Sponsors:
Rho Nutrition: rhonutrition.com/discount/mindpump
MAPS PPL: mapsppl.com
Full body or Push Pull Legs... which one actually wins? You are going to walk away knowing exactly which style of training fits YOUR goals, YOUR lifestyle, and YOUR experience level.
If you have ever wondered why you are not getting the pump you want from full body training... or why your split routine keeps falling apart because you keep skipping leg day... this episode is going to hit different. Adam breaks down how he personally evolved from full body training all the way to a double PPL split during his peak physique competition years, and WHY that progression made total sense. Sal lays out the intensity, recovery, and exercise selection differences that most people completely overlook when comparing these two approaches.
Key Topics
• Full body training protects you when you miss a workout because you never skip an entire muscle group the way you do on a split routine
• With a PPL split, missing one day means missing an entire category of movement, and the day people skip most is almost always leg day
• Total weekly volume can be identical between full body and split routines, but the exercise selection looks completely different: full body leans compound, splits open the door to isolation and sculpting work
• Split routines allow higher training intensity per session because you are not hitting that muscle group again for a full week, meaning you can push harder without it hurting your next workout
• Full body routines are shorter per session when volume is matched because you warm up for each compound lift separately, while a PPL session only requires one warm up before you fly through the rest
• You CAN spot build specific muscle groups through resistance training even though you cannot spot reduce fat, and split routines lend themselves naturally to prioritizing lagging areas
• Adam ran a double PPL (six days per week, PPL twice) during his peak competition years, strategically reducing volume on less important muscle groups and adding volume to whatever he was trying to bring up for the next show
• The pump you get from training one body part in a single session is dramatically greater than the pump from a full body session, and that experience matters for long term consistency and muscle connection
• Full body training is better for beginners because it teaches appropriate intensity and movement practice, while the inability to fully recover before hitting the same muscle again punishes those who tend to overtrain
• Split routines are an easier mental sell on low energy days because a chest, shoulders, and triceps session feels far less daunting than squatting, pressing, rowing, and overhead pressing all in one session
Timestamps:
0:00 Intro
0:20 MAPS PPL
0:49 Sponsor: Rho Nutrition
2:07 Full body vs. split overview
2:28 What full body and split routines actually are
3:13 Adam's progression from full body to split
4:42 Why missing one day destroys a split
5:34 Why beginners should train full body
6:51 How exercise selection changes between full body and split routines
8:17 Spot building
9:38 The pump
10:24 Why split routines tend to be faster even at equal volume
11:43 Intensity differences
13:41 Using splits to bring up lagging muscle groups
17:44 Adam's double PPL strategy
19:46 How to adjust volume
20:00 Splits are an easier pill to swallow on low energy days
20:40 Sal's personal experience switching to a PPL style split
21:35 What the data actually says
23:42 MAPS PPL details, discount code, and at home version