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  2. How to Plan a Push Day Workout to Pump Your Upper Body - AOL

    www.aol.com/plan-push-day-workout-build...

    The Push Day Workout for Beginners. The beginner push day is designed to hit all the major muscle groups involved in pushing (the chest, triceps, and shoulders) with three exercises. Samuel notes ...

  3. Are Push Day Workouts Right For Your Fitness Routine? - AOL

    www.aol.com/only-push-day-workout-routine...

    For beginners, a full-body workout two to three times per week might be more suitable, she says, whereas more advanced lifters might opt for a split routine with push workouts twice a week. Hearst ...

  4. Make Smarter, Balanced Gains With a Push-Pull-Legs Workout Split

    www.aol.com/smarter-balanced-gains-push-pull...

    The push-pull-split workout program structures your training based on movement patterns, which is great for accomplishing strength and physique goals. Make Smarter, Balanced Gains With a Push-Pull ...

  5. Split weight training - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Split_weight_training

    The Push/pull/legs split consists of three different workout routines: First, the push muscles consisting of the chest, anterior and lateral deltoids, and triceps. Then, the exercises for pull muscles (latissimus, trapezius, rhomboids, biceps, and rear deltoids) are worked on the second day. The final workout consists of training the muscles of ...

  6. Calisthenics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calisthenics

    A full body calisthenics workout that works abdominal muscles, chest, arms, legs, and several parts of the back. The subject squats down and quickly moves their arms and legs into a push-up position. Sometimes, people do a push up (not mandatory) before they finish their rep by tucking the legs in and jumping up. Chin-ups and pull-ups

  7. Strength training - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strength_training

    The simplest strength training periodization involves keeping a fixed schedule of sets and reps (e.g. 2 sets of 12 reps of bicep curls every 2 days), and steadily increasing the intensity on a weekly basis. This is conceptually a parallel model, as several exercises are done each day and thus multiple muscles are developed simultaneously.