by Eric Bach
Cobra LatsBroad ShouldersLean Waist
Which physique turns heads the most? A big upper body that tapers at the waist: the V-taper. Here's the formula for getting one.
Who doesn’t want broad shoulders and sweeping lats that lead down to a narrow but solid waist? Achieving a V-taper comes down to three key components:
- A foundation of strength
- Spot-specific hypertrophy for your lats and medial delts
- Adequate leanness
The best way to get there? A specialization programlike the one here. As a bonusI’ll throw in a nutrition program to fuel your success. But firstlet’s take a closer look at these three keys.
1. A Foundation of Strength
No impressive physique is built without an impressive foundation of strength. Heavy compound liftsspecifically the overhead presspull-upand deadliftare the cornerstone of V-taper physique training.
These will provide the necessary tension to build dense muscle and activate the maximum number of muscle fibers to accelerate growth. More importantlybuilding impressive top-end strength builds a body that’s actually as strong as it looks.
2. Spot-Specific Hypertrophy Work
This is bodybuilding- work to accentuate the muscles that really make a V-taper.
Shoulders
Your anterior delts get plenty of work with overhead and horizontal pressing movements. While these compound movements are a pillar for building a V-taperwe’ll spice up your training with a bunch of lateral and rear-delt building variations. This emphasis will help improve your posturebalance out the muscular development of your latsand add width at the top of the V.
Well-developed lats are a must to accentuate a lean waist. While vertical pulling exercises like pull-ups are essential to building the V-taperit’s important to remember that the lats aid in internal rotation. If you overemphasize exercises that internally rotate your humerusyou’ll exacerbate caveman postureround your shouldersand minimize the top the “V” so to speak.
To balance out your physiquewe’ll add a steady dose of horizontal pulling movementslike rowsto retract your shoulder blades. You’ll improve posturereduce shoulder dysfunctionand visually enhance the V-taper.
Abs
You must be lean to maximize the V-taper. An intelligent plan includes exercises to target the “anti-movements” and provide a pillar of stability for performance and injury prevention while adding a little meat on your rectus abdominus. For additional volumewe’ll combine anti-movementssingle-limb trainingand flexion-based abdominal training.
3. Adequate Leanness
No physique will stand out if it’s hidden beneath a few layers of body fat. Sureyou can still look athletic or strong if you’re carrying some extra weightbut your “V” won’t really have a chance to taper if the girth of your waist is the same as the girth of your shoulders.
Much of this component comes down to dietand you’ll see what I suggest at the end here. So don’t click off once you’ve gotten the workout program. Check out the nutrition recommendations too.
V-Taper Physique Program
The V-taper program is a specialization program consisting of five separate training days. Take a look:
- Two days focused on vertical push-pull exercises
- Two days focused on horizontal push-pull exercises
- One day focused on legs
This program is best done intermittently as a 6-8 week specialization phase placed between more balanced programming. Think of this as a specialization periodnot a long-term thing. Your elbows and shoulders will benefit from a reduction in volume.
Ease up after this and you’ll notice increased muscle growth due to super-compensation in the days and weeks following the V-taper specialization.
Here’s exactly how the program will help you build muscle in all the right places.
Four Ways You’ll Trigger Muscle Growth
1. Technical Mastery
Exercise selection and rep schemes are importantbut they’re meaningless without careful attention to mastering the execution of each rep. When building muscle is the goalyou need to maximize tension on each rep and focus on creating a mind-muscle connection.
In the beginning of the programdecrease the weight you think you’d normally useslow down your eccentric (lowering) phaseand focus on squeezing the target muscle. Once you’ve locked in technical mastery of an exerciseadd load.
2. Heavier Weight
You’ll be using giant sets with heavy weightmoderately-low repsand auto-regulated rest periods. Setting up training this way is going to allow you to fit in more volume due to the heavier weightsand resting just long enough not to have to drop the weight as the sets progress. This will provide significant mechanical tension to trigger growth.
3. Mechanical Tension
This is arguably the most crucial factor for building muscle. Tension refers to the amount of stress placed on a working muscle for a given length of time. The problem ismost lifters only associate mechanical tension with heavycompound lifting. But to maximize growthwe must focus on a variety of muscular contractionsnot just heavy or explosive lifting.
For examplein one workout belowyou may increase tension through the use of partial reps and eccentric pauses. In anotheryou may use giant sets to increase tension through heavier weightalong with mid-rep pausesROM manipulationand partial reps.
You’ll notice that almost every exercise has some form of tension manipulation technique to help you get more out of each lift.
4. The Pump
One of the keys to building bigdense muscle is sending as much nutrient-rich blood as possible into the muscle you’re targeting. The heavy giant sets will helpbut you’re going to complement them with some brutal end-of-session finishers to fill up those muscles with blood to stimulate more repair and growth.
V-Taper Program Schedule
- Day 1: Upper Body (horizontal)
- Day 2: Upper Body (vertical)
- Day 3: Lower Body
- Day 4: OFF
- Day 5: Upper Body (horizontal)
- Day 6: Upper Body (vertical)
- Day 7: OFF
Weeks 1-3
Upper Body Horizontal Workout
|
Exercise |
Sets |
Reps |
Rest |
| A1 |
Barbell Bench Press |
4 |
5 |
|
|
Squeeze your shoulder blades down and back and initiate the bench by “rowing” the bar to your chest. |
|
|
|
| A2 |
Band Pull-Apart |
4 |
25 |
2 min. |
|
Brace your abs and keep all movement through shoulder retraction. Do these the second way shown in the videonot the first. |
|
|
|
| B1 |
Pronated-Grip Dumbbell One-Arm Row |
3 |
8-10 |
1 min. |
|
Focus on driving your elbow towards your hipmaximizing tension on your lat. At the end range of your rowpull the elbow in slightly as if you were wrapping it around your back to further squeeze your lat. |
|
|
|
| B2 |
Alternating Dumbbell Incline Bench Press |
3 |
8-10 |
1 min. |
| C |
T-Bar Row |
3 |
10 |
1 min. |
| D |
Dip |
2 |
6-8 |
1 min. |
| E1 |
One-and-a-Half Rep Inverted Row |
3 |
12 |
30 sec. |
|
Pronated gripelbows flared. Lower yourself all the way downrow half-way upback downthen up for a full rep. |
|
|
|
| E2 |
Rear Delt Flye |
3 |
12-15 |
30 sec. |
|
Don’t retract your shoulder blades! Doing so takes tension off your rear delts and emphasizes your traps. |
|
|
|
Upper Body Vertical Workout
|
Exercise |
Sets |
Reps |
Rest |
| A |
Bottoms-Up Kettlebell Press |
2 |
6 |
45 sec. |
|
To maximize tension“crush” the handle of the kettlebell throughout the set. |
|
|
|
| B |
Chin-Up |
4 |
4-6 |
90 sec. |
|
Imagine pulling your elbows into your hip pocket to squeeze your lats on each rep. |
|
|
|
| C1 |
Seated Dumbbell Shoulder Press |
3 |
8 |
90 sec. |
|
4-1-1-1 tempo (four seconds to lowerone second at the bottomone second to pull upand one second at the top). Don’t tap the dumbbells together at the top. |
|
|
|
| C2 |
Lean-Away Lat Stretch |
3 |
30 sec. |
1 min. |
|
Grab onto a dumbbell or squat rackshift your hips towards the side you’re looking to stretch. Stretch 30 sec. per side. |
|
|
|
| D |
2:1 Accentuated Eccentric Lat Pulldown |
3 |
6 |
90 sec. |
| E1 |
Lean-Away Lateral Raise |
3 |
8 |
0-30 sec. |
| E2 |
Dumbbell Lateral Raise |
3 |
8 |
0-30 sec. |
| E3 |
Shoulder Circlefront to back |
3 |
8 |
0-30 sec. |
| E4 |
Shoulder Circleback to front |
3 |
8 |
1 min. |
| F |
Jackknife Pull-Up |
3 |
failure |
1 min. |
|
Use a 4-1-1-1 tempo and squeeze the hell out of your lats on each rep. |
|
|
|
Lower Body (Maintenance)
|
Exercise |
Sets |
Reps |
Rest |
| A |
Squat |
3 |
6 |
2 min. |
|
Do 2-3 warm-up sets as neededthen three progressively heavier sets. |
|
|
|
| B1 |
Barbell Hip Thrust |
3 |
8 |
1 min. |
|
Hold at peak contraction for two seconds on each rep. |
|
|
|
| B2 |
Feet-Elevated Side Plank |
3 |
45 sec./side |
1 min. |
| C |
Snatch-Grip RDL |
3 |
10 |
1 min. |
| D1 |
Dumbbell Walking Lunge |
3 |
6/leg |
|
| D2 |
Hollow Body Hold |
3 |
45 sec. |
1 min. |
| E1 |
Kneeling Cable Crunch |
3 |
12 |
30 sec. |
| E2 |
Sprinter Sit-Up (Flatten out completely each rep) |
3 |
12 |
30 sec. |
Upper Body (Horizontal)
|
Exercise |
Sets |
Reps |
Rest |
| A |
Cable Rope Face Pull |
3 |
15,12,10 |
0-30 sec. |
| B1 |
Split-Stance Dumbbell Row (Go heavystrap up) |
4 |
6 |
1 min. |
| B2 |
Dumbbell Bench Press |
4 |
8 |
1 min. |
|
Use a tempo of 3-1-1-1 (three seconds to lowerone second at the bottomone second to pull upand one second at the top) and don’t clank the dumbbells together at the top. |
|
|
|
| C |
Hammer Strength or Dumbbell Chest-Supported Row |
2 |
12 |
1 min. |
| D1 |
Ring Iso-Hold to Row |
3 |
10,8,8 |
1 min. |
|
Do a 15-second hold firstthen follow up with the reps as listed. |
|
|
|
| D2 |
Ring Push-Up (Pause at peak contraction for 2 sec) |
3 |
8-12 |
1 min.. |
| E1 |
Chest-Supported Incline Shrug |
3 |
12 |
45 sec. |
| E2 |
Prone Dumbbell Swing |
3 |
25 |
45 sec. |
Upper Body (Vertical)
|
Exercise |
Sets |
Reps |
Rest |
| A |
Half-Kneeling Cable Scapular Slide |
2 |
12 |
45 sec. |
| B |
Barbell Overhead Press |
4 |
4-6 |
90 sec. |
|
Do 2-3 warm-up sets as neededthen four progressively heavier sets. |
|
|
|
| C |
Pull-Up (Tuck lats into your hip pockets each rep) |
3 |
8-10 |
1 min. |
| D1 |
Arnold Press |
3 |
10-12 |
1 min. |
| D2 |
Lean-Away Lat Stretch |
3 |
30 sec. |
|
| E |
Wide-Grip Lat Pull-Down |
4 |
8-10 |
1 min. |
|
3 second eccentric. Think about pulling your elbows into your hip pocket. |
|
|
|
| F1 |
Dumbbell L-Lateral Raise |
3 |
8 |
45 sec. |
| F2 |
Bus Driver (Use a 25-pound plate) |
3 |
failure |
45 sec. |
Weeks 4-6
Upper Body Horizontal Workout
|
Exercise |
Sets |
Reps |
Rest |
| A1 |
Barbell Bench Press |
4 |
5 |
|
| A2 |
Band Pull-Apart |
4 |
25 |
2 min. |
| B1 |
Pronated-Grip Dumbbell One-Arm Row |
3 |
8-10/side |
1 min. |
| B2 |
Alternating Dumbbell Incline Bench Press |
3 |
8-10/side |
1 min. |
| C |
T-Bar Row |
2 |
6-8 |
1 min. |
| D |
Dip |
2 |
6-8 |
1 min. |
| E1 |
One and a Half Rep Inverted Row |
4 |
10 |
30 sec. |
| E2 |
Rear Delt Flye |
4 |
12 |
30 sec. |
Upper Body Vertical Workout
|
Exercise |
Sets |
Reps |
Rest |
| A |
Bottoms-Up Kettlebell Press |
2 |
6 |
45 sec. |
| B |
Chin-Up |
4 |
6-8 |
90 sec. |
| C1 |
Seated Dumbbell Shoulder Press |
3 |
8 |
90 sec. |
| C2 |
Lean-Away Lat Stretch |
3 |
30 sec./side |
1 min. |
| D |
2:1 Accentuated Eccentric Lat Pulldown |
3 |
6/side |
90 sec. |
| E1 |
Iso-Dynamic Lateral Raise (15 second hold) |
3 |
8 |
|
| E2 |
Shoulder Circlefront to back |
3 |
8 |
0-30 sec. |
| E3 |
Shoulder Circleback to front |
3 |
8 |
1 min. |
| F |
Jackknife Pull-Up |
3 |
failure |
1 min. |
Lower Body (Maintenance)
|
Exercise |
Sets |
Reps |
Rest |
| A |
Squat |
4 |
6-8 |
2 min. |
| B1 |
Barbell Hip Thrust |
3 |
8 |
1 min. |
| B2 |
Feet-Elevated Side Plank |
3 |
45 sec./side |
1 min. |
| C |
Snatch-Grip RDL |
3 |
10 |
1 min. |
| D1 |
Dumbbell Walking Lunge |
3 |
6/leg |
|
| D2 |
Hollow Body Hold |
3 |
45 sec./leg |
1 min. |
| E1 |
Cable Crunch |
3 |
12 |
30 sec. |
| E2 |
Sprinter Sit-Up |
3 |
10/side |
30 sec. |
Upper Body (Horizontal)
|
Exercise |
Sets |
Reps |
Rest |
| A |
Cable Rope Face-Pull |
3 |
15,12,10 |
0-30 sec. |
| B1 |
Split-Stance Dumbbell Row |
4 |
6 |
1 min. |
| B2 |
Dumbbell Bench Press |
4 |
8 |
1 min. |
| C |
2:1 Accentuated Eccentric Chest-Supported Row |
3 |
8/side |
1 min. |
| D1 |
Ring Iso-Hold to Row (Reps of 12,10,8failure) |
4 |
|
1 min. |
| D2 |
Ring Push-Up |
4 |
10 |
1 min. |
| E1 |
Chest-Supported Incline Shrug |
3 |
12 |
45 sec. |
| E2 |
Prone Dumbbell Swing |
3 |
25 |
45 sec. |
Upper Body (Vertical)
|
Exercise |
Sets |
Reps |
Rest |
| A |
Half-Kneeling Cable Scapular Slide |
2 |
12 |
45 sec. |
| B |
Barbell Overhead Press |
4 |
6-8 |
90 sec. |
| C |
Pull-Up |
4 |
8-10 |
1 min. |
| D1 |
Arnold Press |
3 |
10-12 |
1 min. |
| D2 |
Lean-Away Lat Stretch |
3 |
30 sec. |
|
| E |
Wide-Grip Lat Pull-Down |
4 |
8-10 |
1 min. |
| F1 |
Dumbbell L-Lateral Raise |
3 |
8 |
45 sec. |
| F2 |
Bus Driveruse 25-pound plate |
3 |
failure |
45 sec. |
V-Taper Physique Diet
Eat at maintenance on your training days but drop calories into a deficit on rest days. You’ll maintain and build muscle in key areas while leaning out. Here’s the basic setup.
Lifting Days
- Calories: Bodyweight in pounds x 13-15
- Protein: Bodyweight x 1.2 grams
- Carbs: Bodyweight x 1.5 grams
- Fat: Remaining calories
Off Day
- Calories: 20% lower than training days
- Protein: Bodyweight x 1.2 grams
- Carbs: Bodyweight x 0.5 grams
- Fat: Remaining calories
Need an example? Let’s take a highly active200-pound guy:
Lifting Days for 200 Pound Lifter
Based upon his bodyweight we can determine these numbers:
- Calories: 200 x 15 = 3,000
- Protein: 200 x 1.2 = 240 grams
- Carbs: 200 x 1.5 = 300 grams
- Fat: 93 grams
Note On Fat: Take your carbs and fatmultiply them each by four. Then add them together and subtract that number from your total daily calories. This leaves you with your daily calorie allowance from fat. To find how many grams that isjust divide that number by 9 to get your total daily fat grams.
Off Day
- Calories: 3,000 x 0.8 = 2,400
- Protein: 200 x 1.2 = 240 grams
- Carbs: 200 x 0.5 = 100 grams
- Fat: 115 grams
Run this for 6-8 weeks and watch your physique change before your eyes.
