Previously, I posted an article on Masahiko Kimura's training routine. Kimura was just a beast at Judo; one of the best ever. Similarly, Herschel Walker is just a beast of an athlete.Below is an excerpt from a post that appeared at The Art of Manliness, on Walker's daily routine. The whole post may be read here.
Can you keep up?
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With our archives now 3,500+ articles deep, we’ve decided to
republish a classic piece each Sunday to help our newer readers discover
some of the best, evergreen gems from the past. This article was
originally published in July 2016.
As a boy I followed the Dallas Cowboys, and one of the players I
really admired was Herschel Walker. He was a beast, but the guy could
move like nothing else.
A few years ago I read somewhere that Walker’s legendary,
granite-like physique was built not by lifting weights but through
bodyweight exercises — lots of them. On the order of 2,000-3,000
push-ups and sit-ups every day.
Talk about an intriguing regimen! I wanted to learn more about
it. How and why did Walker develop this program for himself? What
underlay his fitness philosophy? Were sit-ups and push-ups all he did,
and if not, what other kinds of exercises did he do?
I searched online, and while I couldn’t find more details, I
discovered that Walker was an even more impressive athlete than I had
imagined and a true fitness renaissance man: he had excelled in both
track and football in college, earned a 5th degree black belt
in taekwondo, competed as an Olympic bobsledder, and even danced with
the Fort Worth Ballet. Oh, and he’s continued his insane bodyweight
workout into his 50s, in addition to training for MMA.
Now I really wanted to know the full nature and
motivation behind Walker’s unorthodox training program. I was able to
finally discover it by getting my hands on a copy of Basic Training,
an out-of-print book he wrote in the 80s along with Dr. Terry Todd, an
Olympic weightlifter and conditioning expert. The book remains so
sought-after that thirty years after its publication, used copies
continue to command a crazy premium.
Below you’ll find the background on how Walker developed the
unorthodox bodyweight training program he’s been doing for over forty
years, as well as details as to what it consists of. The Walker Workout
is definitely not for everyone, but its exercise components are in many
ways the least interesting thing about it. Walker’s story and overall
fitness philosophy — one that eschews excuses and convention, and prizes
autonomy, improvisation, experimentation, and consistency — offer
interest and inspiration for all.
The Origins of Herschel Walker’s Bodyweight Workout
Walker grew up on a farm in rural Johnson County, Georgia along with
six siblings. While his family didn’t have a lot of money, they got by,
and his household was filled with plenty of love and support.
As a boy, Herschel had a speech impediment, was short and chubby,
and didn’t seem destined for athletic greatness. In running races with
siblings and playing games with friends, he was slow and uncoordinated,
struggled to keep up, and felt lacking in the confidence and endurance
to really push himself. In elementary school, he was bullied and beat up
by his classmates, and thus often chose to stay inside during recess
rather than going out to play.
After finishing the sixth grade, Walker decided he wanted to turn
things around for himself. He approached a track coach who had mentored
his older brothers and told him he “wanted to get bigger and stronger
and faster and be better at sports.” As Walker remembers, the coach
responded that “it was simple but I had to work hard at it. He said to
do push-ups, sit-ups, and sprints. That’s all he said. But it was
enough.”
Herschel went home and got started on his new bodyweight program
straightaway; his parents had always taught him that “you can’t make
excuses in life, you’ve got to get it done,” and he thus made do with
what was available:
There weren’t any weights then at school, of course,
and we sure didn’t have any out in the country, but I used what I had,
and that was the living room floor and the dirt road that ran from the
highway out front up the hill to our house. I did my push-ups and my
sit-ups on the floor most of the time, and I did all my sprints up that
hill out front.
Herschel’s commitment to his workouts was religious — he never missed
a day. He would crank out his push-ups and sit-ups during TV commercial
breaks at night, and did his sprints on the hills and fields near his
home — even in the summer, under the hot Georgia sun. He particularly
liked to run when his father had recently plowed up the ground, as the
consistency of the dirt became like heavy sand and added an extra
challenge. He’d also chase and run alongside the family’s horse and
bull, changing direction as the animals did in order to develop his
agility and reaction time. There was a chin-up bar out back and he added
chin-ups and pull-ups to his routine as well.
While push-ups, chin-ups, sit-ups, and sprints formed the core of
Walker’s workout, they were hardly the only exercises he did. Herschel
did different bodyweight exercises like squats and dips, loaded hay and
performed other chores around the farm, wrestled with his brothers, took
up taekwondo, played tennis with friends, and even practiced for and
entered dance competitions with his sister. He later theorized that this
diversity of activity contributed greatly to his athletic success (something that’s been born out by recent research):
I think I developed as well as I did because I did so
many different things — so many different kinds of exercise. I can’t
prove it, but I think when you hear someone telling a young athlete to
specialize and concentrate on only one sport you’re hearing someone give
bad advice. I believe just the opposite. I believe variety is
best…any kind of movement can help you learn about lots of other kinds
of movement. That’s why I do so many things myself and that’s why I
believe all young people ought to do as many different sports and types
of exercise as they can.
Walker in fact didn’t play his first organized sport – basketball — until 7th grade. He started doing track and field in 8th grade, and only began playing football in 9th.
He continued all three sports throughout high school, while still
continuing to do his personal bodyweight workout each day on his own.
(It’s worth noting that while Walker was committed to athletics,
he was equally diligent about succeeding in school, strictly setting
aside at least two hours a night to do his homework; for his efforts, he
became valedictorian of his high school and president of its honor
society, an accomplishment, he says “I was as happy about as I was about
the good things that happened to me on the football field.”)
Willing to put in 110% effort day after day, Walker filled out,
got faster, and improved his athletic skill; it wasn’t long before he
was excelling in all three sports and beating the kids who had formerly
surpassed him:
What a good feeling that was, too, to know all that
hard work was paying off, and to know that even though I wasn’t all that
good to begin with, I could get better. I remember a bunch of
kids I grew up with who had a heap more talent than I had but who never
trained much or tried very hard. I’m not saying they didn’t try at games, but almost anybody’ll try hard in a real game. What matters is how hard you try before the game, especially when nobody is watching you. That’s what’s important. If you can bear down and really train and try hard before the game, the game’ll take care of itself.
Walker was a versatile, standout athlete in high school. In track, he
won the state championship in the shot put and the 100- and 220-yard
dash, and anchored the victorious 4X400 relay team. In football, he
rushed for 3,167 yards his senior year and led the team to their first
state championship.
This dual success continued at the University of Georgia, where he
became an All-American in both track and football, helped the Bulldogs
win the Sugar Bowl as a freshman, and won the Heisman Trophy as a
junior.
Walker played sixteen seasons of professional football, the first
three with the now-defunct United States Football League. In the NFL he
racked up massive rushing yards (18,168 all-purpose yards, the ninth
all-time best) while playing seven different positions. Combining those
yards with those he garnered in his years playing for the USFL would put
him first on the NFL’s career rushing list.
In 1992, while Walker was still playing pro ball, he competed in the Olympics, placing 7th in the two-man bobsled competition.
In more recent years, he’s tried his hand at MMA, winning the two
bouts he participated in by TKO. Walker felt his MMA training left him
in better shape at age 50 than when he was playing football in his early
20s.
And all along, up until the present day, he’s kept up with the
bodyweight workout he first starting doing in junior high. In fact, he
didn’t start lifting weights until several years into his professional
football career. It’s not that he had anything against it, but he had
seen improvements in his strength and speed every year since high
school, and figured he’d only start lifting once those gains ceased.
After his football days were over, he returned to a bodyweight-only
program, as he believes it protects the joints and promotes fitness
longevity.
So what exactly was included in a program that allowed Walker to
become a standout high school athlete, one of the best college football
players of all time, and a leading rusher for the NFL, as well as spend
his career nearly injury-free and maintain his fitness into his 50s?
Let’s take a look.
The Philosophy & Elements of the Walker Workout
Even though Walker didn’t lift weights in college, when the team did a
bench press test, he hoisted an astonishing 375 lbs (the most, his
coach said, anyone had lifted on the BP at Georgia up until that time),
and did 222 lbs (his body weight) for 24 reps. While Walker has always
denied being born with superior talent, saying all his abilities were
due to hard work and his unique routine, he very likely possesses a
stellar set of genes. Still, he did a ton to maximize that potential,
utilizing a program that incorporated the following elements and
underlying philosophy:
Massive reps. From middle school up through
middle age, Walker has done thousands of push-ups and sit-ups nearly
every day. Such a massive number of reps isn’t typically recommended to
build strength, as your body adapts to the exercise, but Walker found a
way to keep on making gains in his fitness by infusing his workouts with
a whole lot of:
Variety. From martial arts to dance, Walker
engaged in a wide range of physical activities and exercises throughout
his life, and continues to do so. As he told nfl.com, “I was doing CrossFit before they gave it a name.”
He also was constantly looking for different variations of individual exercises to try, in order to keep them challenging:
I was always trying to find some new way to sprint or
some new way to do push-ups or sit-ups to keep my interest up and to
make my body work in different ways so it would get strong from every
angle.
Oftentimes, Walker simply made up his own variations himself, because he was a fitness renaissance man who constantly liked to:
Experiment. Walker was never one to take
conventional advice; instead, he enjoyed trying his own experiments, and
seeing exactly what exercises worked uniquely well for him:
The way I usually do things is to try something new and then check it out real good as to how it feels.
If it feels good to me — if I think it’s really working me hard — then
I’ll add it to all the other exercises I do. But if it doesn’t seem to
work the way I want it to, I’ll just let it go. By doing things this way
I only do exercises that feel right for me. Everybody ought to try different exercises, too. Just keep experimenting.
Thus Walker freely created his own exercises and workouts — simply
going at it ‘til his muscles burned — and assessed their efficacy based
on how they made him feel, and the results they garnered.
While those who stick to strict, standard programs might think
his routine is nuts and ineffective, Walker simply doesn’t care. Even
now, he maintains unorthodox habits: sleeping for just five hours a
night, waking up at 5:30 a.m. to do scores of sit-ups and push-ups,
eating only once a day (and sometimes fasting for several), and
consuming a diet that consists largely of soup, bread, and salad without
worrying about his macronutrients; he figures if the “farm strong” men
he grew up with never thought about how many grams of protein they were
eating, he doesn’t need to either. He just completely does his own
thing, treats himself as an n=1 experiment, and lets the results speak
for themselves.
Given this level of autonomy, it’s no wonder he’s remained so motivated throughout his life.
As Walker put it, “I try, with all my workouts, to make them fun. I
like to experiment with different things, and I think that trying new
exercises helps to keep you fresh and mentally ready.”
Consistency. Even though Walker is a freethinker
when it comes to fitness, his commitment to it is positively dogmatic.
He believes in doing some kind of exercise every day and has hardly
missed a single workout since he started doing his bodyweight routine as
a young man. Consistency, Walker says, is like funding an investment in
your body and mind:
I did a lot of the things I did because I loved to do
them or because I thought they’d help me get better in the things I
thought I could be good at. Basketball was great because I loved it, but
I also knew it helped me physically for football. All my other stuff —
my exercises and all that — I did because I knew it was good for me. And
after I’d work out real hard I always had a good feeling because I knew
I’d done what I needed to do to make my body improve. I used to think
training was a lot like putting money in the bank. And I don’t say that
because I get paid now to run with the football. I say it because of the
feeling I got — and still get — from doing my exercises. It makes me
feel good about myself, just like you feel when you put away a little
money every week and watch it build up.