Is Getting Stronger Really the Best Way to Gain Muscle?

Published: Sept. 20, 2017, 12:59 p.m.

Spend enough time in the gym and you\u2019ll inevitably notice that the biggest guys and gals are also often the strongest.

Sure, some people are stronger than they look, but for the most part, strength and size seem to be directly correlated.

The bigger someone is, the bigger his weights tend to be.

This begs a question, then:

Is muscle growth simply a byproduct of strength? If you just focus on getting stronger and stronger, will your muscles just get bigger and bigger?

Advocates of strength training have been saying this for decades, but their detractors say that muscle growth isn\u2019t that simple.

They point to stringbeans that can push, pull, and squat tremendous amounts of weight, and to research that appears to demonstrate that heavy weightlifting\u2013the bread and butter of all strength programs\u2013simply isn\u2019t necessary for getting big muscles.

Instead, they counter, you can focus on other training variables, such as volume, time under tension, metabolic fatigue, and others, and achieve the same results.

Who\u2019s right? Or are both of these schools of thought misguided and the truth is somewhere in the middle?

Well, in this podcast, you\u2019re going to get a clear, concise, and conclusive answer based on decades of anecdotal evidence as well as our current scientific understanding of muscle hypertrophy.

3:59 - What is the primary driver of muscle growth?
5:39 - What should be the number one goal for a weight lifter?
6:31 - What about people that get big but not strong?
11:00 - What about people that are stronger than they look?
14:37: What should you do when you eventually stop gaining strength?

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