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Military press

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Does anyone do military press anymore? I feel like it is a dying exercise even though it's my major lift in my shoulder routine... I noticed a big increase in my DB shoulder press after doing it to... Also what are some of your weights like compared to your body weight?
 
I do the military press. I feel it should always be done standing though.

Last workout I did 145 x 5. I had more in the tank, I would guess I could have done about 7 reps, but I am saving my max outs for my "3" and "5-3-1" workouts and trying to just do my prescribed reps on the "5" and "deload" days. I am a rather weak presser and am much stronger in pulling and legs.
 
I do the standing press, not military press. For it to be a military press your heels have to be touching. Most people say they do military press when in reality they are doing a standing press with their feet shoulder width apart.
 
My problem with doing them seated is they lose a lot of functionality. I have never in my life had to lift something heavy over my head while seated.
 
boogyman said:
My problem with doing them seated is they lose a lot of functionality. I have never in my life had to lift something heavy over my head while seated.

Right, but seated shoulder press us far more taxing on the shoulders, which is better of that is what one is going for. All depends on goals
 
uvawahoowa said:
Right, but seated shoulder press us far more taxing on the shoulders, which is better of that is what one is going for. All depends on goals

Seated shoulder press is far more taxing on your kinetic chain. Terrible exercise imo
 
Right, but seated shoulder press us far more taxing on the shoulders, which is better of that is what one is going for. All depends on goals
Your right, to each his own. I look at the shoulder press as a lift something really heavy over you head movment, not a shoulder exercise.
 
SLW2 said:
If your not standing with your heels touching it is not a military press. You are doing a seated shoulder press.

Well crap guess I don't do military press after all just shoulder press

Sent from my HTC EVO
 
boogyman said:
My problem with doing them seated is they lose a lot of functionality. I have never in my life had to lift something heavy over my head while seated.

Same for flat bench press. How often do you have a flat back when pushing something? Usually you lean forward like the incline bench position. That doesn't mean it's dumb to do flat bench though.
 
Same for flat bench press. How often do you have a flat back when pushing something? Usually you lean forward like the incline bench position. That doesn't mean it's dumb to do flat bench though.

But I do lift heavy things over my head while standing, pretty regularly. So if given the choice on how to train that movement, I think standing is the better option. This has nothing at all to do with benchpressing.

I also think standing presses have more importance than the benchpress.
 
boogyman said:
But I do lift heavy things over my head while standing, pretty regularly. So if given the choice on how to train that movement, I think standing is the better option. This has nothing at all to do with benchpressing.

I also think standing presses have more importance than the benchpress.

I know what you mean but I'm saying I push things often at work and dont just do incline bench know what I mean
 
I know what you mean but I'm saying I push things often at work and dont just do incline bench know what I mean


I never said to only do overhead pressing.

I simply feel there are a handful of movements everyone should do, and the standing press is one of them. The full squat, deadlift, some form of pullup, and dips being the others.
 
I do them a lot. Mostly seated bb press.

I usually start at 135 and work up to 215x10. I do 4 working sets
I'm 190
 
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