The Westside Conjugate Method was developed by Louie Simmons (1947-2022) at Westside Barbell in Columbus, Ohio. Simmons combined the Soviet conjugate system - rotating special exercises to avoid accommodation - with the Bulgarian approach of frequent near-maximal lifting. He added a speed training method for moving submaximal loads at max velocity to develop rate of force development.
The core philosophy: you can train maximally year-round without burning out if you rotate exercises frequently enough that no single movement pattern accumulates excessive fatigue. Max Effort days build absolute strength. Dynamic Effort days build explosive power. The repetition method (accessories) builds muscle mass and addresses weak points. Together, these three methods develop every quality a powerlifter needs.
Who It's For
Experience level: Advanced (2+ years of consistent barbell training, ideally with powerlifting meet experience)
Prerequisites: Strong working knowledge of Squat, Bench Press, and Deadlift technique. Known 1RMs for all three. Ability to identify personal weak points and select exercises accordingly.
Primary goal: Maximal strength in the powerlifting competition lifts
Best suited for: Bulking or maintenance. The volume of accessory work supports muscle growth, and the frequency of heavy work requires adequate recovery.
Pros & Cons
Pros
Trains maximal strength (1-3RM) every week year-round, keeping the nervous system adapted to heavy loads without peaking and detraining cycles
Exercise rotation every 1-3 weeks prevents staleness and accommodation - you're always working toward a new PR on some variation
Dynamic Effort days develop explosive power and bar speed, which directly improves competition lift performance off the chest and out of the hole
The accessory-heavy approach (3-5 movements per session) builds significant muscle mass alongside strength
Highly customizable - you choose ME variations, DE percentages, and accessories based on your individual weak points
Cons
Requires self-knowledge to select the right exercises for your weak points - poor exercise selection means poor results
The original percentages were designed for multi-ply equipped lifters - competitors who wear thick supportive suits and shirts that store elastic energy and can add 100-200+ lbs of assistance at lockout. Raw lifters (no supportive gear, just a belt and knee sleeves) need higher DE percentages to get enough resistance through the full range of motion. This version is already adjusted for raw.
Sessions run 60-90 minutes due to the combination of main work plus 3-5 accessories
No built-in deload - the exercise rotation is supposed to manage fatigue, but some lifters accumulate fatigue anyway and need periodic lighter weeks
No direct bicep or calf work - biceps only get indirect volume through rows and pulldowns. Add curls if arm size is a priority.
Dynamic Effort work with straight weight (no bands/chains) is less effective than with accommodating resistance, but most commercial gyms lack bands and chains
Program Structure
Split: Upper/lower, with each half trained twice per week - once for max effort, once for dynamic effort
Periodization: Conjugate - simultaneous development of max strength (ME), speed-strength (DE), and hypertrophy (repetition method) year-round. DE work follows 3-week pendulum waves.
Schedule: Fixed 4-day weekly split. Day 1: ME Upper. Day 2: ME Lower. Day 3: DE Upper. Day 4: DE Lower.
Rotation: ME exercises change every 1-3 weeks. DE exercises stay consistent within a 3-week wave, then percentages reset.
Exercise Selection & Rationale
Max Effort Upper rotates through Bench Press variations that address different sticking points. Bench Press Close Grip builds tricep lockout strength. Incline Bench Press develops upper chest drive. Bench Press with a pause trains the bottom position. Each variation is trained for 1-3 weeks before rotating.
Max Effort Lower follows the classic Westside 3-week rotation: squat, deadlift, good morning. Front Squat builds quad strength for squat recovery. Deficit Deadlift strengthens the pull off the floor. Good Morning targets the posterior chain (always done for triples, never singles).
Dynamic Effort Upper uses Bench Press with rotating grip widths (close, medium, wide) to develop speed off the chest across different positions.
Dynamic Effort Lower pairs speed Box Squat with speed Deadlift. Box squats teach explosive hip drive from a dead stop. Speed deadlifts train rate of force development in the pull.
Accessories prioritize the muscle groups that support the big three: triceps, lats, upper back, glutes, hamstrings, and abs. Triceps Extension and Triceps Pushdown for bench lockout. Bent Over Row and Lat Pulldown for back thickness and deadlift support. Romanian Deadlift, Barbell and Lying Leg Curl for posterior chain. Hanging Leg Raise and Ab Wheel for core stability under heavy loads.
Set & Rep Scheme
Max Effort work: Work up to a 1-3 rep max on the main exercise. This means progressively heavier singles, doubles, or triples until you hit a daily max - the heaviest you can manage with good form that day. Typically 5-7 working sets ramping up. After the top set, one backoff set at roughly 70% of your max for an AMRAP (1-2 reps in reserve) adds volume without excessive fatigue.
Dynamic Effort Bench: 9 sets of 3 reps at 50-65% of 1RM. The goal is maximum bar speed, not grinding reps. Rest is kept short (60 seconds) to maintain neural activation. Grip rotates every 3 sets (close, medium, wide).
Dynamic Effort Squat: 10 sets of 2 reps at 60-70% of 1RM to a box. Short rest (60 seconds). The box eliminates the stretch reflex, forcing you to generate force from a dead stop.
Dynamic Effort Deadlift: 6 singles at 60-75% of 1RM after box squats. Each rep starts from a dead stop with maximum acceleration.
DE 3-week wave: Week 1 uses the lowest percentage with highest volume, Week 2 is moderate, Week 3 is highest percentage with lowest volume. Then reset.
Accessories on ME days: 3-4 exercises, 3-4 sets of 6-12 reps. Heavier, lower-rep accessories that complement the heavy main work.
Accessories on DE days: 3-4 exercises, 3-4 sets of 12-20 reps. Lighter, higher-rep pump work since the main movement is submaximal.
Progressive Overload
Max Effort: You progress by attempting a new PR on a variation every time it comes around in the rotation. If you did Bench Press Close Grip for a 3RM of 225lb three weeks ago, aim for 230lb+ when it returns. The rotation means you're always setting PRs on something, even when competition lifts plateau.
Dynamic Effort: Percentages increase across a 3-week wave (e.g., 60% -> 65% -> 70% on box squat). After week 3, reset to the starting percentage. Over time, your 1RM increases, so the same percentages represent heavier absolute loads.
Accessories: Use double progression - hit the top of the rep range for all sets, then increase weight and drop back to the bottom of the range.
When you stall: If you miss a ME attempt, that variation has run its course - rotate to a new exercise. If DE bar speed slows noticeably, reduce the percentage by 5%. If an accessory stalls, swap it for a different exercise targeting the same muscle group.
How Long to Run It / What Next
The conjugate method is designed to run indefinitely. There's no built-in endpoint - the exercise rotation prevents staleness. Many Westside lifters ran this system for years.
Signs to move on: You want more structured periodization with planned peaks (for meet prep), you prefer a simpler system with less exercise selection decisions, or you want to focus on hypertrophy over maximal strength.
Transition to: 5/3/1: Boring But Big for a simpler periodized approach, Bullmastiff for a wave-periodized peaking program, or PHUL if you want to shift toward hypertrophy.
Equipment Needed
Barbell, squat rack, bench, weight plates, dumbbells, cable machine, and ideally a box for box squats (a flat bench works as a substitute).
Home gym substitutions:
Lat Pulldown -> Pull Up or Chin Up
Lying Leg Curl -> Romanian Deadlift, Barbell or Good Morning
Triceps Pushdown -> Skullcrusher or Bench Dip
Face Pull -> Reverse Fly
Seated Row -> Bent Over Row or Pendlay Row
Leg Press -> Bulgarian Split Squat or Front Squat
Box squat: Use a flat bench or stack plates to the right height
Rest Times
Max Effort main work: 3-5 minutes between heavy attempts (full neural recovery)
Max Effort backoff set: 2-3 minutes
Dynamic Effort sets: 60 seconds (this is critical - short rest maintains the speed-strength training effect)
ME day accessories: 90-120 seconds
DE day accessories: 60-90 seconds
How to Pick Starting Weights
Max Effort: No starting weight needed - work up to a daily max based on how you feel. Start with the bar and add weight each set until you reach a heavy single, double, or triple. Don't plan the exact number in advance; let the day's performance guide you.
Dynamic Effort: Enter your competition 1RM for Bench Press, Squat, and Deadlift. The program calculates DE percentages from there. If bar speed is slow (the concentric takes more than ~1 second), the percentage is too high - reduce by 5%.
Accessories: Start light and use double progression. You should be able to complete all prescribed reps with 2-3 reps in reserve on week 1.
Common mistake: Going too heavy on DE work. The point is speed, not strain. If it looks like a max effort set, the weight is too high.
Common Modifications
Adding bands/chains: If you have access to resistance bands or chains, add them to DE work for accommodating resistance. Use 25% of total load from bands/chains at lockout, and reduce bar weight accordingly.
3-day variant: Combine ME Upper and DE Upper into one day (ME work first, then DE work with reduced volume -6x3 instead of 9x3). Keep lower body days separate. This works well for lifters who recover slowly.
Raw lifter adjustments: This version already uses higher DE percentages (60-70% vs the original 50-60%) suitable for raw lifters. If you're an equipped lifter, reduce DE percentages by 10-15%.
ME exercise pool: Keep your rotation to 3-4 exercises per lift category. Too many variations means you never practice any one long enough to track meaningful PRs.
Extra posterior chain work: Add Reverse Hyperextension or Glute Bridge, Barbell on lower body days if your posterior chain is a weak point.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Westside Conjugate Method good for beginners?
No. Conjugate training requires the ability to work up to true maxes safely, select appropriate exercise variations for your weak points, and self-regulate accessory work. Beginners should build a strength base with a linear progression like GZCLP or Basic Beginner Routine first.
How many days a week is the Westside Conjugate Method?
Four days per week: Max Effort Upper, Max Effort Lower, Dynamic Effort Upper, and Dynamic Effort Lower. Most lifters space them as Monday/Tuesday/Thursday/Friday or Monday/Wednesday/Friday/Saturday.
Do I need bands and chains for the Conjugate Method?
No. This version uses straight weight with adjusted percentages for raw lifters. Bands and chains add accommodating resistance that makes the program more effective, but they're not required. If you do have them, add 20-25% of the total load from bands/chains and reduce bar weight accordingly.
How often should I rotate Max Effort exercises?
Every 1-3 weeks. Simmons recommended changing every week, but many raw lifters get better results running a variation for 2-3 weeks to practice the movement pattern before rotating. Keep your rotation pool to 3-4 exercises per lift category.
Can I do the Conjugate Method without a box for box squats?
Yes. Use a flat bench set to parallel height, or stack bumper plates. The box height should put your hip crease at or just below knee level. If you have no box option at all, replace box squats with pause squats - sit in the hole for 2 seconds before driving up.
Why are Dynamic Effort rest periods so short?
The 60-second rest keeps the nervous system activated between sets while preventing full recovery, which trains your ability to produce force repeatedly under fatigue. Longer rest turns speed work into regular strength training and defeats the purpose. If you can't maintain bar speed with 60-second rest, reduce the weight.
What's the difference between the Conjugate Method for raw vs equipped lifters?
The main difference is Dynamic Effort percentages. Equipped lifters use 50-60% of 1RM because their gear adds significant force at lockout. Raw lifters need 60-70% for squats and 50-65% for bench to get enough resistance through the full range of motion. This version is set up for raw lifters.
How do I know if I'm picking the right Max Effort exercises?
Choose variations that target your specific weak points. If you fail bench press at lockout, use Close Grip Bench Press and Floor Press. If you fail squats out of the hole, use Front Squat and Pause Squat. If you're unsure of your weak points, rotate through the defaults in this program and pay attention to which variations feel hardest - those expose your weaknesses.
~60-90 min per workout
3 weeks, 4x/week, 5-6 exercises per day
Barbell, Dumbbell, Cable, Band, Leverage Machine
Total Sets: 87
Strength Sets: 29, 33%
Hypertrophy Sets: 58, 67%
Upper Sets:43 (11s, 32h), 4d
Lower Sets:32 (18s, 14h), 2d
Core Sets:12 (12h), 4d
Push Sets:27 (11s, 16h), 2d
Pull Sets:22 (6s, 16h), 4d
Legs Sets:26 (12s, 14h), 2d
Shoulders:25↓ (6s, 19h), 4d
Triceps:16↓ (7s, 10h), 2d
Back:21↓ (21h), 4d
Abs:12 (12h), 4d
Glutes:29↓ (17s, 12h), 4d
Hamstrings:26↓ (9s, 17h), 4d
Quadriceps:23↓ (10s, 13h), 4d
Chest:24↓ (10s, 14h), 4d
Biceps:8↑ (8h), 4d
Calves:14↓ (9s, 5h), 2d
Forearms:8↑ (8h), 4d
Week 1
Week 2
Week 3
Week 1 - ME Upper
Bench Press Close Grip
Barbell
1-3
3
Work up to a heavy 1-3RM, then one backoff AMRAP at ~70%.
Incline Bench Press
Dumbbell
4 × 8 × 25lb
Bent Over Row
Barbell
4 × 8 × 95lb
Triceps Pushdown
Cable
3 × 12 × 40lb
Face Pull
Band
3 × 15 × 30lb
Hanging Leg Raise
Bodyweight
3 × 12 × 0lb
Week 1 - ME Lower
Front Squat
Barbell
1-3
3
Work up to a heavy 1-3RM, then one backoff AMRAP at ~70%.
Romanian Deadlift
Barbell
4 × 8 × 95lb
Lying Leg Curl
Leverage Machine
4 × 10 × 60lb
Lat Pulldown
Cable
3 × 10 × 70lb
Ab Wheel
Bodyweight
3 × 10 × 0lb
Week 1 - DE Upper
Bench Press
Barbell
9 × 3 × 72.5lb
Speed work. Move the bar as fast as possible. Rotate grip every 3 sets: close, medium, wide.
Overhead Press
Dumbbell
3 × 15 × 20lb
Triceps Extension
Dumbbell
3 × 15 × 15lb
Seated Row
Cable
3 × 15 × 60lb
Lateral Raise
Dumbbell
3 × 15 × 10lb
Hanging Leg Raise
Bodyweight
3 × 15 × 0lb
Week 1 - DE Lower
Box Squat
Barbell
10 × 2 × 92.5lb
Speed box squats. Sit back, pause briefly on the box, then explode up.
Deadlift
Barbell
6 × 1 × 120lb
Speed deadlifts. Each rep from a dead stop. Maximum acceleration off the floor.
Leg Press
Leverage Machine
3 × 15 × 180lb
Lying Leg Curl
Leverage Machine
3 × 15 × 45lb
Bent Over Row
Barbell
3 × 12 × 75lb
Hanging Leg Raise
Bodyweight
3 × 20 × 0lb
Week 2 - ME Upper
Incline Bench Press
Barbell
1-3
3
Work up to a heavy 1-3RM, then one backoff AMRAP at ~70%.
Incline Bench Press
Dumbbell
4 × 8 × 25lb
Bent Over Row
Barbell
4 × 8 × 95lb
Triceps Pushdown
Cable
3 × 12 × 40lb
Face Pull
Band
3 × 15 × 30lb
Hanging Leg Raise
Bodyweight
3 × 12 × 0lb
Week 2 - ME Lower
Deficit Deadlift
Barbell
1-3
3
Work up to a heavy 1-3RM, then one backoff AMRAP at ~70%.
Romanian Deadlift
Barbell
4 × 8 × 95lb
Lying Leg Curl
Leverage Machine
4 × 10 × 60lb
Lat Pulldown
Cable
3 × 10 × 70lb
Ab Wheel
Bodyweight
3 × 10 × 0lb
Week 2 - DE Upper
Bench Press
Barbell
9 × 3 × 80lb
Speed work. Move the bar as fast as possible. Rotate grip every 3 sets: close, medium, wide.
Overhead Press
Dumbbell
3 × 15 × 20lb
Triceps Extension
Dumbbell
3 × 15 × 15lb
Seated Row
Cable
3 × 15 × 60lb
Lateral Raise
Dumbbell
3 × 15 × 10lb
Hanging Leg Raise
Bodyweight
3 × 15 × 0lb
Week 2 - DE Lower
Box Squat
Barbell
10 × 2 × 100lb
Speed box squats. Sit back, pause briefly on the box, then explode up.
Deadlift
Barbell
6 × 1 × 127.5lb
Speed deadlifts. Each rep from a dead stop. Maximum acceleration off the floor.
Leg Press
Leverage Machine
3 × 15 × 180lb
Lying Leg Curl
Leverage Machine
3 × 15 × 45lb
Bent Over Row
Barbell
3 × 12 × 75lb
Hanging Leg Raise
Bodyweight
3 × 20 × 0lb
Week 3 - ME Upper
Bench Press
Barbell
1-3
3
Work up to a heavy 1-3RM, then one backoff AMRAP at ~70%.
Incline Bench Press
Dumbbell
4 × 8 × 25lb
Bent Over Row
Barbell
4 × 8 × 95lb
Triceps Pushdown
Cable
3 × 12 × 40lb
Face Pull
Band
3 × 15 × 30lb
Hanging Leg Raise
Bodyweight
3 × 12 × 0lb
Week 3 - ME Lower
Good Morning
Barbell
1-3
3
Work up to a heavy 1-3RM, then one backoff AMRAP at ~70%.
Romanian Deadlift
Barbell
4 × 8 × 95lb
Lying Leg Curl
Leverage Machine
4 × 10 × 60lb
Lat Pulldown
Cable
3 × 10 × 70lb
Ab Wheel
Bodyweight
3 × 10 × 0lb
Week 3 - DE Upper
Bench Press
Barbell
9 × 3 × 87.5lb
Speed work. Move the bar as fast as possible. Rotate grip every 3 sets: close, medium, wide.
Overhead Press
Dumbbell
3 × 15 × 20lb
Triceps Extension
Dumbbell
3 × 15 × 15lb
Seated Row
Cable
3 × 15 × 60lb
Lateral Raise
Dumbbell
3 × 15 × 10lb
Hanging Leg Raise
Bodyweight
3 × 15 × 0lb
Week 3 - DE Lower
Box Squat
Barbell
10 × 2 × 107.5lb
Speed box squats. Sit back, pause briefly on the box, then explode up.
Deadlift
Barbell
6 × 1 × 137.5lb
Speed deadlifts. Each rep from a dead stop. Maximum acceleration off the floor.
Leg Press
Leverage Machine
3 × 15 × 180lb
Lying Leg Curl
Leverage Machine
3 × 15 × 45lb
Bent Over Row
Barbell
3 × 12 × 75lb
Hanging Leg Raise
Bodyweight
3 × 20 × 0lb
# Week 1
## ME Upper
// Work up to a heavy 1-3RM, then one backoff AMRAP at ~70%.
me_upper[1-3]/used: none/1x1-3, 1x3/warmup: none/180s/progress: custom() {~
if (completedReps >= reps && week == 3 && dayInWeek == 1) {
rm1 += 5lb
}
~} /update: custom() {~
if (setIndex == 1) {
weights[2] = completedWeights[1] * 0.7
}
~}
// ...me_upper
me_upper: Bench Press Close Grip / ...me_upper
me_acc: Incline Bench Press, Dumbbell[1-3]/4x825lb/progress: dp(5lb, 8, 12)
me_acc: Bent Over Row[1-3]/4x895lb/progress: dp(5lb, 8, 12)
me_acc: Triceps Pushdown[1-3]/3x1240lb/progress: dp(5lb, 12, 20)
me_acc: Face Pull[1-3]/3x1530lb/warmup: none/progress: dp(5lb, 15, 25)
me_acc: Hanging Leg Raise[1-3]/3x120lb/warmup: none## ME Lower
// Work up to a heavy 1-3RM, then one backoff AMRAP at ~70%.
me_lower[1-3]/used: none/1x1-3, 1x3/warmup: none/180s/progress: custom() {~
if (completedReps >= reps && week == 3 && dayInWeek == 2) {
rm1 += 10lb
}
~} /update: custom() {~
if (setIndex == 1) {
weights[2] = completedWeights[1] * 0.7
}
~}
// ...me_lower
me_lower: Front Squat / ...me_lower
me_acc: Romanian Deadlift, Barbell[1-3]/4x895lb/progress: dp(5lb, 8, 12)
me_acc: Lying Leg Curl[1-3]/4x1060lb/progress: dp(5lb, 10, 15)
me_acc: Lat Pulldown[1-3]/3x1070lb/progress: dp(5lb, 10, 15)
me_acc: Ab Wheel[1-3]/3x100lb/warmup: none## DE Upper
// Speed work. Move the bar as fast as possible. Rotate grip every 3 sets: close, medium, wide.
de: Bench Press /3x3 (Close), 3x3 (Med), 3x3 (Wide) /55%/60s/warmup: none/progress: custom() {~
if (week == 3) {
rm1 += 5lb
}
~}
de_acc: Overhead Press, Dumbbell[1-3]/3x1520lb/progress: dp(5lb, 15, 20)
de_acc: Triceps Extension[1-3]/3x1515lb/progress: dp(5lb, 15, 20)
de_acc: Seated Row[1-3]/3x1560lb/progress: dp(5lb, 15, 20)
de_acc: Lateral Raise[1-3]/3x1510lb/warmup: none/progress: dp(5lb, 15, 25)
de_acc: Hanging Leg Raise[1-3]/3x150lb/warmup: none## DE Lower
// Speed box squats. Sit back, pause briefly on the box, then explode up.
de: Box Squat /10x2/60%/60s/progress: custom() {~
if (week == 3) {
rm1 += 10lb
}
~}
// Speed deadlifts. Each rep from a dead stop. Maximum acceleration off the floor.
de: Deadlift /6x1/65%/60s/warmup: none/progress: custom() {~
if (week == 3) {
rm1 += 10lb
}
~}
de_acc: Leg Press[1-3]/3x15180lb/progress: dp(10lb, 15, 20)
de_acc: Lying Leg Curl[1-3]/3x1545lb/progress: dp(5lb, 15, 20)
de_acc: Bent Over Row[1-3]/3x1275lb/progress: dp(5lb, 12, 20)
de_acc: Hanging Leg Raise[1-3]/3x200lb/warmup: none# Week 2
## ME Upper
// ...me_upper
me_upper: Incline Bench Press / ...me_upper
## ME Lower
// ...me_lower
me_lower: Deficit Deadlift / ...me_lower
## DE Upper
de: Bench Press /3x3 (Close), 3x3 (Med), 3x3 (Wide) /60%/60s## DE Lower
de: Box Squat /10x2/65%/60s
de: Deadlift /6x1/70%/60s# Week 3
## ME Upper
// ...me_upper
me_upper: Bench Press / ...me_upper
## ME Lower
// ...me_lower
me_lower: Good Morning / ...me_lower
## DE Upper
de: Bench Press /3x3 (Close), 3x3 (Med), 3x3 (Wide) /65%/60s## DE Lower
de: Box Squat /10x2/70%/60s
de: Deadlift /6x1/75%/60s
Enter reps and weight for each set, then tap the checkmark to complete it. Finish the workout day and see how the program adjusts weights, reps, and sets for next time.
Week 1 - ME Upper
Bench Press Close Grip, Barbell
Equipment: Barbell
Work up to a heavy 1-3RM, then one backoff AMRAP at ~70%.
Set
Reps
lb
1
1-3180s
1-3
×
2
3180s
3
×
Week 1 - ME Lower
Front Squat, Barbell
Equipment: Barbell
Work up to a heavy 1-3RM, then one backoff AMRAP at ~70%.
Set
Reps
lb
1
1-3180s
1-3
×
2
3180s
3
×
Week 1 - DE Upper
Bench Press, Barbell
Equipment: Barbell
Speed work. Move the bar as fast as possible. Rotate grip every 3 sets: close, medium, wide.
Set
Reps
lb
1
Close
3 × 55%72.5lb60s
3
×
72.5
2
Close
3 × 55%72.5lb60s
3
×
72.5
3
Close
3 × 55%72.5lb60s
3
×
72.5
4
Med
3 × 55%72.5lb60s
3
×
72.5
5
Med
3 × 55%72.5lb60s
3
×
72.5
6
Med
3 × 55%72.5lb60s
3
×
72.5
7
Wide
3 × 55%72.5lb60s
3
×
72.5
8
Wide
3 × 55%72.5lb60s
3
×
72.5
9
Wide
3 × 55%72.5lb60s
3
×
72.5
Week 1 - DE Lower
Box Squat, Barbell
Equipment: Barbell
Speed box squats. Sit back, pause briefly on the box, then explode up.
Set
Reps
lb
W
Warmup
5 × 45lb
5
×
45
W
Warmup
5 × 72.5lb
5
×
72.5
1
2 × 60%92.5lb60s
2
×
92.5
2
2 × 60%92.5lb60s
2
×
92.5
3
2 × 60%92.5lb60s
2
×
92.5
4
2 × 60%92.5lb60s
2
×
92.5
5
2 × 60%92.5lb60s
2
×
92.5
6
2 × 60%92.5lb60s
2
×
92.5
7
2 × 60%92.5lb60s
2
×
92.5
8
2 × 60%92.5lb60s
2
×
92.5
9
2 × 60%92.5lb60s
2
×
92.5
10
2 × 60%92.5lb60s
2
×
92.5
You can use this program on Liftosaur - a weightlifting tracker app!
Log your workouts there, and have a history of all your workouts on your phone
It will automatically update weights, reps and sets for you from workout to workout - according to the program logic
And you can customize the programs in any way, change exercises, the exercise logic, sets/reps/weights, etc.
{"program":{"vtype":"program","id":"westside-conjugate-method","name":"Westside Conjugate Method","url":"https://www.westside-barbell.com/pages/conjugate-method","author":"Louie Simmons","shortDescription":"A 4-day powerlifting system combining Max Effort heavy singles, Dynamic Effort speed work, and high-volume accessories to build strength year-round.","description":"A 4-day upper/lower powerlifting system developed by Louie Simmons at Westside Barbell. Two days use the Max Effort (ME) method - working up to a heavy 1-3 rep max on a rotating exercise. Two days use the Dynamic Effort (DE) method - moving moderate weight at max speed for multiple low-rep sets. Accessories target weak points through high-rep bodybuilding work.","nextDay":1,"weeks":[],"isMultiweek":true,"days":[{"id":"tculnslq","name":"Day 1","exercises":[]}],"exercises":[],"tags":[],"deletedDays":[],"deletedWeeks":[],"deletedExercises":[],"clonedAt":1772728622900,"planner":{"vtype":"planner","name":"Westside Conjugate Method","weeks":[{"name":"Week 1","days":[{"name":"ME Upper","exerciseText":"// Work up to a heavy 1-3RM, then one backoff AMRAP at ~70%.\nme_upper[1-3] / used: none / 1x1-3, 1x3 / warmup: none / 180s / progress: custom() {~\n if (completedReps >= reps && week == 3 && dayInWeek == 1) {\n rm1 += 5lb\n }\n~} / update: custom() {~\n if (setIndex == 1) {\n weights[2] = completedWeights[1] * 0.7\n }\n~}\n\n// ...me_upper\nme_upper: Bench Press Close Grip / ...me_upper\n\nme_acc: Incline Bench Press, Dumbbell[1-3] / 4x8 25lb / progress: dp(5lb, 8, 12)\nme_acc: Bent Over Row[1-3] / 4x8 95lb / progress: dp(5lb, 8, 12)\nme_acc: Triceps Pushdown[1-3] / 3x12 40lb / progress: dp(5lb, 12, 20)\nme_acc: Face Pull[1-3] / 3x15 30lb / warmup: none / progress: dp(5lb, 15, 25)\nme_acc: Hanging Leg Raise[1-3] / 3x12 0lb / warmup: none"},{"name":"ME Lower","exerciseText":"// Work up to a heavy 1-3RM, then one backoff AMRAP at ~70%.\nme_lower[1-3] / used: none / 1x1-3, 1x3 / warmup: none / 180s / progress: custom() {~\n if (completedReps >= reps && week == 3 && dayInWeek == 2) {\n rm1 += 10lb\n }\n~} / update: custom() {~\n if (setIndex == 1) {\n weights[2] = completedWeights[1] * 0.7\n }\n~}\n\n\n// ...me_lower\nme_lower: Front Squat / ...me_lower\n\nme_acc: Romanian Deadlift, Barbell[1-3] / 4x8 95lb / progress: dp(5lb, 8, 12)\nme_acc: Lying Leg Curl[1-3] / 4x10 60lb / progress: dp(5lb, 10, 15)\nme_acc: Lat Pulldown[1-3] / 3x10 70lb / progress: dp(5lb, 10, 15)\nme_acc: Ab Wheel[1-3] / 3x10 0lb / warmup: none"},{"name":"DE Upper","exerciseText":"// Speed work. Move the bar as fast as possible. Rotate grip every 3 sets: close, medium, wide.\nde: Bench Press / 3x3 (Close), 3x3 (Med), 3x3 (Wide) / 55% / 60s / warmup: none / progress: custom() {~\n if (week == 3) {\n rm1 += 5lb\n }\n~}\n\n\nde_acc: Overhead Press, Dumbbell[1-3] / 3x15 20lb / progress: dp(5lb, 15, 20)\nde_acc: Triceps Extension[1-3] / 3x15 15lb / progress: dp(5lb, 15, 20)\nde_acc: Seated Row[1-3] / 3x15 60lb / progress: dp(5lb, 15, 20)\nde_acc: Lateral Raise[1-3] / 3x15 10lb / warmup: none / progress: dp(5lb, 15, 25)\nde_acc: Hanging Leg Raise[1-3] / 3x15 0lb / warmup: none"},{"name":"DE Lower","exerciseText":"// Speed box squats. Sit back, pause briefly on the box, then explode up.\nde: Box Squat / 10x2 / 60% / 60s / progress: custom() {~\n if (week == 3) {\n rm1 += 10lb\n }\n~}\n\n// Speed deadlifts. Each rep from a dead stop. Maximum acceleration off the floor.\nde: Deadlift / 6x1 / 65% / 60s / warmup: none / progress: custom() {~\n if (week == 3) {\n rm1 += 10lb\n }\n~}\n\nde_acc: Leg Press[1-3] / 3x15 180lb / progress: dp(10lb, 15, 20)\nde_acc: Lying Leg Curl[1-3] / 3x15 45lb / progress: dp(5lb, 15, 20)\nde_acc: Bent Over Row[1-3] / 3x12 75lb / progress: dp(5lb, 12, 20)\nde_acc: Hanging Leg Raise[1-3] / 3x20 0lb / warmup: none"}]},{"name":"Week 2","days":[{"name":"ME Upper","exerciseText":"// ...me_upper\nme_upper: Incline Bench Press / ...me_upper"},{"name":"ME Lower","exerciseText":"// ...me_lower\nme_lower: Deficit Deadlift / ...me_lower"},{"name":"DE Upper","exerciseText":"de: Bench Press / 3x3 (Close), 3x3 (Med), 3x3 (Wide) / 60% / 60s"},{"name":"DE Lower","exerciseText":"de: Box Squat / 10x2 / 65% / 60s\nde: Deadlift / 6x1 / 70% / 60s"}]},{"name":"Week 3","days":[{"name":"ME Upper","exerciseText":"// ...me_upper\nme_upper: Bench Press / ...me_upper"},{"name":"ME Lower","exerciseText":"// ...me_lower\nme_lower: Good Morning / ...me_lower"},{"name":"DE Upper","exerciseText":"de: Bench Press / 3x3 (Close), 3x3 (Med), 3x3 (Wide) / 65% / 60s"},{"name":"DE Lower","exerciseText":"de: Box Squat / 10x2 / 70% / 60s\nde: Deadlift / 6x1 / 75% / 60s"}]}]}},"fullDescription":"## Origin & Philosophy\n\nThe Westside Conjugate Method was developed by [Louie Simmons](https://www.westside-barbell.com/pages/conjugate-method) (1947-2022) at Westside Barbell in Columbus, Ohio. Simmons combined the Soviet conjugate system - rotating special exercises to avoid accommodation - with the Bulgarian approach of frequent near-maximal lifting. He added a speed training method for moving submaximal loads at max velocity to develop rate of force development.\n\nThe core philosophy: you can train maximally year-round without burning out if you rotate exercises frequently enough that no single movement pattern accumulates excessive fatigue. Max Effort days build absolute strength. Dynamic Effort days build explosive power. The repetition method (accessories) builds muscle mass and addresses weak points. Together, these three methods develop every quality a powerlifter needs.\n\n## Who It's For\n\n- **Experience level**: Advanced (2+ years of consistent barbell training, ideally with powerlifting meet experience)\n- **Prerequisites**: Strong working knowledge of [{Squat}], [{Bench Press}], and [{Deadlift}] technique. Known 1RMs for all three. Ability to identify personal weak points and select exercises accordingly.\n- **Primary goal**: Maximal strength in the powerlifting competition lifts\n- **Best suited for**: Bulking or maintenance. The volume of accessory work supports muscle growth, and the frequency of heavy work requires adequate recovery.\n\n## Pros & Cons\n\n**Pros**\n\n- Trains maximal strength (1-3RM) every week year-round, keeping the nervous system adapted to heavy loads without peaking and detraining cycles\n- Exercise rotation every 1-3 weeks prevents staleness and accommodation - you're always working toward a new PR on some variation\n- Dynamic Effort days develop explosive power and bar speed, which directly improves competition lift performance off the chest and out of the hole\n- The accessory-heavy approach (3-5 movements per session) builds significant muscle mass alongside strength\n- Highly customizable - you choose ME variations, DE percentages, and accessories based on your individual weak points\n\n**Cons**\n\n- Requires self-knowledge to select the right exercises for your weak points - poor exercise selection means poor results\n- The original percentages were designed for multi-ply equipped lifters - competitors who wear thick supportive suits and shirts that store elastic energy and can add 100-200+ lbs of assistance at lockout. Raw lifters (no supportive gear, just a belt and knee sleeves) need higher DE percentages to get enough resistance through the full range of motion. This version is already adjusted for raw.\n- Sessions run 60-90 minutes due to the combination of main work plus 3-5 accessories\n- No built-in deload - the exercise rotation is supposed to manage fatigue, but some lifters accumulate fatigue anyway and need periodic lighter weeks\n- No direct bicep or calf work - biceps only get indirect volume through rows and pulldowns. Add curls if arm size is a priority.\n- Dynamic Effort work with straight weight (no bands/chains) is less effective than with accommodating resistance, but most commercial gyms lack bands and chains\n\n## Program Structure\n\n- **Split**: Upper/lower, with each half trained twice per week - once for max effort, once for dynamic effort\n- **Periodization**: Conjugate - simultaneous development of max strength (ME), speed-strength (DE), and hypertrophy (repetition method) year-round. DE work follows 3-week pendulum waves.\n- **Schedule**: Fixed 4-day weekly split. Day 1: ME Upper. Day 2: ME Lower. Day 3: DE Upper. Day 4: DE Lower.\n- **Rotation**: ME exercises change every 1-3 weeks. DE exercises stay consistent within a 3-week wave, then percentages reset.\n\n## Exercise Selection & Rationale\n\n**Max Effort Upper** rotates through [{Bench Press}] variations that address different sticking points. [{Bench Press Close Grip}] builds tricep lockout strength. [{Incline Bench Press}] develops upper chest drive. [{Bench Press}] with a pause trains the bottom position. Each variation is trained for 1-3 weeks before rotating.\n\n**Max Effort Lower** follows the classic Westside 3-week rotation: squat, deadlift, good morning. [{Front Squat}] builds quad strength for squat recovery. [{Deficit Deadlift}] strengthens the pull off the floor. [{Good Morning}] targets the posterior chain (always done for triples, never singles).\n\n**Dynamic Effort Upper** uses [{Bench Press}] with rotating grip widths (close, medium, wide) to develop speed off the chest across different positions.\n\n**Dynamic Effort Lower** pairs speed [{Box Squat}] with speed [{Deadlift}]. Box squats teach explosive hip drive from a dead stop. Speed deadlifts train rate of force development in the pull.\n\n**Accessories** prioritize the muscle groups that support the big three: triceps, lats, upper back, glutes, hamstrings, and abs. [{Triceps Extension}] and [{Triceps Pushdown}] for bench lockout. [{Bent Over Row}] and [{Lat Pulldown}] for back thickness and deadlift support. [{Romanian Deadlift, Barbell}] and [{Lying Leg Curl}] for posterior chain. [{Hanging Leg Raise}] and [{Ab Wheel}] for core stability under heavy loads.\n\n## Set & Rep Scheme\n\n**Max Effort work**: Work up to a 1-3 rep max on the main exercise. This means progressively heavier singles, doubles, or triples until you hit a daily max - the heaviest you can manage with good form that day. Typically 5-7 working sets ramping up. After the top set, one backoff set at roughly 70% of your max for an AMRAP (1-2 reps in reserve) adds volume without excessive fatigue.\n\n**Dynamic Effort Bench**: 9 sets of 3 reps at 50-65% of 1RM. The goal is maximum bar speed, not grinding reps. Rest is kept short (60 seconds) to maintain neural activation. Grip rotates every 3 sets (close, medium, wide).\n\n**Dynamic Effort Squat**: 10 sets of 2 reps at 60-70% of 1RM to a box. Short rest (60 seconds). The box eliminates the stretch reflex, forcing you to generate force from a dead stop.\n\n**Dynamic Effort Deadlift**: 6 singles at 60-75% of 1RM after box squats. Each rep starts from a dead stop with maximum acceleration.\n\n**DE 3-week wave**: Week 1 uses the lowest percentage with highest volume, Week 2 is moderate, Week 3 is highest percentage with lowest volume. Then reset.\n\n**Accessories on ME days**: 3-4 exercises, 3-4 sets of 6-12 reps. Heavier, lower-rep accessories that complement the heavy main work.\n\n**Accessories on DE days**: 3-4 exercises, 3-4 sets of 12-20 reps. Lighter, higher-rep pump work since the main movement is submaximal.\n\n## Progressive Overload\n\n**Max Effort**: You progress by attempting a new PR on a variation every time it comes around in the rotation. If you did [{Bench Press Close Grip}] for a 3RM of 225lb three weeks ago, aim for 230lb+ when it returns. The rotation means you're always setting PRs on *something*, even when competition lifts plateau.\n\n**Dynamic Effort**: Percentages increase across a 3-week wave (e.g., 60% -> 65% -> 70% on box squat). After week 3, reset to the starting percentage. Over time, your 1RM increases, so the same percentages represent heavier absolute loads.\n\n**Accessories**: Use double progression - hit the top of the rep range for all sets, then increase weight and drop back to the bottom of the range.\n\n**When you stall**: If you miss a ME attempt, that variation has run its course - rotate to a new exercise. If DE bar speed slows noticeably, reduce the percentage by 5%. If an accessory stalls, swap it for a different exercise targeting the same muscle group.\n\n## How Long to Run It / What Next\n\nThe conjugate method is designed to run indefinitely. There's no built-in endpoint - the exercise rotation prevents staleness. Many Westside lifters ran this system for years.\n\n**Signs to move on**: You want more structured periodization with planned peaks (for meet prep), you prefer a simpler system with less exercise selection decisions, or you want to focus on hypertrophy over maximal strength.\n\n**Transition to**: [5/3/1: Boring But Big](/programs/the531bbb) for a simpler periodized approach, [Bullmastiff](/programs/bullmastiff) for a wave-periodized peaking program, or [PHUL](/programs/phul) if you want to shift toward hypertrophy.\n\n## Equipment Needed\n\nBarbell, squat rack, bench, weight plates, dumbbells, cable machine, and ideally a box for box squats (a flat bench works as a substitute).\n\n**Home gym substitutions**:\n- [{Lat Pulldown}] -> [{Pull Up}] or [{Chin Up}]\n- [{Lying Leg Curl}] -> [{Romanian Deadlift, Barbell}] or [{Good Morning}]\n- [{Triceps Pushdown}] -> [{Skullcrusher}] or [{Bench Dip}]\n- [{Face Pull}] -> [{Reverse Fly}]\n- [{Seated Row}] -> [{Bent Over Row}] or [{Pendlay Row}]\n- [{Leg Press}] -> [{Bulgarian Split Squat}] or [{Front Squat}]\n- Box squat: Use a flat bench or stack plates to the right height\n\n## Rest Times\n\n- **Max Effort main work**: 3-5 minutes between heavy attempts (full neural recovery)\n- **Max Effort backoff set**: 2-3 minutes\n- **Dynamic Effort sets**: 60 seconds (this is critical - short rest maintains the speed-strength training effect)\n- **ME day accessories**: 90-120 seconds\n- **DE day accessories**: 60-90 seconds\n\n## How to Pick Starting Weights\n\n**Max Effort**: No starting weight needed - work up to a daily max based on how you feel. Start with the bar and add weight each set until you reach a heavy single, double, or triple. Don't plan the exact number in advance; let the day's performance guide you.\n\n**Dynamic Effort**: Enter your competition 1RM for [{Bench Press}], [{Squat}], and [{Deadlift}]. The program calculates DE percentages from there. If bar speed is slow (the concentric takes more than ~1 second), the percentage is too high - reduce by 5%.\n\n**Accessories**: Start light and use double progression. You should be able to complete all prescribed reps with 2-3 reps in reserve on week 1.\n\n**Common mistake**: Going too heavy on DE work. The point is speed, not strain. If it looks like a max effort set, the weight is too high.\n\n## Common Modifications\n\n- **Adding bands/chains**: If you have access to resistance bands or chains, add them to DE work for accommodating resistance. Use 25% of total load from bands/chains at lockout, and reduce bar weight accordingly.\n- **3-day variant**: Combine ME Upper and DE Upper into one day (ME work first, then DE work with reduced volume -6x3 instead of 9x3). Keep lower body days separate. This works well for lifters who recover slowly.\n- **Raw lifter adjustments**: This version already uses higher DE percentages (60-70% vs the original 50-60%) suitable for raw lifters. If you're an equipped lifter, reduce DE percentages by 10-15%.\n- **ME exercise pool**: Keep your rotation to 3-4 exercises per lift category. Too many variations means you never practice any one long enough to track meaningful PRs.\n- **Extra posterior chain work**: Add [{Reverse Hyperextension}] or [{Glute Bridge, Barbell}] on lower body days if your posterior chain is a weak point.","faq":"### Is the Westside Conjugate Method good for beginners?\n\nNo. Conjugate training requires the ability to work up to true maxes safely, select appropriate exercise variations for your weak points, and self-regulate accessory work. Beginners should build a strength base with a linear progression like [GZCLP](/programs/gzclp) or [Basic Beginner Routine](/programs/basicBeginner) first.\n\n### How many days a week is the Westside Conjugate Method?\n\nFour days per week: Max Effort Upper, Max Effort Lower, Dynamic Effort Upper, and Dynamic Effort Lower. Most lifters space them as Monday/Tuesday/Thursday/Friday or Monday/Wednesday/Friday/Saturday.\n\n### Do I need bands and chains for the Conjugate Method?\n\nNo. This version uses straight weight with adjusted percentages for raw lifters. Bands and chains add accommodating resistance that makes the program more effective, but they're not required. If you do have them, add 20-25% of the total load from bands/chains and reduce bar weight accordingly.\n\n### How often should I rotate Max Effort exercises?\n\nEvery 1-3 weeks. Simmons recommended changing every week, but many raw lifters get better results running a variation for 2-3 weeks to practice the movement pattern before rotating. Keep your rotation pool to 3-4 exercises per lift category.\n\n### Can I do the Conjugate Method without a box for box squats?\n\nYes. Use a flat bench set to parallel height, or stack bumper plates. The box height should put your hip crease at or just below knee level. If you have no box option at all, replace box squats with pause squats - sit in the hole for 2 seconds before driving up.\n\n### Why are Dynamic Effort rest periods so short?\n\nThe 60-second rest keeps the nervous system activated between sets while preventing full recovery, which trains your ability to produce force repeatedly under fatigue. Longer rest turns speed work into regular strength training and defeats the purpose. If you can't maintain bar speed with 60-second rest, reduce the weight.\n\n### What's the difference between the Conjugate Method for raw vs equipped lifters?\n\nThe main difference is Dynamic Effort percentages. Equipped lifters use 50-60% of 1RM because their gear adds significant force at lockout. Raw lifters need 60-70% for squats and 50-65% for bench to get enough resistance through the full range of motion. This version is set up for raw lifters.\n\n### How do I know if I'm picking the right Max Effort exercises?\n\nChoose variations that target your specific weak points. If you fail bench press at lockout, use Close Grip Bench Press and Floor Press. If you fail squats out of the hole, use Front Squat and Pause Squat. If you're unsure of your weak points, rotate through the defaults in this program and pay attention to which variations feel hardest - those expose your weaknesses.","userAgent":"Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)","indexEntry":{"id":"westside-conjugate-method","name":"Westside Conjugate Method","author":"Louie Simmons","authorUrl":"","url":"https://www.westside-barbell.com/pages/conjugate-method","shortDescription":"A 4-day powerlifting system combining Max Effort heavy singles, Dynamic Effort speed work, and high-volume accessories to build strength year-round.","description":"A 4-day upper/lower powerlifting system developed by Louie Simmons at Westside Barbell. Two days use the Max Effort (ME) method - working up to a heavy 1-3 rep max on a rotating exercise. Two days use the Dynamic Effort (DE) method - moving moderate weight at max speed for multiple low-rep sets. Accessories target weak points through high-rep bodybuilding work.","isMultiweek":true,"tags":[],"weeksCount":3,"exercises":[{"id":"benchPressCloseGrip","equipment":"barbell"},{"id":"inclineBenchPress","equipment":"dumbbell"},{"id":"bentOverRow","equipment":"barbell"},{"id":"tricepsPushdown","equipment":"cable"},{"id":"facePull","equipment":"band"},{"id":"hangingLegRaise","equipment":"bodyweight"},{"id":"frontSquat","equipment":"barbell"},{"id":"romanianDeadlift","equipment":"barbell"},{"id":"lyingLegCurl","equipment":"leverageMachine"},{"id":"latPulldown","equipment":"cable"},{"id":"abWheel","equipment":"bodyweight"},{"id":"benchPress","equipment":"barbell"},{"id":"overheadPress","equipment":"dumbbell"},{"id":"tricepsExtension","equipment":"dumbbell"},{"id":"seatedRow","equipment":"cable"},{"id":"lateralRaise","equipment":"dumbbell"},{"id":"boxSquat","equipment":"barbell"},{"id":"deadlift","equipment":"barbell"},{"id":"legPress","equipment":"leverageMachine"},{"id":"inclineBenchPress","equipment":"barbell"},{"id":"deficitDeadlift","equipment":"barbell"},{"id":"goodMorning","equipment":"barbell"}],"equipment":["barbell","dumbbell","cable","band","leverageMachine"],"exercisesRange":[5,6],"frequency":4,"age":"more_than_year","duration":"60-90","goal":"strength","datePublished":"2026-03-05T08:08:26-06:00","dateModified":"2026-03-05T08:12:20-06:00"}}