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- Dorian Haywood is the NEW Masters Olympia Champion
Dorian Haywood is the NEW Masters Olympia Champion
From Jeff Cavaliere’s rear-delt revelations to Dorian Yates’ old-school arm-building secrets, this edition is packed with proven ways to train smarter, eat sharper, and size up your competition—both in and out of the gym.
Legends over 40 took center stage in Tokyo on August 9–10, battling it out across ten divisions with Olympia qualifications on the line. For the Men’s Open, Dorian Haywood claimed the title, beating Phil Clahar and Domenico Intermaggio into second and third. In the 212 division, Samir Troudi impressed with exceptional conditioning to snag his ticket to Las Vegas. Classic Physique went to Alex Cambronero for his symmetry and poise—while divisions from Women’s Bodybuilding (Tiana Flex) to Bikini (Kerryne Henich) saw standout performances and next-level muscle maturity. For readers tracking who’s carving a second act, these results are your roadmap to the 2025 Olympia. [Catch the Tokyo Showdown Now!]
This six-week cutting diet gives you a scientific blueprint to strip fat while keeping hard-earned muscle. Start by calculating your maintenance calories and trimming 500 calories per day, a rate proven to deliver around a pound of fat loss per week. Protein intake is non-negotiable: hit 1 to 1.2 grams per pound of bodyweight while keeping fats modest (0.2–0.25 g/lb) and filling the rest with carbs. Choose whole-food powerhouses, like lean meats, leafy greens, low-GI fruits, legumes, eggs, and clean grains to fuel training and recovery. Pair that with smart use of whey, creatine, BCAAs, ZMA, or glutamine if desired, and your cut becomes both effective and sustainable. [Start Your 6-Week Transformation Today!]
Even though biceps weren’t his greatest asset, six-time Mr. Olympia Dorian Yates turned them into a defining feature with four strategic isolation moves. He recommends starting every arm session with focused work: concentration curls, cable curls, machine curls, and barbell curls to maximize muscle control and peak contraction. The emphasis on a slow negative, and intense focus paid off, letting his biceps grow despite his high-intensity overall training style. For the reader chasing a legendary arm pump, this sequence proves that even weaker body parts can be turned into assets when approached with intent and precision. [Curl with Yates’ Legacy Here!]
Bodybuilding legends Dennis James, Jose Raymond, and Milos Sarcev recently weighed in on the 2025 Mr Olympia outlook. Jose backs Hadi Choopan, while Dennis names Samson Dauda his pick. Sarcev adds that Choopan might be hiding a knockout package for Vegas. The trio also dissected the growing tension between Derek Lunsford and Nick Walker, agreeing that the dislike is real and that each seems more motivated by beating the other than by a title alone. [Get Ahead of Olympia’s Rivalry Now!]
Muscle-building purists have long debated whether to crank up the weight or crank out more reps. An expert cuts through the noise: progressive overload is key, and both approaches work depending on your goal. Want lean muscle? Alternate between heavier lifts and extra reps with the 8–12 or 12–15 rep range using 70–80 percent of your 1RM and aim for 12–20 total sets per muscle each week. Chasing strength? Make weight your weapon, think 85–90 percent of your 1RM in 4–8 reps, and drop to 2–4 reps for pure strength focus. Cutting fat or just staying active? Either approach works, so stick with what keeps you moving. [Choose Your Path and Dominate Your Workouts!]
The 2025 Texas Pro delivered victories across elite divisions worth more than bragging rights. It’s a fast track to Olympia. Men’s Open went to Chase Conners, with strong lineups from second-place Michael Riley and third-place Devon Nicolai. Classic Physique saw Santiago Banuelos take gold thanks to textbook symmetry and presentation. In women’s divisions, Brittany Arnsdorf claimed Fitness Olympia qualification in Wellness. [Check Out the Full Texas Pro Breakdown!]
At the 2025 Tupelo Pro in Mississippi (August 8–9), four categories delivered winners headed straight to Vegas. In Classic Physique, Kim Angel impressed judges with sculpted symmetry and earned first place over Ejike Enwereuzor and Mahfuz Hawit. Figure crowned Missy Truscott for flawless presentation and stage poise. Brooke Walker dominated Women’s Physique with muscle definition and confidence. In Wellness, Nicole Salazar’s lower-body proportions stood out above the rest. For anyone tracking who’s locked in for Olympia, this event just handed out keys to the kingdom. [Unlock the Tupelo Pro Victors Here!]
ATHLEAN-X founder Jeff Cavaliere just debunked rear-delt training clichés with a trio of potent moves. First up is the rear-delt row. Ditching the fly in favor of elbow positioning that lets the rear delts take center stage. Next, the face pull, but only with two ropes, which unlocks full rear-delt engagement by allowing elbows to reach that growth zone. Finally, the secret bonus - the seated row machine, performed with elbows high and wide, to overload the often-neglected rear delts. Each move works smarter (not harder) to reveal fuller, rounder shoulders. [Master the Rear Delt Trifecta Now!]
It isn’t about lifting harder, it’s about lifting smarter. A veteran trainer lays out a hypertrophy roadmap that pairs mechanical tension, metabolic stress, and muscle damage to spark real growth. Readers learn to manipulate load, rep range, and tempo to target all three growth stimuli, whether that means pausing the negative, using drop sets, or pushing to near-failure. It even shows how to alternate training phases. Think heavy strength to prime the muscles, then higher-rep intensity to exhaust and adapt. For anyone tired of plateauing, this strategy is your ticket to unlocking gains that actually stick. [Discover the Smarter Muscle Path Now!]
Curious exactly how much protein your body needs to build muscle, burn fat, or just maintain tone? FitnessVolt’s free Protein Calculator helps you figure it out, tailoring recommendations based on your weight, activity level, goals, and sex. Built on science and aligned with CDC and ADA guidelines, it delivers personalized daily targets in seconds - no guesswork required. For readers who want nutrition that actually matches their body, this tool simplifies the path to optimized protein intake. [Dial in Your Protein Target Here!]
Mike Sommerfeld puts the 2025 Olympia lineup on notice with a razor-sharp posing session that shows every cut, line, and detail dialed in 📹💪
Recovery Tip of the Day: Electrostimulation Between Heavy Days
Think of electrostimulation as a personal masseuse that works while you binge-watch Netflix. By sending low-level electrical pulses to your muscles, it boosts blood flow, speeds up nutrient delivery, and clears out waste products that make you feel sore and sluggish. Pro athletes use it between brutal training days to keep muscles primed without adding more stress to their joints. Just 15–20 minutes can help you bounce back faster, so when the next heavy day hits, you’re lifting like you never took a break.
The Strength Bulletin
This week’s science drop: A brand-new meta-analysis found no meaningful difference in muscle growth between faster and slower lowering (eccentric) phases when volume and load are matched. Growth remains the same either way. [Read the Study Here!]
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