Programs

Terrence 2021 Mr Olympia Split – Arm and Upper focused

This is the EXACT program Terrence Ruffin used for his 2021 prep Mr Olympia. It is an advanced program not for the faint of heart, with slightly more emphasis on upper body.  

2020 was Terrence’s best competitive season to date. He placed 2nd at the Arnold to Alex Cambronero. Then, later that year at the Mr Olympia, Terrence passed Alex and every other Classic Physique competitor, except for Chris Bumstead, and placed 2nd in the world. 

Coming into 2021 our goal was to keep getting better. This program is relatively high frequency, especially for upper body. But programmed in a manner, where even the hardest training, strongest individuals, can still recover while running it. This is mainly by implementing what I’ve coined as “reverse” push and pull days. Keeping the main focus arms, but with added frequence for the entire upper body. Proximity to failure, as well as volume, were specific to Terrence’s current needs.

As for every program, feel free to adjust variables slightly as needed. The base metric of “1 REP” is not well established in “research”, and can vary largely from individual to individual. So feel free to make slight adjustments to the program’s prescribed: Rep ranges, Number of working sets, and Proximity to Failure (RIR).  Anyone that argues any of these variables down to the single metric of measure as definitively “the best”, has spent too much time on social media, and too little time applying training to actual humans. In addition, every individual brings large differences to the table as far as “outside the gym” variables: nutrition, sleep, stress, etc.  So while I’m confident this program provides epic guidelines and a great place to start, you are ultimately your own study of 1.  So feel free to experiment a bit.  

Also, with exercise selection I always follow one of my main, guiding training principles of: As little as possible to produce maximal results. That said, there is no exact cut off point for the number of exercises per workout. So if you want to add an exercise or even two to any given workout, same as the advice I give above… try it out, measure progress and adjust accordingly. Lastly, exercise selection is based on what I feel has the most evidence for being effective long-term, but for any single exercise on the program, there are always other options that can accomplish the same goal similarly. So feel free to swap exercises based on preference, or if you need a recommendation get in the forums. 

Rest: 90 seconds – 3 minutes before working sets 

RIR: 0-2 

Suggested split structure:

Monday – Pull

Tuesday – Push

Wednesday – Lower

Thursday – Off

Friday – Reverse Pull

Saturday – Reverse Push 

Sunday – Off

Other split options for consideration:

Legendary recovery:

4 days on, 1 day off

Good recovery:

2 days on, 1 day off

Below average recovery:

1 on, 1 off

*These are still just suggestions.  There is no right or wrong option here.  You can also make this work with any schedule.  Whenever you train, just pick right up on the next session.  Hypothetically, if you’re ever sick, rundown, excessively busy, stressed or just have a moment of laziness and train less days than the suggested split, no worries at all just pick back up right where you left off. At the same time if you are recovering like a robot, or just absolutely love training more often than the suggested split, have added it. Don’t let anyone, myself included, limit how much you love the train, or make you feel guilty for missing a session. Long-term consistency and adherence are. 

Pull

pull-downs (single arm)

Set 1: 6-8 reps 

Set 2: 8-12 reps 

Chest Supported Tbar row

Set 1: 6-8 reps 

Set 2: 8-12 reps 

Chest supported machine Row

Set 1: 6-8 reps 

Set 2: 8-12 reps 

Tbar 

Set 1: 6-8 reps 

Set 2: 8-12 reps 

Standing cable curls

Set 1: 10-12 reps 

Set 2: 12-15 reps 

E1 Reverse pec dec

Set 1: 6-8 reps 

Set 2: 8-12 reps 

Ab Mat Crunches

Set 1: 6-8 reps 

Set 2: 8-12 reps 

Wrist Curls 

Set 1: 20 reps 

Push

Incline DB Press 

Set 1: 6-8 reps 

Set 2: 8-12 reps 

Roller Fly

Set 1: 10-12reps 

Set 2: 12-15 reps 

High Incline Smith (60 degrees or more)

Set 1: 6-8 reps 

Set 2: 8-12 reps 

Cuff laterals 

Set 1: 8-10 reps 

Set 2: 10-12 reps 

Rope Cable Extensions 

Set 1: 15-20 reps 

Set 2: 15-20 reps 

Standing calf (smith) 

Set 1: 10-12 reps 

Set 2: 12-15 reps 

Lower

Seated Leg Curls

Set 1: 5-8 reps 

Set 2: 8-10 reps 

Pendulum Squat 

Set 1: 6-8 reps 

Set 2: 8-12 reps 

Lying Leg Curls 

Set 1: 6-8 reps 

Set 2: 8-12 reps 

Split squats (safety Squat Bar)

Set 1: 20 reps (10 per leg)

Set 2: 30 reps (15 per leg) 

Prowler*

Set 1: 40-60 seconds 

Set 2: 40-60 seconds 

*If you don’t have a prowler, sub with sprints on a spin bike 

Reverse Pull

Single arm preacher 

Set 1: 6-8 reps 

Set 2: 8-12 reps 

Cable hammer curl 

Set 1: 10-12 reps 

Set 2: 18-22 reps 

Cable rear delts

Set 1: 10-12 reps 

Set 2: 12-15 reps 

Cable Rope Pullovers

Set 1: 10-12 reps 

Set 2: 12-15 reps 

Rack Chins 

Set 1: BW – AMRAP

Set 2: BW – AMRAP

Hanging Leg Raises

Set 1: BW – AMRAP

Set 2: BW – AMRAP

Wrist Extensions

Set 1: 20 reps  

Reverse Push

Cross-Cable Triceps Extensions 

Set 1: 10-12 reps 

Set 2: 12-15 reps 

JM banded smith press

Set 1: 8-10 reps 

Set 2: 10-12 reps 

Delt Cable Y-Raise

Set 1: 10-12 reps 

Set 2: 12-15 reps 

Pec dec 

Set 1: 10-12 reps 

Set 2: 12-15 reps 

Smith incline press 

Set 1: 10-12 reps 

Set 2: 12-15 reps 

Hip loaded calf 

Set 1: 6-8 reps 

Set 2: 8-12 reps