Push Yourself to Double Duty With This Chest and Back Workout

Not everyone has time to train one body part a day. And not everyone wants to do that. Sometimes, you just need to get all your upper-body training into one session.

On days like that, the chest-and-back superset session is one of your best training options. It’s grueling and challenging, but it will leave your entire upper body with a vicious pump, and insure that you’re hitting all critical upper-body muscles.

And while it’s challenging, it’s also smartly crafted: For the health of your shoulders and your posture, you always want to blend pushing and pulling exercises into your training. Supersetting a chest exercise with a back exercise insures that you do that. Lead with the back exercise in each pair first; for physique balance, you should aim to pull more weight (and more frequently) than you push in all your training.

A chest-and-back superset workout also lets you move challenging weights; you’ll wind up doing major movements, such as bench presses and rows, and by lifting heavy weights, you’ll spur your body towards muscle growth.

This isn’t the kind of workout you want to do all week, though, especially if you’re training hard. If you try doing chest-and-back supersets, think of doing them twice a week, with at least two days of rest for upper-body training in between. Chest-and-back supersets work ideally with a weekly split that has you training on a three-day split that starts with legs on the first day, places upper body on the second day, and includes a third day of rest and recovery.

Not sure where to start with a chest-and-back supersets workout? Here’s a sample session that can get you jumpstarted.

The Chest-and-Back Blast

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Directions

Do the exercises in order, with exercises 1a and 1b as a superset. Perform both moves back-to-back, resting one minute after completing each set. Do the same for moves 2a and 2b. Do exercise 3 by itself, resting for 1 minute between sets. Finish with 2 sets of exercise 4.

1a) Barbell Row

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Hold a loaded barbell with an overhand grip slightly wider than shoulder-width. Hinge at the hips and tighten your core, working to keep your shoulders slightly higher than your hips. Don’t round your lower back. Squeeze your shoulder blades, then row the barbell to your chest. Return to the start. Do 3 sets of 10 reps.

1b) Dumbbell Bench Press

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Lie with your back on a bench, holding dumbbells directly over your shoulders, arms straight. Your core should be tight and your glutes should be squeezed. Bend at the elbows and shoulders, lowering the weights to within an inch of your chest, then press the dumbbells back up. Do 3 sets of 8 reps.

2a) Chinup

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Hang from a pullup bar with a shoulder-width, underhand grip. Keep your core tight. Squeeze your shoulder blades, then pull your chest toward the bar. Hold when you’ve pulled your chest to the bar, then slowly lower to the start. That’s 1 rep; do 3 sets of 6 to 8 reps.

2b) Mixed-style Incline Press

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Life very rarely permits you to repeat the exact same isolated muscle contraction 10-12 consecutive times. So every so often, mix things up with moves like this 2-style incline dumbbell press. Start with a single-arm alternating press (one of my faves), then immediately do a standard two-arm press. Aim for 5-6 clusters of that per set and shoot for 4 sets. The first move will challenge your core to stabilize against off-balance forces. Your core then gets a “breather” of sorts (although it’s still working), but your entire body faces a more challenging load on the standard rep. I actually started throwing this into my chest training three weeks ago as means of solving a problem: I had been doing so much single-arm press work that when I had to deal with standard two-arm dumbbell presses, my body seemed to fatigue from the overall load. This stack insures that I get all the core and shoulder stabilization benefits of single-arm work along with the overall weight of two-arm work, while building some coordination (ya gotta think on this one) too. #fitness #training #chestday #benchpress #hateinclinework

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Lie with your back on an adjustable bench set to a 30-degree incline, holding light- to medium-weight dumbbells directly over your shoulders, core tight and glutes squeezed. Keeping your right arm straight, lower the left dumbbell to your chest then press it back up. Do that twice. Then keep the left arm straight as you lower the right dumbbell to your chest and press it back up twice. Lower both dumbbells to your chest and press them back up. Do 2 to 3 clusters of reps like that. Do 3 sets.

3) Incline Bench Dumbbell Row

Lie with your chest on an adjustable bench set to a 30-degree incline, holding light dumbbells. Let your arms hang naturally. Tighten your glutes, flex your abs, and squeeze your shoulder blades. Row the dumbbells upwards, aiming to drive your elbows higher than your torso. Squeeze your back at the top of each rep. Do 3 sets of 10 to 12.

4) Pushup-to-triceps Pushup Finisher

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Super easy pushup challenge that travels well (and that’s actually meant to be done outdoors on a day like today even though I did it indoors). Easy rules: 1 pushup, then jump your hands into a tricep pushup position. 1 tricep pushup. Jump back to standard and go 2 reps and 2 reps…then 3 and 3….blah blah blah until you’re toast. Make it to 5 and 5 (this is my last set and I wasn’t even close on that…it’s tough) and you’ve done 30 reps. 3 sets and you’ll be rocked. Advanced lifters, this is your finisher (mine today). Beginners, this can be a full workout. Couple notes: 1) on the close-grip jump, don’t think too close. Think hand-width just inside of normal pushup position and slightly below your chest. You’ll save your shoulders from unnecessary internal rotation that doesn’t actually benefit the triceps training effect we want. 2) if you can’t jump your hands you can still do this. Just move your hands to each position with control. 3) make the pushups clean and controlled but don’t drop your chest all the way to the deck. #fitness #training #chestday #triceps #pushups

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Get in pushup position. Do one pushup. As you push your torso upwards, jump your hands in the air, into position for a triceps pushup, hands slightly narrower than shoulder-width apart. Do one triceps pushup, then jump (or step) your hands back to regular pushup position and do two standard pushups. After the second one, move back into triceps pushups position and do two triceps pushups.

Continue laddering up until you can do no more good-form reps. Do 2 sets.

For more tips and routines from Samuel, check out our full set of Eb and Swole workouts. If you want to try an even more dedicated routine, consider Eb’s New Rules of Muscle program.

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