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  • The Science of Winning

    THE SCIENCE OF WINNING ACCORDING TO VASILI ALEXEYEV
    by Dmitri Ivanov
    For www.EliteFTS.com

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Note from Dave: This is a repost of what I feel is one of the most educational articles we have ever posted. This was sent to me years ago from Dr Mel Siff and should be a must read for everyone in the strength game. I think you will also find the material very insightful. Dr Siff makes a few notes throughout the article that I found to be of great interest. Dr Siff is the author of the text Supertraining.


    Notes from Dr Siff:
    I cannot recall if this article on the great OL lifter, Alexeyev, has already
    been featured. Anyway, it is still worth reading even if it was posted a
    long time ago. Alexeyev's comments on his great rival, Reding, are
    especially noteworthy:

    "I remember, at the time of the championships in Lima, that Reding in
    training lifted record weights. He had acquired a terrific strength and huge
    muscles, but he lost to me, even though he was physically stronger. Why?
    Serge and I had different ways of training. Others thought for him. He
    carried out the suggestions of his coach, Dupont. Roughly speaking, Reding
    took in 'the science of winning' though his ears. And this showed when he was
    on his own with the barbell. But, as for me, I thought for myself. Serge
    also lost because he wanted to beat me. That's all he thought about. He
    worried constantly and burned himself out before he even got to the platform
    . . . "

    Read the rest of the article and appreciate how much of it applies to many of
    us.





    THE SCIENCE OF WINNING ACCORDING TO VASILI ALEXEYEV

    by Dmitri Ivanov

    The main thing in a record holder's life is work. In my opinion, it is
    particularly a profoundly thought-out creative individual training regimen
    which allowed Alexeyev to build his fantastically strong and voluminous
    muscles and to strengthen his will. But, most important, is his character!

    When I asked Vasily the reasons for his constant victories, he thought a bit
    and answered: "If I want something. I will definitely achieve it. No matter
    what I have to sacrifice ... The more complex the situation, the more
    threatening my rivals, the more I spread my wings in defiance of everything.
    You want to know the principles of my training? That, forgive me, is a secret
    . . . I'm joking, of course! I don't like to speak about this subject
    because some people won't understand what I'm talking about while others will
    say I'm bragging, as if to say, "He's become a champion and he's making it
    up... "

    "But then I see that many on our team are already working in my way. Theirs,
    however, is a copy - not the original. Even though the copy may be a good
    one, it will always be a step away from the original. You see, the question
    is not one of strength, not one of talent. It's a matter of what's in the
    head. In the physical sense you should, you need to work very hard, but with
    the nerves-- less . . ."

    At different stages Alexeyev was helped by trainers and he listened to their
    opinions . . . but only up to a point, to a limit. There was his first
    teacher, Simon Mileiko, and then Alexander Chuzhin. Rudolf Plyukfelder, it's
    felt, also played a definite part. And Vasily also took something from the
    trainers of the Soviet team. Especially from Arkady Vorobyev. However, he was
    not a blind follower of orders given from the sidelines.

    All these last years, Alexeyev has been training on his own using his own
    method which can't be found in any textbook. All the books say that to
    achieve great results you have to train vigorously, often lifting maximum
    weights. But Alexeyev considers this a harmful mistake. More than one book
    could be written about Alexeyev's method of winning and I imagine he will
    write them. Here I will quote some excerpts from his words on this subject,
    taken from our many chats over the years:

    "There is much talk about the art of training. But there is nothing concrete.
    I myself keep searching for a rational method..... Constantly..... But
    generally I train differently from anyone else ...

    "Here they've put up a lot of mirrors in the gyms. They're good for furniture
    but not for training. When an athlete looks into the mirror he gets away from
    himself; instead he should be totally focused. In the mirror you'll see
    nothing but your image. This means that you won't understand and won't pick
    up the technique of exercise, you won't make sense out of the method. My
    advice during training is to think, think, think! ...

    "What upsets me is that the method of training used by an overwhelming number
    of weightlifters, in spite of the amazing growth in records, is still at the
    same point it was in the fifties. For example, you want to improve your
    technique on the snatch - you practise the snatch; the jerk -- you practice
    the jerk. I tell them to correct their mistakes differently -- to strengthen
    separate groups of muscles. A simple example: an athlete is having trouble
    with the snatch. They advise him to start differently, to change his grip on
    the barbell -- wider or narrower. But it turns out that it's enough to build
    up a group of muscles which 'do the trick' with the maximum effort and he
    gets better results ...

    "We often see the effect but not the cause of what's lacking. If an athlete
    doesn't know how to jerk, he's not going to learn this only by jerking. But
    if he were to do some necessary exercises in order to strengthen a group of
    muscles (those necessary for the jerk) then he will get results. No one seems
    to understand that, even though an exercise does not 'lie' [functionally]
    right alongside the jerk, it influences, it gives you the jerk . . .

    "Everyone supposes that my method is good for heavyweights alone. It's good
    for anyone who wants to build up the strength of their muscles . . .

    "My method is aimed at increasing the two lift total. We have many
    outstanding weightlifters in the gyms, but very few at the competitions. Why?
    Well, because one must know how to 'deliver' one's strength on the competing
    platform. The object of today's trainers is not to teach an athlete the
    correct way to lift a barbell. Most important, he must teach him to reason
    and make important decisions independently. Without thought there's no
    creation. And without creation, progress in our difficult work is impossible
    ...

    "It seems to me that some of the talented athletes lack one thing-- they
    haven't had an injury. That's right! An injury that will put them out of
    commission for a year during which time they'll have a chance to weigh every-
    thing. I, too, would not be where I am if I had not injured my back. I
    suffered for a year and a half thinking everything over ... After a
    misfortune, people pull through and become, if possible, great people -- and
    sportsmen, in particular. Those who are stronger find their way out and to
    the top ...

    "Do I worry? Well, of course. If you don't worry, you'll never succeed at
    anything. In sports, without the excitement of daring, you don't win victory
    or records. When I'm too calm before a competition, I rouse myself with hot
    coffee. The pulse must be beating -- no less than 18 times in ten seconds ...

    " Excitement before competition is very dangerous. I, of course, have felt
    it. Sometimes I calm myself --everything happens as it must, and so what
    happens will happen. I must win, because I have a solid supply of strength
    ...

    "Waiting causes the most anxiety. The heavyweights wait the longest, they put
    the final touch on the championships. Usually, I do this. And while the
    others are competing, I can barely stand the noise of the barbells, the
    monotonous voice of the judge. Everything irritates me and annoys me. In
    addition to this, I worry about the team. This puts a lot of strain on my
    will . . .

    'They say that the strongest wins. But the strongest in what way? I remember,
    at the time of the championships in Lima, that Reding in training lifted
    record weights. He had acquired a terrific strength and huge muscles, but he
    lost to me, even though he was physically stronger. Why? Serge and I had
    different ways of training. Others thought for him. He carried out the
    suggestions of his coach, Dupont. Roughly speaking, Reding took in 'the
    science of winning' though his ears. And this showed when he was on his own
    with the barbell. But, as for me, I thought for myself. S erge also lost
    because he wanted to beat me. That's all he thought about. He worried
    constantly and burned himself out before he even got to the platform . . .

    For me the most important thing is to beat myself, to lift the barbell that
    up to this point I have not yet lifted. My rivals don't worry me very much.
    It's good when your competitors are strong and bad when they are weak. The
    same Reding, now dead, when he appeared without me, beat the records every
    time. And I treated him respectfully because he always kept me in shape. Now
    Enaldiev, Rachmanov, Plachkov, and Bonk do the same ...

    "There was a time when I was overcome with anxiety, when I rarely competed so
    that I was losing a sense of the platform. But when I started appearing often
    and with a lot of gusto, my self-confidence returned, and with that records
    and victories. Now, with a solid backlog of experience, I appear on the
    platform less frequently. But for the time being I've not lost my fighting
    qualities. Any competition is a holiday for me. During my training sessions,
    I get up an enormous appetite to lift the heaviest barbell and to set a
    record. Other times, honest, I think to myself: train with weights of 150 to
    200 kilograms, how will I push 250? But I firmly believe in success and know
    exactly how much I am going to pick up in my second turn--the first I do for
    the team ...

    "At the championship, I am in a proper fighting mood. When I put on my outfit
    and my shoes, this very process transforms me. I become more energetic, more
    excited. It's here that it's important not to lose your head, you should
    compete as much as possible with sense ...

    "What advice can I give to the young ones who come out onto the platform with
    their teeth chattering from nerves? First, you must enter a competition well
    prepared. And for this you must train sensibly; you must work on yourself
    physically but save your nerves. It doesn't pay to get excited over nothing
    while training, to show off your courage, to swagger. Save this charge for
    the contest. And then be alert when you go up to the barbell . . . And, to
    be frank, even with all my experience, I am sometimes very nervous--you
    cannot imagine ...

    "I have observed that many train without sense. They do a great deal of work
    for nothing. For example, Falev, an athlete on the Soviet team weighing 110
    kilograms, does squats with a barbell weighing 320 kilograms. I don't use one
    weighing more than 270kg. There is a difference of 50 kilograms in his favor.
    But he jerks 220kg, while I jerk 256kg. Thus, it turns out that the result in
    the classical exercise is not determined by the strength of the legs ...

    "In order to avoid noise, I used to train alone. Now, I go out among the
    people. I show the youngsters the whys and wherefores. I tell them how to
    polish up their technique. Naturally, this is more tiring, since I also train
    myself."

    Usually the great champions, while they are still active, hide their methods
    of training. Alexeyev is not like that. It would seem that it would not be to
    his advantage to share his experiences with young heavyweights, potential
    rivals, with those who are already striving to replace him. However, Vasili
    doesn't refuse anyone his help.

    "I can't do otherwise. What kind of team captain would I be if I watched the
    methods and technical mistakes of my teammates with indifference?"

    My conviction that Alexeyev's priceless experience will not be lost was
    strengthened when I saw that at the end of 1976 he conducted a trial
    get-together at the Podolsk sports base to train the young heavyweights. I
    won't try to describe in depth Alexevev's method (he has written about it in
    his dissertation as a science degree candidate) but I'll explain the reason
    for its great effectiveness.

    Usually the athletes lift barbells and then immediately drop them. This takes
    several seconds. According to Alexeyev's method, the sportsman finds himself
    under the weight for a period of two or three minutes. The entire body must
    sustain this prolonged effort, as the athlete completes several consecutive
    exercises without letting go of the equipment. [Note that this would refer to
    various hybrid exercises, as described in my "Supertraining"2000 book, p397,
    436 Mel Siff]. The weight of the barbell is relatively light, but the
    varied work with it affects every muscle cell.

    By the end of the two-week session, all Alexeyev's students had increased
    their bodyweights as a result of muscle growth and at the same time they'd
    increased their abilities. Here is what Sultan Rachmanov said: "At first I
    trained in mv own way. I didn't believe that Alexeyev's advice would help me.
    Now I believe ... My shoulders, my back, everything is filling up with
    strength. There is this to consider. Not everything will come my way, but
    I'll take the most important! (At the USSR championships in Karaganda,
    Rachmanov, who up until then had not been a 400kg man, became the third prize
    winner with the distinguished sum of 420 kg. In the fall this athlete took
    the USSR record in the snatch. And who is to know, perhaps he will be the
    successor to the glory of the hero of the Munich and Montreal Olympic Games!)

    Each of Alexeyev's students noted that thanks to this unusual system of
    working they have acquired a good amount of self-confidence in their own
    strength. Yes, and I too have noticed with what incredible ease the athletes
    picked up the 160-kilo barbell in the snatch at the end of the training
    session.

    The 1976 annual "Heavy Athletics" ['Tyezhelaya Atletika' in Russian or
    "Weightlifting" in English Mel Siff] ran a detailed article which Alexeyev
    called "The Experience of My Training.' In this first scientific
    publication of the strongest athlete, the author refutes some unsound
    (although they've existed for ten years) methodological concepts about how to
    develop strength in athletes of the heavyweight class.

    He writes: "In the first years I trained according to the accepted methods.
    But then, from 1966, I decided to significantly increase the size of my
    training weight. This immediately brought results. By the end of 1967, I had
    gained 32.5 kilograms in my triple sum total and by the end of 1968 -- 42.5
    kilograms. For athletes of the superheavyweight class, the average rate of
    growth had by this time significantly increased."

    Vasily includes a great variety of exercises in his training. "Besides
    exercises in the· snatch, jerk, or press, pull and squats, I have used many
    other exercises with the barbell and weights. Bends with the barbell on the
    shoulders; bends with the barbell on the shoulders while lying on the 'horse'
    bracing one's hips, with the legs secured; jumps with the barbell on your
    shoulders; press on crossbars with weights; bending and unbending the arms in
    the elbow joints; squats on one leg; throwing the bar upward and behind; and
    other exercises. In addition, in the first year of the time span analyzed,
    these exercises consisted of, on the average, 360 lifts in the preparatory
    period and 158 lifts during the competition period. In the second year,
    correspondingly 841 and 506 lifts, and in the third 880 lifts a month."

    [Note how different his highly varied training was from the training of elite
    Bulgarian lifters. Mel Siff]

    And here is the conclusion that Alexeyev drew at the end of his studies: "The
    method of training I have used can be recommended to athletes of the
    heavyweight class, and also to those athletes whose bodyweight does not
    correspond to the height specifications. Y oung athletes should not inhibit
    the growth of their bodyweight. They should be more courageous about entering
    their proper weight class ...

    "One of the conditions for fast growth in the scores of future athletes of
    heavyweight classes is the completion of large amounts of exercises with the
    barbell and other weights. The problem is that beginning athletes of the
    light or middle weight, in order to become first-class athletes, must
    increase their muscle mass by approximately 25 percent. For heavyweights it's
    50 percent and more. The growth of the muscle mass is directly dependent on
    the amount of the training loads . . .

    "It is also important to note that you can achieve high scores at
    competitions by decreasing to a minimum the lifting of barbells of maximum
    weight in the snatch and jerk exercises, by significantly decreasing the num
    ber of lifts of the barbell with big weights."

    I don't doubt that in the near future the mining engineer Vasily Alexeyev
    will successfully conclude his graduate study as a correspondence student in
    the Institute of Physical Culture and will become a graduate in pedagogical
    studies.

    He will probably change his qualifications because he already considers
    himself outside weightlifting. He will become a coach. A good one! But for
    the moment, Alexeyev is thinking about his third victory at the Olympic
    Games.

    I asked the champion how he was able in 18 years of training to "grow" more
    than 70 kilograms of muscle?

    "Earlier I didn't lift less than 20 tons. More often the daily load was 25 to
    30 tons. What's more, these aren't the same tons that our 'boys' lift today.
    You have to multiply their tons by two or three; that's the factor of
    difficulty which I applied in my exercises. If necessary, I would even now be
    ready to lift 40 tons in one training session ...

    "Besides, speaking about the physical make-up of heavyweights, some experts
    feel that the ability to get high scores should be combined with the
    development of a trim figure. I have departed from this quite a bit. What is
    the weakest part of a person's constitution? You don't know? In my opinion,
    the part of the spine at the waist. And I constantly reinforce it by growing
    a 'corset' with my muscles [If this sounds familiar, then think of Louie
    Simmons and his powerlifters who advocate much the same. Mel Siff]. Yes, we
    superheavyweights are not too pretty to look at, but our body makeup is
    expedient for picking up record barbells."

    "I'll have time to work on my figure when I retire from weightlifting,"
    Vasily said, smiling. "For the moment, I do and will continue to do only that
    which makes me stronger. I notice some talented athletes spend more time
    building their muscles for the sake of form and that this muscular
    development impedes their ability to lift maximum weights. They aren't too
    concerned with their ability to defend the honor of Soviet sports abroad.
    What is the sense of their beautiful figures?!"

    "My task for the future is quite clear," explains Alexeyev. "It is to create
    in Ryazan, where I have settled, a center for weightlifting. To get some
    coaches and help them. I'll develop a method for each different age group --
    from the beginning to maturity. I've tried out everything on myself ...
    Maybe, I'll invite some boys with potential to Ryazan, boys who don't have
    coaches or suitable conditions for training. I don't mean this would be to
    lure them away. We are still behind in many weight classes. I would like to
    work, and I have no profit motive ...

    "For the time being I still want to win and set records. I love this
    occupation. I respect weightlifting. It teaches you to master the art and at
    the necessary moment to organize yourself. It's because I feel so 'in love'
    with the barbell that I gave it the best years of my life. For me sport is
    life. Hemingway put it well when he wrote: 'Sport teaches you to win
    honestly. Sport teaches you to lose with dignity. In a word, sport teaches
    you life'...

    [Unfortunately, far too many athletes today, especially in pro sports, don't
    seem to believe Hemingway! Mel Siff]

    "There is no point in denying that for the athlete, as for the artist,
    recognition is a necessity. A good artist controls his public. The athlete
    first causes his public to be amazed, then to worry about their idol, and
    finally to love him for his skill, his strength, and his courage. One wants
    to startle the world with something incredible. Then they recognize you. For
    this it is worth working like a dog. Especially since in our time, it becomes
    more and more difficult to surprise anybody ...

    "When I joined the weightlifting section, there were no sharp definitions
    between the methods of training. I was not used to training mechanically and
    I didn't like this. I began to think for myself, how to organize an effective
    system of training. I knew from my own experience that, with stubborn effort,
    one can do anything. I didn't spare myself. I worked with maximum weights,
    analyzed my situation, and again began training. I invented many things
    myself. For example, I began to work a great deal with the barbell in water.
    I searched and experimented...and here is the result. I made my way from 500
    to 600 kilograms in three years. >From then on I wanted to be first ...

    [Note that lifting weights against various opposing media such as elastic
    bands and chains, a la Westside - and, in this case, lifting against water
    resistance (which is variable) - can be a useful supplementary form of
    training. Mel Siff]

    "At 28 I set my first record, having had a solid physical preparation. I ran,
    jumped, played volleyball -- with first-class sports strength. At the age of
    12, I began to train with homemade barbells. They are still to be found in my
    mother's yard. All of them weigh more than two tons. I didn't think of any
    records. I always respected strength in people and I wanted to have it
    myself. What boy doesn't want to be strong and skillful? I'm sure there isn't
    one."

    "Isn't the cultivation of one's physical abilities detrimental to the
    development of the mind?", I once asked Alexeyev and showed him a quotation
    from the magazine "Bicyclist", which was published in St Petersburg in the
    last century. "To make a man an athlete and at the same time a man of
    learning is simply impossible. In order to regulate the body in accordance
    with physiological law it is necessary for the physical work to be in reverse
    proportion to the intellectual work. Only in view of these circumstances,
    instead of opposition, can one achieve the desired balance. . .

    "There is some truth in this," agreed Vasily, "I have known from my own
    experience how difficult it is to read even entertaining literature after a
    hard training session. I can never sit too long in one place. It's torture
    for me. I absolutely must move. Therefore it`s not easy for us to study. And
    yet all Soviet athletes get a higher education. But they lay certain claims
    on us. Some would like to see the big sportsman as a well-rounded
    intellectual. But this doesn't happen in reality. Take any scholar, dig a bit
    and you will find that in many things he is an ignoramus."

    "Do you think about leaving sports?"

    "I clearly understand that I won't be around forever. But I still have the
    desire to compete and compete. Even though I soon will be 36 and age in
    sports is critical, I have outlasted and I think I will still outlast some of
    the younger 'old men' who don't know how to compete. I've outlived Patera,
    Dube, Reding, and Mang..."

    "Our youth is now coming up"

    "Whom do you have in mind?"

    "Enaldiev, Rachmanov . . . "

    "What kind of youth is this? -- they are about 30. It's me who is young and
    coming up. But you can't make comparisons with me. I am no worse now than I
    was in 1970, when I was 28 years old."

    "And yet is there a reason to remain on the competing platform? After all,
    your remaining in sports keeps you from making progress in the industrial
    field."

    "Sometimes I worry about this. When I was just a Master of Sports, they
    offered me a choice -- rather, they advised me to 'drop' my barbells because
    my absences from work (while at the contests) interfered with my job. At the
    factory I worked with zeal and at the Kotlas paper works, they appreciated
    me. They wanted me to become a technical expert. But I wanted to achieve
    great things in sports and I refused the tempting offer. I found work which
    allowed me to spend more time with the barbells. I was not wrong in my
    choice. I don't regret anything. Even though, of course, I've missed some
    things. I imagine that if I had not gotten so passionately involved in
    sports, I might have had more success at the factory where they also
    appreciated me. My principle is to work honestly.''

    It is difficult to approach Alexeyev. But in rare moments of frankness, it's
    a real pleasure to chat with him and listen to him. He has a tendency to be
    too stern and at times he is somewhat unfair to our friend, the journalist.
    But it seems he can't be any other way.

    Once a famous pilot and hero of the Soviet Union, Georgi Mosolov, talking
    about heroic deeds, wrote: "The strength of the muscles, as if blending with
    the strength of the will, makes for a third strength, the strength that helps
    sportsmen set phenomenal world records. That is the very strength people find
    in themselves, people who have crossed a limit that until then had been
    considered impossible."

    The Russian giant has passed that boundary 80 times! Sometimes he fought for
    victory (in spite of himself) and won. In these moments Vasily Alexeyev was
    saved by the main component--the third strength--the indomitable will.

    ---------------

    Dr Siff Notes:
    Here is the next installment on the intriguing Russian behemoth, Vasily
    Alexeyev. I cannot recall who sent it to me or from which reference it came,
    so, if anyone does know, please let me know, so that we can provide full
    acknowledgements for this fascinating tale.

    -------------------------


    ALEXEYEV- THE BEST AT EVERYTHING (continued)

    William O. Johnson

    ...... He went on. "There are two categories of performer in my sport.
    First: those who view competitions as tortures. Second: those who see
    competitions as great celebrations. I am in the middle of those two. For some
    performers there is a psychological problem. As the weight is greater, the
    more the mind makes the weight seem to be. But we are from the U.S.S.R., and
    such a psychological situation is no problem. During Shakespeare's times it
    was said,'What must be cannot be avoided.' That is how it is when I lift. To
    successfully lift the weight cannot be avoided. I experience the tortures und
    the celebration. But I lift as well as I lift because it cannot be avoided.

    "I am asked to make many speeches in the Soviet Union. I am very much at ease
    and I say to crowds,'O.K, what topic do you like me to talk about?' They ask
    me to tell my biography, how I got to be a great sportsman, and they ask my
    impression of my last competition. Of course, I have nearly always won the
    last competition, so my impressions are always happy, proud. I say I have
    become a great champion because of my love of hard work and my great striving
    to reach the target of winning."

    When I asked whether he considered his victories some sort of proof of the
    U.S.S.R.'s superiority over the U.S., Alexeyev replied, "I have always had to
    win because I respect my people and I display my country's success by
    winning. As to whether we would prove the Soviet way better than the American
    in the competitions of weightlifting - such a target was never put before
    us."

    It was about 11:45 in the morning, another translucent autumn day in
    Alexeyev's courtyard. Young Dmitri was kicking his soccer ball, the Doberman
    puppy scrambling wildly after it. The boy's school hours were in the
    afternoon. His brother attended morning classes--there are double sessions in
    Shakhty. Suddenly the door of Alexeyev's house banged open and the great man
    stepped out. He was dressed in electric-blue sweat pants, Adidas sneakers, a
    thin apple-green T shirt. In his right hand he carried a bulging Adidas bag
    and looked not unlike a gigantic commuter bound for his train. And Vasili
    Alexeyev was indeed on his way to work. He strode about 25 mighty paces, and
    there he was at his office, chairman of the board, to say nothing of king of
    the mountain.

    In those 25 paces from his back door to the bar, the weights and the rubber
    mats laid by the brick wall, everything in Alexeyev's existence as premier
    sports hero of the Soviet Union and strongest man in the world was on
    display. He moved with a powerful swagger across the courtyard bricks. His
    massive arms kept rhythm with the steady pump of his great thighs and his
    head swayed--gently, arrogantly--with each stride. He radiated absolute peace
    and self-assurance. His face was composed in the benign, even saintly,
    self-confident expression of an old-fashioned king absolutely certain of his
    divine right to reign. There might have been music, The Hallelujah Chorus
    perhaps, but it was not necessary.

    At the weightlifting area he unzipped the bag to take out a package of talcum
    powder and a white leather girdle which he strapped beneath his belly to
    diminish the immense strain on his stomach muscles when he hoists the
    weights. The weights, the great discs of iron, were stacked along the garden
    wall. He studied them, then picked up one weighing 25 kilos (55 pounds) andd
    fitted it on one end of the bar. He got a similar disc on the other end and
    began to work. Next he progressed to 65 kilos (143 pounds). He dusted his
    hands with talcum, spat into his palms, bent and gripped the bar. With a
    horrible gasp and grunt he yanked it to shoulder level, paused, then raised
    it, in triumph, it seemed, above his head. He held it there for a moment,
    then let it fall to the mats with an explosive crash. In the soft morning,
    with his Shakhtinka roses budding nearby and the leaves of the grapevines
    rustling on the garden wall, with the chirping of the birds in his trees and
    the civilized sound of trolley cars in the distance, the savage clangor of
    the falling weight was as unnerving as a grenade blast at one's feet.

    Alexeyev lifted the 65 kilos three or four times as a warmup. He rested for a
    moment, leaning on a padded gymnastic horse. He said nothing. He seemed to be
    concentrating very hard, as though slipping into some kind of trance
    necessary to the superhuman feats he performed so regularly. Dmitri and the
    puppy scampered by his feet. and Alexeyev emerged from his trance to inquire,
    "Have you done all your lessons?" Offended, the boy replied that of course he
    had. Alexeyev added more weight and lifted something over 250 pounds. He
    seemed about to burst when he hoisted the bar above his head. His belly
    strained against the leather girdle. He dropped the weight with the same
    hideous crash. He lifted it again and let it fall. Then, panting, he leaned
    again against the horse. Once more he seemed to be entering a quasi-mystical
    state of concentration, which it seemed wise not to interrupt. But then he
    looked at me and said, "Ask me something."

    Well, all right. Could he explain his training technique? He said, "The
    difference between my methodics and others is great. What is mainly different
    is that I train more often and I lift more weights than others. I never know
    when I will train. Sometimes deep in the night, sometimes in the morning.
    Sometimes several times a day, sometimes not at all. I never repeat myself.
    Only I understand what is right for me. I have never had a coach. I know my
    own possibilities bestly. No coach knows them. Coaches grow old and they have
    old ideas."

    END OF PART 2

    ----------------------

    Dr Mel C Siff
    Denver, USA
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