How can a fighter best structure weight training sessions to be the most productive in the shortest space of time? We’re a twitchy bunch with a strong work ethic and rest periods are generally not respected.

However, it takes a relatively long time for the neuromuscular system to recover between strength and power exercise sets – typically between 3-5 mins – and not allowing adequate recovery greatly reduces strength and power development. Taking less rest between sets is tempting, as you don’t feel fatigued. But in reality your central nervous system is still fried and incapable of delivering a strong enough spark to contract your muscles with sufficient force.

But who’s got time to wait at least 3-minutes between sets? Is there another way to use this rest time that doesn’t hamper strength and power?

The solution is supersets – pairing two non-competing exercises back to back without any rest. For example, perform 5x front squats followed immediately by 5x weighted pull ups, then rest for a couple of minutes before hitting the front squats followed by pull ups again. By the time you return to the front squats, about 3-minutes will have elapsed, and by the time you repeat the pull ups again, about 3-minutes will have elapsed too. The chosen exercises don’t interfere with each other’s recovery as pull ups involve different neuromuscular pathways to the squats.

Renowned strength coach Mike Boyle advocates tri-sets for even greater ‘density’ – pairing two strength exercises back to back with either a core or mobility exercise, depending on your personal requirements. I like this approach, it allows you to pack a lot of high quality work into a short space of time. Get in, train hard, and get out again.

Here’s an example gym session structure that I use, you can plug in any relevant exercises into the categories outlined:

Soft Tissue/Flexibility

Activation/Movement Preparation

Superset:

1a) Power Exercise

1b) Mobility Exercise

Rest 2-mins

Tri-set:

2a) Strength Exercise 1 – Lower Body

2b) Strength Exercise 2 – Upper Body Pull

2c) Mobility Exercise

Rest 1-min

Tri-set:

3a) Strength Exercise 3 – Upper Body Push

3b) Strength Exercise 4 – Core

3c) Mobility Exercise

Rest 1-min

You can even fill the short rest periods with Muay Thai footwork practice or relaxed shadow boxing if you like. I may do this during lower intensity sessions when the lifting loads aren’t so taxing.

This session structure packs a lot into around 45-60 minutes. And if you can fit two sessions like this in each week for 4-weeks, you’ll be rewarded with increased in power and strength, improved mobility and significantly reduce your likelihood of injury. It’s certainly time well invested in something other than Muay Thai practice.