Adler1983 said:
Ozo: Hate to break it to you; but yeah, you're wrong. Your triceps are secondary movers for all of your chest pressing activities. They're an essential component to heavy benching. If your triceps are exhausted before you attempt chest; you'll be at an immediate disadvantage because you're not pushing as much.
Just because a muscle is tired doesn't mean it won't be firing during an activity. You're chest may not be growing for a number of reasons 1) overtraining 2) you haven't give it enough time to really see reults 3) not execising apppropriately 4) genetics.
Keep chest before triceps; or better yet...do triceps on a different day.
Pre-exhaustion of your triceps can be done, which would cause your chest to pick up the slack. Triceps are very rarely the sticking point for trainees on the heavy, unilateral pressing movements anways. Your shoulders will almost always cause you to fail, or stick, on your pressing movements. Pre-exhaustion could be a practical solution, or a welcome change of pace for someone looking for different methods to spark gains on a lagging, or stale, chest workout.
However, at your early stage of lifting I would not recommend this. As I stated earlier, you will gain the most mass off of heavy, compound movements in which you lift to gain reps/weight. Pick one of your favorite chest exersizes, pick 3 different rep ranges, and perform that chest exersize (along with total body work) no more than 3 times weekly, and no fewer than 2 times per week utilizing different parameters. Example,
Monday:5x5, rest 60s, tempo 10X
Flat Barbell bench press
(Other total body work)
Wednesday: 3x10, rest 120s, tempo 13X
Db Incline Bench press
(other total body work)
Friday: 2x15, rest 2-3 min, tempo 10X
Dips
(other total body work)
A very solid routine structure for beginner and advanced lifters is "Total Body Training" by world known strength and conditioning coach Chad Waterbury.
www.t-nation.com, do a search for "Total Body Training"
Scott