Iron Man November 1973
by Bill Reynolds
For those interested in weightlifting from the 70's and 80's (particularly in the New York/New Jersey area) I'd recommend Mark Morthier's podcast. There's other sports covered from that era, but includes some good interviews with National level weightlifters from that time. Yesterday's Sports Podcast
During the recent CBS television coverage of the Senior
Nationals, American weightlifting fans were treated to a taste of the action in
the super-heavyweight class. A virtually effortless 435 pound clean and jerk
wrapped up the title for Jacob Stefan, a previously obscure lifter from
Seattle. Perhaps not one spectator in twenty at Williamsburg expected Jake to
win, as he was simply too big a mystery.
To a few iron game super fans, though, the name Stefan has a
ring of familiarity, as he has cropped up on the national scene several times
in the past three years. A few powerlift fans might recall 1970, a year in
which Stefan placed third at both Juniors and Seniors in the heavyweight
division. His 1700 total that year included a 610 pound squat and a 670 pound
deadlift. During that same year, he totalled 1020 on Olympic lifts to attain
his Master rating as a heavyweight. His combined 2720 total was worthy of note
and possibly not approached officially by any other heavyweight that year.
By 1971, Jake’s Olympic total climbed to 1075, which was
good for an easy super-heavy victory at the Junior Nationals. Jake had to eat
and drink very heavily prior to the weigh-in in order to lift as a super heavy
at the Juniors. The following year a broken hand kept his total from advancing
as rapidly as expected and his 1080 effort was only high enough for fifth place
among heavyweights at the 1972 Seniors. Then with the press eliminated from the
Olympic lifts, Stefan finished first at super-heavy in the recent Senior
Nationals. His 777 total was registered at a bodyweight of only 249 and Stefan
was chosen for the World Championships team as a heavyweight.
Like Jon Cole, Stefan is perhaps one of the most athletic
heavyweights in the United States. He has recently sprinted 60 yards in an
amazing 6.5 seconds while weighting 245 pounds. As a high school athlete, his
skill at both football and track attracted numerous athletic scholarship offers.
These were rejected, however, in favor of weightlifting which Jacob found to be
considerably less brutal and more satisfying than football. Still, the sight of
a super strong 245 pounder with 6.5 speed in the sixty yard dash must set pro
football scouts to drooling.
Typically, Jakes training is thrice weekly and highly
variable. He seldom does the same workout twice, but keeps an accurate record
of all his training poundages and attempts to slowly increase weights over the
long haul. Basically, his training is peaked out only once a year from what he
considers to be an important meet. Then a week or two layoff is taken and the
long process of building up is repeated.
The power lifts that he once concentrated on have been
sublimated in favor of those exercises that will improve performance on the two
Olympic lifts. Dead lifts and bench presses have been totally abolished from
his schedule and 650 pound single squats have given way to sets of five with a
pause at the bottom of each and a maximum resistance of 550 pounds. On an
average, Jacob squats only once a week (usually on Monday or Wednesday), as
cleaning and snatching really work his legs hard on other days. He does front
squats “about once a year” as they seem to hurt his wrists.
Stefan usually does some form of pulling and some type of
movement to benefit his jerk during both his Monday and Wednesday sessions.
Then on Saturday, he usually goes heavy on both the snatch and the clean and
jerk. Pre-Williamsburg bests were 350 snatch and 450 clean and jerk, but not in
the same workout. A typical weekly training schedule would shape up as follows:
Monday
1)
Cleans: 6-8 sets up to 440 or 450 x 2
2)
Jerk Drives: 3-4 sets up to 475-500 x 2
Wednesday
1)
Squats: 4-5 sets up to 550 x 5
2)
Snatch Grip Pulls: 4-5 sets up to 375-400 x 3
3) Jerk Lockout Supports (on rack): 5-6 holds up to 650
Saturday
1)
Snatch singles up to maximum for the day
2)
Clean and Jerk: singles up to maximum for the
day
Following Jake through a typical workout, one would see him
first spend a couple of minutes taping his wrists and then wrapping them for
maximum protection from injury. Then he spends ten or fifteen minutes
stretching and warming up before the training session. All of this preparation
has eliminated injuries from training.
During the past five years only one injury has resulted in lost training time,
and that was a broken hand sustained while practicing karate.
Cleans might be the first exercise and he starts out low
with 135 x 2. Then his series might often go 205 x 2, 275 x 2, 325 x 2, 360 x
2, 380 x 2, 400 x 2, 420 x 2, 440 x 2. All of his pulling in training is
reinforced with straps to keep from yanking off patches of skin from the palms
of his hands. Jake finds no difficulty in hook gripping his maximum meet
poundages, so seldom pulls without straps in training.
A typical second exercise might be jerk drives in which he
would do 440 x 2, 460 x 2, 480 x 2, and 500 x 2 during a particularly heavy
session. Jake considers the jerk to be his weakest link at the present time and
is spending plenty of time improving it. He is even experimenting with a
slightly wider grip which shows promise of helping his lockout.
Following his workout with the weights, Jake occasionally
runs, but usually he does this on his off days. Running is usually in the form
of three mile cross country runs with gentle hills. A few wind sprints tend to
give Jake the tired breathless feeling that tells him that his heart and lungs
are benefitting from the exercise.
Stefan supplements his training with a positive mental
outlook, a protein rich diet and plenty of rest and sleep. So far his formula
has paid off, and having watched him train on numerous occasions, the author
fully expects a 375 snatch and a 500 clean and jerk from him within the next
two or three years.
Nice feature of reminders as to some of the history of American Olympic weightlifting. Recalling the quality participation of Jake Stefan, for instance. Also, his contest training routine foretells a time when progress in Olympic lifting did not require intricate, multiple workouts per day. Oh, and we are also reminded that noted bodybuilding book author---and Weider magazine force-- Bill Reynolds was not above throwing a little PR to an Olympic lifter once upon a time.
ReplyDeleteThat is the exact thought I had when I saw the article: Jake's training at the time is such a far departure from what is commonly seen now, but clearly he made good progress ( a 197kg clean and jerk for a 109+ would still put him towards the top of USAW nationals, currently.) The drug issue from that time period can't be ignored, but it does show that excessive training frequency for the Olympic lifts doesn't guarantee progress. Bulgaria's success starting in the late 60's, and their willingness to have their training methods published (just about every issue of International Olympic Lifter I have from the 70's includes something about Bulgarian training methodology) seems to have gotten the wheels turning on high volume training for weightlifting.
DeleteDidn't Hoffman and/or Terpak have some issues with Jake.
ReplyDeleteAlso I,to a degree, lost interest in O lifting during that period as the lifters that followed Bednarski, Dube, Pickett and Patera were not anything to right home about
This was a S&H article not IM. But thanks for putting it on the blog.
ReplyDeleteKinda like this one I typed out in 2015 from IronMan magazine? But thanks for nothing, ya fuckin' goof. How about contribute something worth shit? https://ditillo2.blogspot.com/2015/02/jake-stefans-clean-and-jerk-training_12.html
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