Summer High School Special
Slater Coe • May 29, 2026
SUMMER HIGH SCHOOL SPECIAL
If you've got a High Schooler with no summer plans, send 'em our way for some Strength & Fitness.
Just $99/mo for Unlimited classes.
We'll help them build strength, sweat a little (or a lot), and stay active during their break. We'll put 'em thru our Ramp Up process to learn barbell & gymnastic movements, so they have a good base for the summer and the rest of their athletic endeavors.
Email us to lock in this deal!
MORE RECENT POSTS
A drop set is a training method where you perform a set at one weight, briefly rest, reduce the weight, and continue lifting. Most people know drop sets from bodybuilding, where someone does an exercise to failure, strips weight off the bar, and keeps going until they can barely move. In our classes, we're using the same basic idea, but for a different purpose. Instead of trying to exhaust a muscle, we're trying to accumulate more high-quality reps, reinforce good technique, and get stronger without letting form deteriorate. Take today's Front Squat session as an example: Every 3 minutes for 4 sets 3 Front Squats @ 85% Rest 15sec 2 Front Squats @ 80% Rest 15sec 1 Front Squat @ 75% The three reps at 85% are the main strength work. They're heavy enough that they demand concentration and good positioning. After 15sec, you've recovered just enough to perform two more reps at 80%. Even though you're still fatigued, that slightly lighter weight now feels more manageable because your body has already handled something heavier. Another 15sec later, you finish with a single rep at 75%, which should move quickly and reinforce excellent technique. Those short rest periods are what make the workout effective. Fifteen seconds isn't enough time to fully recover, but it is enough to reset your breathing, tighten your brace, and prepare for another quality rep. You're never completely fresh, which teaches you to maintain good movement even when you're tired, but you're also never so fatigued that your technique falls apart. By the end of the workout, you've accumulated 24 quality Front Squats: 12 at 85%, 8 at 80%, and 4 at 75%. That's a significant amount of productive work without asking you to grind through endless heavy sets. The heavier reps build strength, while the lighter reps reinforce the movement pattern and allow you to move the bar with more speed and confidence. This is one of the biggest differences between strength & conditioning and traditional bodybuilding. Bodybuilding drop sets are designed to maximize muscular fatigue and create a big "burn." Our goal is different. We want every rep to look good. We want to practice producing force, maintaining positions, and building strength under "manageable" fatigue. The drop in weight isn't there because you can't lift the heavier load anymore. It's there because the slightly lighter weight lets you continue practicing high-quality movement after the hardest work has already been done. Over the course of our strength cycle, this approach builds stronger, more technically sound athletes who don't just lift heavier weights... they move those weights better.
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