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5 New Workout Flows
Muscle & Fitness
|March 2020
Tack these five workouts, from flow master Eric Leija, onto your training sessions for more muscle, stability, and mobility.
You’ll be hard-pressed to find a harder worker than Eric Leija.
The resident kettlebell master at the Onnit Academy trains a variety of one-on-one and group classes at the Austin, TX-based gym, travels the country teaching kettlebell seminars, manages his own website (ericleija.com), trains online clients, and is constantly creating new content for his 500K Instagram followers.
Still, Leija manages to bust his ass on the daily in the gym, combining his barbell strength work with his creative flows—that is, two or more similar moves strung together. Not to be confused with supersets or tri-sets, these exercises are done in a way that they flow—hence the name—right into the next. Instead of doing a bench press and then a pullup, a common superset, you’d do a deadlift to a high pull, as the two moves can be done together fluidly.
Leija likes this style of training because it’s quick and keeps the heart rate high. Usually, he’ll start or end his heavier training with these flows, or he’ll do them separately if he’s in a pinch.
Here, Leija outlines five flows that you can do yourself with a barbell, dumbbells, or your body weight.

1 FOR A STRONG CORE
PUSHUP TO ROW FLOW
“This one is tough,” Leija says. “You kill two birds with one stone, getting the pushing and pulling from the pushup and row, while also challenging your core and stability.”
Directions: Do 5 to 8 reps of the push-up and then a row on each side, followed by 30 seconds of rest. Repeat for 5 sets.
A DIVE BOMBER PUSHUP
Dit verhaal komt uit de March 2020-editie van Muscle & Fitness.
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