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In this episode of Hypertrophy Past & Present, Jake and Chris kick off 2026 with a Part 2 follow-up aimed at coaches. Last episode was about the mistakes lifters make when they return to the gym, this week is about the mistakes coaches make when they design and deliver programs to clients. The conversation starts with Bob Hoffman’s time-efficient “working man” full-body routine and why the plan made sense for its context, while also pointing out where it falls short. From there, the episode pivots into the two main problems coaches have to solve today: time constraints and novelty expectations, plus practical strategies that can be used to solve these problems and deliver effective sessions.
Key topics include:
-Bob Hoffman’s minimalist full-body routine for busy lifters
-Simple exercise swaps that improve full-body development with limited equipment
-The two constraints coaches must solve: novelty and time
-How to give the illusion of novelty without compromising programming efficacy
-Time efficiency: avoiding cardiovascular-limited sets, smarter exercise order, and exercise structuring
-Using rest periods to add value instead of feeling like dead time
-A better approach to 30-minute PT sessions
By Chris Beardsley and Jake Doleschal4.8
1717 ratings
In this episode of Hypertrophy Past & Present, Jake and Chris kick off 2026 with a Part 2 follow-up aimed at coaches. Last episode was about the mistakes lifters make when they return to the gym, this week is about the mistakes coaches make when they design and deliver programs to clients. The conversation starts with Bob Hoffman’s time-efficient “working man” full-body routine and why the plan made sense for its context, while also pointing out where it falls short. From there, the episode pivots into the two main problems coaches have to solve today: time constraints and novelty expectations, plus practical strategies that can be used to solve these problems and deliver effective sessions.
Key topics include:
-Bob Hoffman’s minimalist full-body routine for busy lifters
-Simple exercise swaps that improve full-body development with limited equipment
-The two constraints coaches must solve: novelty and time
-How to give the illusion of novelty without compromising programming efficacy
-Time efficiency: avoiding cardiovascular-limited sets, smarter exercise order, and exercise structuring
-Using rest periods to add value instead of feeling like dead time
-A better approach to 30-minute PT sessions

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