@@zapalinski his best achievement till the date is beating John brzenk in 2012....when he was skinny and without roids .......now he is big but not that strong nor healthy.....
@@BontgomoryMurns I don't think so , his performance against Dave chaffe , levan , Andrey pushkar, laletin , prudkin, genadi,olg zhokh is just zero........so, I haven't seen him beating any good arm wrestler in recent 4,5 years. him beating Tim bresnan was not that impressive because he is so huge as compared to Tim bresnan.
Of All These, Nothing Is Better Than Climbing Up The Rope., -&-Training On MY AvoX®️ Armwrestling Machine™️./Not Shown Here, With Only One Goal In Life: To Stand Up For You’re Honor 🙏.
Es entrenamiento para armwrestling, no para culturismo. No tiene nada que ver, en este deporte se busca ser fuerte en determinados angulos. Es entrenamiento, no ir al gimnasio a verte bien.
En realidad estan haciendo entrenamiento para pulsos ; se trata de desarrollar la mayor fuerza posible en antebrazos y biceps; ellos no entrenan para fisicoculturismo;👌😎
@@arturocadiz697 si bro ellos.bien lo saben ; son deportes pesados; y en cada uno de ellos hacen lo que sea por mantener una pocision cerca al campeonato
Alejandro I see you know absolutely nothing about actual training, Instead of being strong in 1/4 for the motion, be strong in the entire range of motion. It would make you way stronger from a losing position, and decrease your chances of a bicep tear, which I’ve seen plenty of, that is most likely the result of improper training and form. You think these guys could curl 90kg from the floor up for reps? They barely move there arm 2 inches, which is literally just holding the weight and monkey fucking it up and down with body swinging. Anything past a 90 degree angle and these guys lose all there strength, and resort to being a bitch under the table.
Armwrestlers do partial reps because they wanna be strong in tight angles, not open angles. When your arm is opened up, you already lost the match. That's why they wanna be as strong as possible in tight angles = partial reps. That being said most armwrestlers train full range of motion too. Usually when they're close to competition they focus a lot more on partial reps. I say do both, full range of motion for health, partial reps for armwrestling strength.
here you go: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-bH239L0Fj48.html Also: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-xETx2MgIjjI.html&feature=emb_logo