ gallon a day to arrive at 2-2.5 gallons a day by 2 days out from weigh ins. Sodium intake is restricted to half normal daily amount at 2 days out and zero sodium the day prior to weigh-in. Water intake stays high keeping the athelete superhydrated till we cut off water at roughly 18hrs out. Timing may vary on this within a 12-24hr range based on actual weight to be cut and how the individual has responded in past. When water is cut off you should take 1500mg vitamin C, 2g of Dandelion root, and 1-2 Coors lights (or equivalent light beer) as your last fluid intake.
If any sauna time is needed, which it shouldn’t, do it at 15min on 15min off while making sure to fully dry off immediately upon exiting sauna each time. You want to be within 2lbs of your weight class when you go to bed the night before weigh ins, and this should have you at your desired weight upon waking. If your not there before bed that night then plan on sauna before bed to get to that point, or upon waking before weigh ins.
Food intake is allowed as either 4oz chicken on 2-3 occasions or a tablespoon of unsalted almond butter (or equivalent) the day prior to weighing in. Make sure the chicken has not been soaked in a salt solution is often the case.
Eat and drink all day post weigh in, forcefully pushing past state of being full. Mix in some pedialyte or Gatorade during the day and on meet day. Stay away from slow digesting heavy meals. Eat sweet and salty foods and nothing that has the potential of causing GI distress. Hitting some light training later that day after refueling and rehydrating with just a bar (I only use 1 plate) for a few 20 rep sets of Squats, Bench, Deadlifts, and Rows. This will help pull the fluids in through to your muscles and help everything fill out. NOT HEAVY, just enough to stimulate blood flow.
I do not recommend cutting more than 12lbs in this method unless you are chasing large world records or doing something very big. That’s elite level stuff that should not be ‘explored’ without an extreme understanding. I will not publish the modifications to this approach to achieve more weight loss. This is the reason I never list my actual walking around weight or my weight cut amounts in public forums.
Take this approach to the platform at your next meet. Now go out there and move some weight because… It’s time to get strong!
Hip Thrusters Revisited - More Is Not Better
Hip Thrusters… They’re a great DNS tool and used for assessments and coaching queue’s moving athletes into bigger and bigger movements. But heavy weighted thrusters? Totally unnecessary!
Chris Duffin’s 3-Step Fix for Amit Sapir’s World Record Squat
I recently had the pleasure of working with IFBB Pro Amit Sapir as he preps for an all-time world record squat at GPA worlds in a few weeks. Amit had some obstacles to overcome based on his body structure and his past experience as an Olympic lifter. His squat pattern combined with his body structure simply would not allow him to physically hit depth, even with his hamstrings sitting on his calves. I took him all the way down to a 10-inch box but, due to the extreme leg dive and his massive leg size and small knees, he was still squatting high.
With only a few days to work together and the meet in only a few weeks, there was no chance of completely rebuilding his squat into a powerlifting squat. We simply couldn’t address every issue.
This is the approach I used to improve his squats in just three training sessions over the course of three days.
Day 1
Step 1: Assess
I watched his current squat pattern from multiple angles, looking at the movement and watching to asses several specific aspects of his movement:
- What was tight and engaged, what was passive, and what was firing movement
- Breathing and core stabilization (also tested physically)
- Natural stance and breathing patterns (what position is he in when standing and breathing normally?)
- Restrictions due to mobility
- Stance, foot placement, bar placement, and basic movement pattern
Step 2: Test
With the meet right around the corner I could only make changes that he could retain quickly without spending significant time to ingrain. We tested a number of different things to see what was manageable and to push him to experiment with entirely new patterns and see how he responded…. Content continued here
Huge Bench, Squat, & Pull This Week - Kabuki Warrior Chris Duffin’s Training Log: 2014, Week 44
This was a big bench, squat and deadlift week for me. I did miss a lot of volume training on Saturday due to having a bad cold.
MONDAY
Shoulderok Swings 3×10/side
Curls 35 x16,16,16
Bench Press
135×20
225×10
275×5
335×5
405×11 PR
455×3.5
475×1
Dips
BW+180 x10,10,8
Machine Shoulder Press
Stack x15,15,15
WEDNESDAY
Squat
165×5
275×5
385×3
495×3
605×1
715×1
825×1
860×2 setups and unracks
860×1
Sumo Deadlift – straps
705×3
815×5
Felt cold coming on
See the rest of my training log for the week at my sponsors site EliteFTS
Chris Duffin CAPO Training Log - EliteFTS
Definitely upped my volume dramatically this week and also condensed my schedule to make room for Clinical based DNS (Dynamic Neuromuscular Stabilization) course from the “Prague School To Athletic Development”. The course was well worth the adjustment in schedule and cost to shore up some gaps in my knowledge and assessment ability. This was just the first 3 days with another 3 days this spring as well as an additional 2 day DNS Exercise course I have planned to take.
MONDAY
Mace Swings 3×10/side
Curls 35 x16,16,16
Bench Press
135×20
225×10
275×5
335×19… damn not 20
405×8
455×1,1
Dips
BW+180 – felt to heavy
Overhead Tricep Extension
Stack+ band x20,17,14
WEDNESDAY
Sumo Deadlift – Hook Grip
155×5
265×3
375×3
485×2
595×1
705×1 nice and easy with a holdout – tore hand due to bar rolling
add straps
771×3
(see the rest of my log here)
Chris Duffin
My Educational Journey in Human Movement - Chris Duffin
I spend A LOT of time lifting, instructing athletes, and collaborating with strength communities on training best practices. What you may not know is that I also invest a great deal in learning about human movement, injury prevention and rehabilitation. Yes, I read books. More importantly, I spend time with practitioners! Through courses, seminars and private events, I learn the science (and art) behind ensuring my body and the bodies of my athletes at EPC are able to withstand the heavy loads we place on them.
The following video is just a sampling of the kind of education I receive. In this case, the course was a three day Thursday-Saturday seminar being taught by Dr. Craig Liebenson a musculoskeletal care guy who works on professional athletes. Craig has numerous published articles, books and blogs regularly. You can learn more about his practice and content if you’re interested at http://www.craigliebenson.com/.
Deadlift Problems & A Path Forward - Training Log Week 41

Link from my sponsor EliteFTS with videos
First week back after the meet over the weekend. Remember it was supposed to just be test meet so no deload after the meet. Well I rarely do anyway. I’m usually ready to train after my deload into a meet, just not with the same level of strength due to condition of the body.
MONDAY
Mace Swings 3×10/side
Curls 35 x16,16,16
Bench Press
315×23,20
Dips
BW+180 x8,6,6
Overhead Press (Machine)
Stack x16,16,16
WEDNESDAY
Sumo Deadlift off 3” blocks
Squats
155×5
265×3
375×3
485×2
595×1
705×2,2 with a nice pop in my bicep on second rep
Pause Squats w/5 seconds in hole
425×5,5
1 arm dead hangs
2-3 sets per side @ 10-20sec each
THURSDAY
Circuit Training
BW Dips x 65,65,65
Leg Extensions – Stack x20,20,20
Leg Curls – 3/4stack x20,20,20
Mace Swings x20,20,20,20
Cool Post From My Sponsors at EliteFTS
I get to work with some damn strong, damn good people. This is a post from the team at EliteFTS focused on me and fellow team member Chris Janek recapping our recent successes. Enjoy!
“Knocking out multiple international accolades in one weekend, Chris Duffin and Chris Janek made it clear why they belong with elitefts™. Janek, the newest equipped lifter of the team, won a world title at the GPC World Powerlifting Championships in Argentina. Duffin set a new all-time world record squat for the 220-pound weight class, breaking his own previous record. He now holds the heaviest-ever four-times bodyweight squat, at 881 pounds. (more…)”
My Podcast With Master Chim From The Pressure Project
I spent some time sharing more about my recent world record squat, perspective on masculinity in today’s society and my life story with Master Chim.
Check out the podcast here and if you enjoy the content on their site then take a minute to like them on Facebook!
Getting Personal With Powerlifter Chris Duffin…
A glimpse into my… Family, business, training, and life in general.