Yes, you can bring up your lower legs with only one dedicated calf workout per one. In fact, you can do with one set!
But there is a catch: it's a giant set using the 6-12-25 protocol. And yes, it's going to hurt.
All three exercises in this giant set encompass the main tenets of muscle growth: mechanical tension, muscle damage, and metabolic stress. You'll see these in successive order with 6 reps of an exercise, 12 reps of another exercise, and then 25 reps of a final exercise for one big, giant set.
The calves are great at using the stretch-shortening cycle (SSC), so performing your reps with a slow and controlled tempo (slight pauses at the bottom of each rep) makes sense.
Here's a look at what to do, but stick around for more info on the how and why:
Go heavy with a slow tempo for 6-rep sets.
Use moderate weight with a slow tempo for 12 reps per side.
Go light and get explosive (this is the only exercise you're not using a tempo with) reps for 25 reps per set.
Only use the 6-12-25 giant-set format once per week to avoid excessive DOMs and soft-tissue injuries.
You can easily implement new exercise variations into this giant set but stick to the key guidelines above. Additional calf training during the same week is fine, but make sure it's spaced out for at least 72 hours from this training day.
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