This is an advanced programme. It was designed and executed by a 21-year-old who had been training seriously for several years. The volume — particularly in Phases 3 and 4 — is high. The intensity in Phase 2 reaches 95 per cent of working maximum. If you are new to training, or returning after a long break, this is not your starting point. See the
40+ Starting Programme or
Beginner Resistance Training instead.
What This Document Is
This is a training programme written in March 1997, signed at the bottom, and followed through to completion. It was not designed in a gym office or assembled from a textbook. It was written by someone in the middle of training seriously, refined across several months, and used not just by the author but by a group of training partners who followed it alongside him.
The weights recorded in each table are the actual kilograms lifted at the time. They reflect the strength levels of a young man with a well-established base of compound lifting. They are published here as a historical record, not as targets. The programme title says eight weeks to get in shape for the summer. That remains true. The principles inside it are not products of their time.
Understanding the Intensity System
Every exercise in this programme is prescribed as a percentage of your working maximum — the heaviest weight you can lift with sound technique for the given rep range. You do not need to test your absolute one-repetition maximum before starting. Begin with a weight that is genuinely challenging while remaining completely controlled, record it, and apply the percentages to that figure.
The system scales automatically. A lifter with a 100 kg squat working at 65% uses 65 kg. A lifter with a 60 kg squat working at 65% uses 39 kg. The relative demand is identical. What matters is honest application. Training at 65% when the prescription says 80% will produce 65% results. The percentages are not decorative — they structure the progression across all six phases.
The Aerobic Component
The intensity percentages for aerobic sessions refer to approximate maximum heart rate. In 1997, heart rate monitors were not in common use. These sessions were calibrated by feel, using rate of perceived exertion on a scale of one to ten. At 50 per cent maximum heart rate — which appears only in the first two weeks — the effort is light and fully conversational, RPE 3 to 4. At 80 per cent, which appears in the final two phases alongside 45-minute sessions, you are working hard and sustaining it, RPE 7 to 8. Use a monitor if you have one. If not, honest perceived effort is sufficient and is exactly what was used in 1997.
The Six Phases at a Glance
| Phase |
Weeks |
Goal |
Intensity |
Reps |
| Establish Your Foundation |
1–2 |
Build the base at moderate load |
65–70% |
8 |
| Get Bigger |
3–4 |
Strength and size — heavy compound work |
85–95% |
5–6 |
| Get Tough |
5 |
Boost overall conditioning — full body volume |
80% |
10 |
| Get Intense |
6 |
Increase endurance while maintaining size |
75% |
12 |
| Get Ripped |
7 |
Optimise fat burning — elevated cardio |
70% |
14 |
| Get Dialed In |
8 |
Fine tune your physique — techniques introduced |
70–80% |
10–16 |
Phase 1 · Weeks 1–2
Establish Your Foundation
Moderate intensity at 65–70% of working maximum. Eight reps throughout. Three resistance sessions and two aerobic sessions per week. The purpose of these two weeks is not to train hard — it is to train consistently and establish the movement patterns that the heavier phases depend on.
Week 1
Day 1
Resistance
Training
Incline Dumbbell Press
1997: 20 kg
Standing Calf Raise
1997: 70 kg
Day 2
Aerobics — 20 minutes
CV
Steady-state cardio
Light and conversational — RPE 3 to 4
Day 3
Resistance
Training
Overhead Press
1997: 32 kg
Back Extension
1997: 10 kg
Day 5
Aerobics — 20 minutes
CV
Steady-state cardio
Light and conversational — RPE 3 to 4
Day 6
Resistance
Training
Front Pulldown
1997: 45 kg
Crunch
1997: 5 kg weighted
Days 4 and 7 — Rest.
Week 2
Day 1
Resistance
Training
Dumbbell Bench Press
1997: 30 kg
Incline Dumbbell Press
1997: 25 kg
Seated Calf Raise
1997: 65 kg
Day 2
Aerobics — 20 minutes
CV
Steady-state cardio
Slightly elevated from Week 1 — RPE 4 to 5
Day 4
Resistance
Training
Overhead Press
1997: 35 kg
Back Extension
1997: 10 kg
Lying French Press
1997: 38 kg
Concentration Curl
1997: 10 kg
Hip Thrust
Not established at the time
Day 5
Aerobics — 20 minutes
CV
Steady-state cardio
RPE 4 to 5
Day 6
Resistance
Training
Dumbbell Shrug
1997: 25 kg
Incline Bench Press
1997: 50 kg
Pull-Up
1997: +5 kg added weight
Days 3 and 7 — Rest.
Phase 2 · Weeks 3–4
Get Bigger
Intensity steps up sharply — 85% in Week 3, 95% in Week 4. Reps drop to six, then five. Sets increase. This is the heaviest phase in the programme. Week 4 introduces drop sets on selected exercises: reduce the load by 10 kg after the final prescribed set and continue to failure. Aerobic duration extends to 25 minutes at 65%.
Week 3
Day 1
Resistance
Training
Incline Dumbbell Press
1997: 30 kg
Hanging Leg Raise
Bodyweight
Standing Calf Raise
1997: 93.5 kg
Day 2
Aerobics — 20 minutes
CV
Steady-state cardio
Moderate effort — RPE 5 to 6
Day 3
Resistance
Training
Overhead Press
1997: 25 kg
Dumbbell Extension
1997: 35 kg
Day 5
Aerobics — 20 minutes
CV
Steady-state cardio
RPE 5 to 6
Day 6
Resistance
Training
Incline Bench Press
1997: 60 kg
Pull-Up
1997: +6 kg added weight
Close Grip Bench Press
1997: 70 kg
Days 4 and 7 — Rest.
Week 4
Exercises marked # in Week 4 include a drop set: after completing all prescribed sets at 95%, reduce the load by 10 kg and continue to failure for one additional set.
Day 1
Resistance
Training
Bent-Over Row #
1997: 75 kg
Dumbbell Bench Press
1997: 70 kg
Seated Calf Raise
1997: 85 kg
Day 2
Aerobics — 25 minutes
CV
Steady-state cardio
RPE 5 to 6
Day 3
Resistance
Training
Overhead Press
1997: 47.5 kg
Crunch
1997: 10 kg weighted
Day 5
Aerobics — 25 minutes
CV
Steady-state cardio
RPE 5 to 6
Day 6
Resistance
Training
Incline Bench Press #
1997: 65 kg
Dumbbell Shrug
1997: 70 kg
Pull-Up #
1997: +10 kg added weight
Close Grip Bench Press
1997: 75 kg
Days 4 and 7 — Rest.
Phase 3 · Week 5
Get Tough
Boost overall conditioning. Intensity drops back to 80% but volume increases significantly — four resistance sessions across the week, each covering multiple muscle groups. Reps rise to ten. Aerobic sessions on Days 3 and 6 extend to 35 minutes at 70%. This is the highest-volume week in the programme.
Day 1
Resistance — Legs, Chest
Training
Romanian Deadlift
1997: 80 kg
Seated Calf Raise
1997: 72 kg
Donkey Calf Raise
1997: 90 kg
Incline Dumbbell Press
1997: 25 kg
Day 2
Resistance — Back, Shoulders, Arms
Training
Front Pulldown
1997: 50 kg
One Arm Dumbbell Row
1997: 35 kg
Barbell Overhead Press
1997: 40 kg
One Arm Reverse Grip Pressdown
1997: 20 kg
Dumbbell French Press
1997: 11 kg
Day 3
Aerobics — 35 minutes
CV
Steady-state cardio
Working hard but sustainable — RPE 6
Day 4
Resistance — Legs, Back, Biceps
Training
Pull-Up (wide grip)
Bodyweight
Front Pulldown (close grip)
1997: 55 kg
Day 5
Resistance — Chest, Back, Abs
Training
Incline Bench Press
1997: 50 kg
Dumbbell Bench Press
1997: 60 kg
Triceps Kickbacks
1997: 10 kg
Close Grip Bench Press
1997: 50 kg
Crunch
1997: 10 kg weighted
Hip Thrust
Not established at the time
Day 6
Aerobics — 35 minutes
CV
Day 7 — Rest.
Phase 4 · Week 6
Get Intense
Increase endurance while maintaining strength and size. Intensity holds at 75% — not heavy, but the reps rise to twelve and the session volume remains high. Day 1 contains thirteen exercises. Aerobic sessions extend to 40 minutes. The combination of high-rep resistance work and extended cardio is where the conditioning gains accelerate.
Day 1
Resistance — Legs, Chest, Triceps
Training
Standing Leg Curl
1997: 10 kg
Standing Calf Raise
1997: 80 kg
Donkey Calf Raise
1997: 90 kg
Dumbbell Bench Press
1997: 60 kg
Incline Dumbbell Press
1997: 50 kg
Day 2
Resistance — Back, Shoulders, Biceps
Training
One Arm Dumbbell Row
1997: 35 kg
Standing Dumbbell Curl
1997: 18 kg
Bent-Over Laterals
1997: 7 kg
Day 3
Aerobics — 40 minutes
CV
Steady-state cardio
Sustained effort — RPE 6
Day 4
Resistance — Legs, Back, Biceps
Training
Pull-Up (close grip)
1997: +7 kg added weight
Front Pulldown (close grip)
1997: 50 kg
Standing Dumbbell Curl
1997: 18 kg
Concentration Curl
1997: 11 kg
Day 5
Resistance — Chest, Back, Abs
Training
Reverse Grip Pressdown
1997: 35 kg
Sit-Up
1997: 5 kg weighted
Hip Thrust
Not established at the time
Day 6
Aerobics — 40 minutes
CV
Day 7 — Rest.
Phase 5 · Week 7
Get Ripped
Optimise fat burning. Intensity drops to 70% and reps rise to fourteen. The combination of moderate load, high volume and 45-minute aerobic sessions at 80% maximum heart rate creates the conditions for accelerated conditioning. Day 1 contains twelve exercises. The drop set appears again on Step-Up.
Day 1
Resistance — Legs, Chest, Triceps
Training
Romanian Deadlift
1997: 70 kg
Incline Dumbbell Press
1997: 50 kg
One Arm Reverse Grip Pressdown
1997: 20 kg
Dumbbell French Press
1997: 30 kg
# Step-Up: after completing all prescribed sets, drop the load by 10 kg and continue to failure for one additional set.
Day 2
Resistance — Back, Shoulders, Calves
Training
Front Pulldown
1997: 50 kg
One Arm Dumbbell Row
1997: 35 kg
Dumbbell Overhead Press
1997: 35 kg
Bent-Over Laterals
1997: 9 kg
Seated Calf Raise
1997: 65 kg
Donkey Calf Raise
1997: 90 kg
Standing Calf Raise
1997: 75 kg
Day 3
Aerobics — 45 minutes
CV
Steady-state cardio
Working hard and sustaining it — RPE 7 to 8
Day 4
Resistance — Legs, Back, Biceps
Training
Front Pulldown
1997: 50 kg
Day 5
Resistance — Chest, Back, Abs
Training
Dumbbell Bench Press
1997: 60 kg
Cable Crossovers
1997: 25 kg
Triceps Kickbacks
1997: 11 kg
Close Grip Bench Press
1997: 50 kg
Dumbbell Shrug
1997: 60 kg
Hip Thrust
Not established at the time
Day 6
Aerobics — 45 minutes
CV
Steady-state cardio
RPE 7 to 8
Day 7 — Rest.
Phase 6 · Week 8
Get Dialed In
Fine tune your physique. Reps reach sixteen. Intensity holds at 70% for most exercises, stepping to 80% on specific compound movements. Three advanced techniques are introduced to increase training density: compound sets, tri-sets, and supersets. These are marked in each session below. Aerobic sessions remain at 45 minutes and 80%.
Technique notation for Week 8: 1 = use as a compound set with the following exercise 2 = use as a tri-set with the next two exercises 3 = use as a superset with the following exercise
Day 1
Resistance — Legs, Chest, Triceps
Training
Romanian Deadlift
1997: 70 kg
Seated Calf Raise 1
1997: 65 kg
Donkey Calf Raise
1997: 90 kg
Incline Dumbbell Press
1997: 50 kg
One Arm Lying Extension 2
Not recorded
Dumbbell French Press
1997: 30 kg
Day 2
Resistance — Back, Shoulders
Training
Good Morning 1
1997: 35 kg
Front Pulldown 1
1997: 50 kg
One Arm Dumbbell Row
1997: 30–35 kg
Barbell Overhead Press 2
1997: 35–40 kg
Day 3
Aerobics — 45 minutes
CV
Steady-state cardio
RPE 7 to 8 — same as Week 7
Day 4
Resistance — Legs, Back, Biceps
Training
Pull-Up (close grip)
1997: +5 kg added weight
Front Pulldown
1997: 55 kg
Day 5
Resistance — Chest, Back, Abs
Training
Incline Bench Press 1
1997: 50 kg
Close Grip Bench Press
1997: 50 kg
Triceps Kickbacks 1
1997: 12 kg
Reverse Grip Pressdown
1997: 35 kg
Crunch 2
1997: 10 kg weighted
Hip Thrust
Not established at the time
Day 6
Aerobics — 45 minutes
CV
Steady-state cardio
RPE 7 to 8
Day 7 — Rest.
What Still Holds Up
The principles embedded in this programme are not products of their time. Periodisation — the deliberate variation of intensity, volume and rep ranges across distinct phases — remains the most reliable method of producing long-term progress. Every credible programme written since 1997 uses the same underlying logic: expose the body to progressive overload, vary the stimulus periodically, allow recovery, and repeat. This programme does that across six phases with a clarity that many modern programmes obscure behind more complicated language.
The integration of cardiovascular work with resistance training throughout — rather than treating them as separate disciplines to be done on separate days or in separate programmes — is exactly what the evidence supports. The aerobic volume increases as the programme moves from the heavy strength phase into the conditioning phases. The sessions lengthen from twenty minutes to forty-five. The intensity at which aerobic work is performed rises from 50% to 80%. That progression is not accidental.
The percentage system deserves particular credit. In 1997 this approach was rarely seen outside serious athletic training environments. The idea that a training programme should scale to the individual rather than prescribe a fixed load was genuinely ahead of what most gym-goers were doing. It is the reason the programme worked for a range of people at different strength levels, and why it remains applicable today.