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HEAVY DUTY DELTS
Untitled Document
HEAVY DUTY DELTS
WANT WIDER, THICKER SHOULDERS? TRY IFBB PRO DENNIS JAMES’ WORKOUT AND BUILD
YOUR OWN V-TAPER BY DEAN BRIERLY
You probably figure any guy nicknamed “Dennis the Menace” would have
to be an agitator, a trash-talker, the kind of guy who gets under everybody’s
skin. But if you’re talking about IFBB pro Dennis James, the moniker doesn’t
really fit. More suitable adjectives include humble, friendly and laid-back because,
as Dennis says, “In this business, you don’t get awards for talking.” Nope,
this is one bodybuilder who lets his physique speak for him, and with increasing
eloquence and effectiveness in each contest he enters.
In fact, the only havoc he wreaks is on training partners and rival competitors.
The 1998 USA winner has placed in the top 10 in three recent Mr. Olympias, with
a best-ever fourth place in 2003. DJ is one of the few guys who poses a legitimate
threat every time he steps onstage — even without the benefit of a planned
posing routine to show off his physique to its best advantage. That’s like
buying an Aston Martin DB5 and forgetting to polish it. Dennis has vowed to apply
that polish in 2004.
“
I will be a totally different guy onstage this year,” he says. [Editor’s
note: at the time of writing, the Olympia was still more than a month away.] “I
never had a rehearsed posing routine before. Last year at the Olympia, Samir
Bannout told me he loved my physique but that there were many poses I should
be doing to make me look better. This year, I’ll be working with him to
choose songs and poses and put them together into a routine that will really
make my muscles come alive. You’ll see a much more aggressive and confident
Dennis James at the Mr. Olympia.”
Ronnie, are you listening?
DETAIL ORIENTED
Besides a new and improved routine, the Menace was planning to add more detail
to the monster package he presented last year. His shoulders, arms and chest
already rank up there with the best in the sport, and he’s worked hard
to bring his back and quads up to speed. Dennis is at the stage of his career
where it’s not about putting on more size — at 260 pounds contest
weight, he’s beefy enough to slug it out with the biggest brutes in the
sport. Working with trainer supreme Charles Glass has helped Dennis to better
dial in his conditioning in recent contests. Besides being a hell of a motivator,
Glass has a knack for transforming exercises from standard into stellar. “Charles
creates different angles with machines,” Dennis explains. “He’ll
place an extra pad on a machine at a certain angle, which lets you get to in-between
muscles you might normally overlook. He finds a way to get you sore each and
every workout.”
All this preparation is paying big dividends, since many observers have now added
Dennis to the short list of pros (Jay Cutler, Günter Schlierkamp, Dexter
Jackson) viewed as viable successors to Ronnie’s crown, and DJ likes his
odds.“I think everyone in the top six has a shot. It all depends on who’s
in shape that day. Did anybody think Jay had a shot at the Olympia in 2001? No.
But he was on when everybody else was off, and he almost won. So I think it’s
possible. If I didn’t, I wouldn’t be training my ass off.”
That’s about as verbally aggro as Dennis gets. Living in Thailand helps
keep him grounded; he has lived in Pattaya for the past 14 years after leaving
his native Germany. It may seem far from the madding bodybuilding crowd, but
Dennis can’t imagine living anywhere else. The climate, islands, people
and lifestyle suit him. And it’s where he met his wife, Ratikan “Sin” Chuaythong,
with whom he has a daughter, Anna.
“After competing in the States, I come back here, and I’m a family
man,” he
says. “I’m not big, bad Dennis James. I stay away from all the rumours
and BS. People say things when they’re mad and later regret it. If you
really have something to say, let your body do the talking. If you run around
and tell people, ‘I’m gonna win this, I’m gonna win that,’ and
then you don’t win, you’ve got a problem. That’s why I like
to stay here and do my thing, do my training and handle my business. Then when
I go to the Olympia, I’ll show people that I did my homework.”
THAI-ED DOWN
Bodybuilding didn’t make much of a dent in the Thai national consciousness
when Dennis first moved there. But in the past few years, the sport’s popularity
has mushroomed, thanks in part to DJ’s high-profile status and frequent
guest-posing appearances at local shows. Now Thai bodybuilders more than hold
their own at major events like the World Championships and Asian Games.
That said, it’s still hard for Dennis to find training partners in Thailand
who can keep up with him. “I train so hard, I destroy them,” he says.
Dennis stays motivated by watching competition videos of the top guys in the
sport and keeping in frequent phone contact with Glass to help fine-tune his
preparation. He normally goes to the States two months before the Olympia to
train with Glass; this year he arrived even earlier to work on his posing. He
planned to devote at least one hour a day to posing to bring out even more muscle
detail and to present his physique in the best possible way.
At 35, Dennis appears to be hitting his stride as a competitor and has no plans
to stop putting on those tiny trunks, oiling up his gargantuan physique and hitting
freaky poses in front of rabid fans in pursuit of the sport’s ultimate
prize.
“As long as I can improve, I will be onstage,” he says. “If
I see
that I’m going backward, then I know it’ll be time to retire. My
goal when I started training was just to compete in a Mr. Olympia. Then my goal
was to be a threat, to make sure that everybody who competed against me worried
about me. My next goal is to place in the top three. And, of course, my ultimate
goal is to win the Mr. Olympia. That is my mission.” M&F
Dean Brierly is a regular contributor to M&F and Flex. He’s also
written
for publications outside the health and fitness industry.
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