
This is a write up of my recent
training experience with the Smolov Base Squat Cycle.
The Smolov????
The Smolov is an iconic powerlifting program and on paper it looks rough. I first read about this in Pavel’s excellent book Power to the People Professional.
Here’s the breakdown… (% x reps x sets)
| Week # |
Monday |
Wednesday |
Friday |
Saturday |
| 1 |
70%x9x4 |
75%x7x5 |
80%x5x7 |
85%x3x10 |
| 2 |
(70%+10kg)x9x4 |
(75%+10kg)x7x5 |
(80%+10kg)x5x7 |
(85%+10kg)x3x10 |
| 3 |
(70%+15kg)x9x4 |
(75%+15kg)x7x5 |
(80%+15kg)x5x7 |
(85%+15kg)x3x10 |
| 4 |
Rest |
Rest |
Test Your Max
|
Rest |
That’s the plan in all its glory. Four days per week of heavy squats cycling from high to low reps as the week progresses whilst maintaining volume in the 30-36 rep range in each session.
Why Do This???
A valid question.
Short answer – because my Back Squat sucked and I couldn’t break the 120kg barrier.
My legs have always been my weak link strength-wise. I’m kinda classic gymnast build and upperbody / core strength comes fairly naturally. Leg strength? Not so hot.
The difference between the ease at which I can build upperbody muscle mass and lower body is also huge and my legs even when getting stronger have been reluctant to grow.
I figured the Smolov might fix some of these weaknesses.
The Starting Point
The end of my last cycle before embarking on the Smolov yielded a 1RM of 117.5kg
Crunching the numbers gave the following plan:
| Week # |
Monday |
Wednesday |
Friday |
Saturday |
| 1 |
85x9x4 |
90x7x5 |
95x5x7 |
100x3x10 |
| 2 |
95x9x4 |
100x7x5 |
105x5x7 |
110x3x10 |
| 3 |
100x9x4 |
105x7x5 |
110x5x7 |
115x3x10 |
| 4 |
Rest |
Rest |
TEST 1RM
|
Rest |
Looking at this before I started, I was pretty dubious that I could hit the numbers as prescribed, but I figured it was worth a shot and figured that the only thing to lose was my weakness. Heck, if after 4 weeks of squatting that often, if I couldn’t up my max, I was pretty much resolved to top myself (I take this kind of thing way too seriously!).
The Actual Training
Week 1
This sucked. I sucked. I was doing way below parallel Back Squats and the volume was harsh on my knees. I noticed also that my abductors and adductors were really weak at the bottom and I was losing knee position integrity as I was unable to keep them pushed out in the bottom position and they were starting to roll in. I was also really feeling the volume in my low back.
I fixed all this with two simple solutions…
- I started wearing knee sleeves (not wraps) to keep my knees warm throughout.
- I switched to low box squats where the box was low enough so that the crease of my hips was below the knee, but not so low that I was rock bottom.
The box squats enabled me to push my hips back, whilst keeping my shins straighter throughout. This relieved the forces on the knees and made me focus on using the muscles around my hips and my abductors and adductors. Doing this also created more torque through the back which aided in strengthening the muscles there, but because I wasn’t going as low on the squats, kept the back in a stronger position for me.

Box Squats. Depth for my cycle would be similar if you lost the plate on top of the box
Week 2
This week called for a 10kg jump from the last week in all sessions. This sounds like a huge jump, but the starting %s are actually a little lower than what would be maxing out, so a 10kg jump actually brings you inline with where you should be. The first week is almost a tempering process to get you used to the volume. The real work starts here.
This was hard, but since I’d sorted out my knees and my positioning, it wasn’t painful. The higher rep sessions at the start of the week were the worst for me as I’m used to low rep training. This was good though as I obviously needed the gear change. I was also much more sore after the higher rep days.
About half way through this week a shift occurred and I became strangely addicted to the squats. There was hardly a moment where I wasn’t thinking about squatting and the next session couldn’t come quick enough. This was a bit odd.
Week 3
This called for a 5kg increase in each session from week 2 and by this point I was well in the flow. Not much new to report here except that by the end of the week I was handling a weight for 10 sets of 3 that was only 2.5kg short of my recent 1RM. Pretty cool for 3 weeks work.
The Final Result
After almost a week’s layoff I felt ready to try for a new PR.
After several warm up sets, I got to work.
All of my PR attempts were full depth and I dispensed with the box. Therefore my Max attempts were lower than my training reps.
I checked how 115kg felt as this was the heaviest I got up to with the box during training. It went down and up easily and this charged my confidence.
Since 117.5kg was my previous best, I decided to save some energy and skip this and go straight t0 120kg.
120kg went smoothly and the form was solid. This was going well. On to 122.5kg.
122.5kg also felt good. Tough at the bottom and a sticking point half way up but it went and felt solid. I like PRs but I like them more when they feel good
I tried 125kg like I think anyone would have done, but whether I was fatigued or whether it was just a step too far, I didn’t make it out of the bottom position. You win some, you lose some.
That was it…. Smolov Base Cycle done…
How I felt About the Whole Thing and What I Learned
122.5kg represented a 5kg PR for me which is right in line with Pavel’s expectations for a lighter lifter (I’m 65kg). A heavyweight lifter would see larger gains.
For 4 weeks work, I was really happy with a 5kg increase in my 1RM. It doesn’t sound like much, but as I’m approaching double-bodyweight and since I’d been stalled out for so long, it was great to break the 120kg barrier.
My back strength improved dramatically and my midsection stabilisation is much more solid and transfers well to the gymnastic work I’ve done since. I also gained some leg mass – quads mainly but also inner thighs. Not quite enough to cause chafing issues, but hey – you’ve got to keep somethings to look forward to…
Recovery was paramount during all this. I foam rolled and stretched multiple times daily.
Nutrition was also important. I ate 3 decent sized main meals of the paleo kind (a protein whack, decent amount of paleo carbs and good fats) plus 2 shakes consisting of some whey isolate, a mixture of berries plus some sweet potato and a little coconut milk. All of this rounded out at about 2500-3000kcal per day with protein at 1gram+ per pound of bodyweight.
Despite all this I still managed to go down with a heavy cold after finishing the plan and this is really rare for me – especially seeing as its summer over here.
Combining This With Other Stuff
Along with the Smolov, I was also trying to maintain my other lifts. I dropped Deadlifts completely, but still Overhead Pressed and Benched once per week and threw in some gymnastic work when I felt good.
Suprisingly I was able to add 2.5kg to my Bench 1RM at the end of all this.
If you are going to do other stuff with you’re squats then you need to be smart with it. Low volume, not maxing out and skip it if you’re overtrained. I’d personally do other stuff on the 4 sets of 9 day and the 7 sets of 5 day as these seemed easier to recover from than the other two days for me atleast.
What I’d Do Different In the Future
First off I’d eat more and sleep more whilst doing it.
Next, I’d use knee sleeves from the start.
I’d only use the box on the first two sessions each week. I think this would give a better carryover for the final 1RM test.
Did I mention eating and sleeping more???
Would I Recommend The Smolov?
In the right circumstances yes. However, unless you’re very experienced, the volume is high, difficult to recover from and forces you to exclude working on other lifts and skills at a high enough level to really develop them.
In my opinion, beginners will be better served by spending time on Mark Rippetoes Starting Strength program and then as they move up from novice status, moving on to something similar to Coach Rut’s ME Black Box or Wendler’s 5/3/1 template to promote long term gains across all lifts.

Jim Wendler's 5/3/1 Rules
The Smolov works, but it takes over your life. If you’re ready for that, cool, go get some. Otherwise there are simpler ways to increase strength that allow better all-round development.