The Top Article of the Week

Mastering the Basics Must Precede Embracing a Specific Methodology -- John O'Neil, petedupuis.com

This week's top article won't teach you some groundbreaking new training method. Nor will it teach you the "best" nutrition protocol. In fact, it'll tell you to stop looking for it (especially if you're in the first few years of your fitness career).

See, most new trainers think they need the most advanced fitness methodologies known to humanity. They need to wow their clients with sophisticated physiological jargon every session.

What they forget, however, is their number-one responsibility: to get their clients results. And what's the best way to fulfill this responsibility?

Master the basics. Enjoy.

 

General Health

Part II: Correcting the Lower Back and Hips -- Kevin Mullins, tonygentilcore.com

What Is Creatine? How to Start Supplementing with Creatine -- Steve Kamb, Nerd Fitness

Ankle Mobility - Training Inside Out -- Mike Tromello, Breaking Muscle

The Journey Is in Low-Intensity Training -- Taylor Lewis, Pulmonary Performance

 

Fat Loss

Use This Fat-Loss Workout Plan to Burn Fat on Autopilot -- JC Deen, jcdfitness.com

The Best Damn Diet for Natural Lifters -- Christian Thibaudeau, T Nation

Give Your Clients What They Want and What They Need -- Raphael Konforti, the PTDC

 

Strength Training

7 Eccentric Landmine Methods for Strength, Size, and Muscle Function -- Joel Seedman, Advanced Human Performance

Your First Meet Cycle — How to Lay the Program's Foundation -- Joe Schillero, Elite FTS

How to Get a Dynamic Full-Body Workout with One Dumbbell -- Pamela Hernandez, Thrive Personal Fitness

Top 30 Row Variations for a Stronger Back and Healthier Shoulders -- John Rusin, drjohnrusin.com

 

Career