Common Contest Prep Mistakes by Natural Pro Bodybuilder - Alberto Nunez
Starting The Diet Too Heavy
negatively affect your prep, well the main problem is that this is an initial blunder that normally can’t be undone. Starting too heavy usually means you will need to spend more time dieting hard. This will take your metabolic rate through some rough patches which can hurt your potential to come in ultra lean. It is much easier to get those last 5 pounds off with a metabolism that has only experienced a caloric deficit for 6-12 weeks, versus one that has been at it for 20 plus and has gone through more “hard dieting.” If you have 10 pounds to lose but have already lost 30 pounds, it is not going to be a pleasant ordeal and in many cases the attempt will not be successful. By starting leaner, the diet doesn’t have to be as aggressive and it is much easier to lose those final pounds. You will spend more time eating up into your show, rather than crawling to the finish line and putting all your hard earned muscle at risk. By being a bit more conscious about how heavy you let yourself get in the offseason, you will in turn make your dieting phase that much more fun and not something out of the 15th round in a Rocky movie. Not Allowing Enough Time To Diet
sounds. On the contrary, ask anyone who has successfully (and by that I mean gotten very lean) completed a 20 week plus journey and they will tell you that the thought of a 12 week diet makes them shudder. Nightmares of ending up soft and under-muscled after a last minute scamper come to mind. Making The Wrong Adjustments To Weight Training
wrong direction hormonally, but it will make your body adapt to accommodate this training and these kinds of adaptations are not conducive to preserving muscle. On the contrary, smaller, more efficient (aerobically) muscles are better suited for this kind of training. And trust me, while on a deficit your body won’t fight the idea of having smaller muscles. Lastly, increasing workload simply because you can’t lift as heavy, or lift as heavy as often, is a bogus methodology. The addition of volume that surpasses your offseason efforts is a recipe for disaster. In fact, most athletes would benefit from a shorter, abbreviated version of their offseason proven protocols. It is the loads that create the highest tension (usually lower rep compounds) that we can thank for the vast majority of our development, and abandoning them in favor of “intense” circuit-type training is senseless. You might not be able to hit your top end weights with as many sets, but one top end set where you reiterate the same amount of tension used in the offseason goes a long way in preserving your hard earned muscle. Keeping strength can be hard and it’s an ongoing battle, but it can be done. It is not strange to hear from top natural pros that they have matched, or even broken personal records in the gym during the last home stretch of their diets. Lowering work load for the sake of keeping intensity up is something I recommend in place of increasing volume and lowering weights. In most cases, I like my athletes to incorporate slight deloads just as they would in an offseason, especially if performance is suffering. Doing this while adhering to some form of periodization the whole way is ideal when dieting. So in a nutshell, things should not be too different from your offseason training, just keep in mind that you are under eating so recovery will be slower. Using A Template or Generic Dieting Plan
not simply cutting calories further. Last year I had a competitor whose final adjustment was actually a bump in calories and low and behold 10 days later he reported back with a pair of carved hamstrings and striated glutes. Even worse are diets where food groups are removed, such as making fish your only protein source after a certain amount of weeks. Cutting dairy, starches, or only eating from a very small pool of foods is totally missing the point. Cutting Water, Dropping Sodium, and Potassium Loading
cannot control and it’s more complicated and delicate than just potassium and sodium. Add that to the massive amount of carbs that bodybuilders are throwing in the day of a show and you have a nasty mess of a spillover on your hands. After seeing stage pictures, many competitors in the back of their minds recall a random day three weeks ago at the gym (because they did nothing extreme then) where they looked better than the day of the show. Not only are these kinds of manipulations detrimental to your appearance, they are just not healthy. Sadly it is common for competitors to pass out from the lack of water and become unable to compete when these manipulations are implemented. A few years ago, a now retired IFBB pro had to be hospitalized for this very reason; his potassium levels were so high that he went into heart arrhythmia. Yes, potassium at extreme levels can be very dangerous or even lethal. The final week should be more about fine tuning your appearance, working out the details from weeks previous and you should feel your best. On the days of all my shows, I feel great. I am hydrated and moderately carbed –up, with potassium and sodium at the same levels they have been during my whole prep. I can run a 5k I feel so good and run another one for the guy sitting there cotton mouthed wondering why these last minute “voodoo” tricks have not worked yet again. Leave the goat blood, and virgin chickens at home, just bring your water. No Exit Plan
in a few weeks time a ravenous (both for gains and food) competitor can do plenty of damage. Some competitors make the mistake of correlating hunger with metabolic rate, which is the furthest thing from the case. If this were so, fat loss would be easier towards the tail end of the diet, which is not the case. Early on you can lose weight too quickly if you are not careful and as time goes on those final pounds that get you shredded require some time with more intensive dieting and cardio protocols. In reality, your plan post show should consist of a gradual increase of calories, the speed and amount will vary from person to person, but you should have an exit plan that goes further than which restaurants you want to crash. In 2008 after my 8 month contest season, through strategic increases in calories (and specific macronutrients) I was eating 1,500 calories more, but only gained 2-3 pounds and this was 12 weeks after my show. While I don’t expect most other competitors to be this diligent, it’s proof that you can set yourself up for a more effective, less metabolic trauma-inducing prep, and not experience the “empty nest” syndrome that comes with a prep that’s just ended. It’s always easier to deal with “post contest blues” when you are only 10 pounds over contest weight as opposed to a bloated mess. Have a plan, and stick to it. It’s no different than when you started your contest season. The first steps towards your offseason should also be closely moderated and carefully planned. This will guarantee that you will not make the first mistake I mention, which is starting your diet too heavy. Wise Words from the 3DMJ Coaches
-Not everyone can be the best, be your best, and shame on you if you are not your best. -Keep a balanced approach to your prep, make it a priority, but don’t put other life priorities on the backburner. You will pay for it dearly when the diet is over, in overdue charges. -Enjoy it as much as you can, especially the hard days. I almost recall those days more than any moment of glory I might have had on the stage. -Practice your posing. -Seriously, the worst that can happen is you lose a bodybuilding show. -Buy her roses for no reason in particular, you are likely due. -If you have the resources to acquire professional advising (coaching) it would be in your best interest to get some, at least the first few times you compete. Make sure the person has had experience and success with a wide variety of clients. -Focus on yourself, rather than how some guy that might be doing your show is doing. For most people this is a recipe for disaster, you are the only variable you can control. Worrying about who might show up is like trying to control your water balance through cutting sodium, and overdosing on potassium pills. -There is an “empty nest” syndrome that goes with the end of a contest season. Make sure you have plenty of things lined up post show and stay goal oriented. -Please don’t pose to “Higher” by Creed. -Don’t expect others or loved ones to alter their diets simply because you are restricted, remember you chose to do this! In the same vein, don’t shun a social life, Tupperware and diet soda can be powerful allies in keeping your friends during a 20+ week long diet! -Don’t obsess over your diet; it will last forever if you do this! Hit your goals in the kitchen and hit your goals in the gym. You will lose the fat regardless of how obsessed you are if you do these two things! -Talk to your fellow competitors back stage! There is no defense in bodybuilding; in the end you only control how you look, so treat the others like brothers not enemies. Team 3DMJ would not exist if we had the “hide his shirt” mentality backstage! -Don’t be the guy who’s posing routine ends with 10 most muscular poses. Seriously people, that gets old. -Apologize to your friends and family when you act like a jerk, in fact, go ahead and throw some random apologies in there too. You probably didn’t notice one of the times you were being a jerk. |





There is no template out there that can roll with variations to our individual metabolic rates and the issues that may present themselves while dieting. This is especially true when discussing what it takes to achieve elite levels of conditioning. In the same vein there are cookie cutter peaking strategies. For the most part, these have human physiology all backwards and most importantly don’t take into account all the data that has been gathered over months of dieting. If you pay attention during your diet, you will find out when you look your best, what foods help you look your best, and how to correctly implement this into your final weeks’ plan. Generic diets will simply leave you looking generic and not given a second look by the judges. 
