Manuel Buitrago, PhD and founder of MaStrength, dives into the intricate world of Olympic lifting and muscle dynamics. He discusses how breathing and body shape differentiate Olympic from powerlifting techniques. Manuel reveals the importance of connective tissue for performance and shares insights on squat variations that influence lifting outcomes. With practical advice on form and training adaptations, he offers listeners a fresh perspective on maximizing athletic movement and explosiveness.
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How He Found Chinese Weightlifting
Manuel Buitrago discovered Olympic weightlifting after gymnastics, powerlifting and seeing Chinese team footage that clicked for him.
He studied in China, learned the language, and used that access to deeply observe and learn Chinese weightlifting culture.
insights INSIGHT
Breath Shapes The Lift
Breathing and torso shape are primary differentiators between Olympic lifting and powerlifting.
Successful lifters must create and switch between upward 'funnel' and downward 'cone' torso shapes during a lift.
volunteer_activism ADVICE
Breathe Opposite Of Powerlifting
Do the opposite of powerlifting breathing when preparing Olympic-style lifts: compress the abs and allocate air to the upper torso.
Maintain that abdominal compression while you inhale so air fills the chest and back to form a funnel.
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Today’s guest is Manuel Buitrago. Manuel is a PhD, along with being the founder and director of MaStrength, a global education brand dedicated to authentic Chinese weightlifting. Since launching MaStrength in 2014, he’s taught 100+ seminars worldwide, authored Chinese Weightlifting: A Visual Guide to Technique and Chinese Weightlifting: Technical Mastery & Training
There are many misconceptions in the world of strength training, especially as the lens of a skeletal pressure-based view is not included in modern training systems. When skeletal pressure dynamics are understood, it allows us to see why athletes prefer particular variations of lifts, how and why they fail lifts, and what aspects of the lifts themselves lead to better athletic outcomes.
On today’s episode, Manuel speaks on the practicalities of weightlifting and how it carries over to sport. He compares powerlifting and Olympic lifting from a technique and transfer standpoint, and gets into how body shapes, breathing, and set-ups affect a lift. Manuel also touches on connective tissue and why it matters for performance and durability. From this episode, you’ll learn concepts about the Olympic and powerlifts that can not only improve lifting performance but also facilitate a better transfer to athleticism and movement ability.
Today’s episode is brought to you by Hammer Strength.
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Timestamps
0:00 - From gymnastics and powerlifting to Chinese weightlifting
3:34 - First Olympic lifting exposure via IronMind footage and Pyrs Dimas
5:40 - The Chinese team’s systematic approach that sparked the study abroad
9:30 - Breathing, shapes, and the funnel concept for lifting
26:15 - Bottom-up squats: why weightlifting squats differ from powerlifting squats
30:45 - Training near the hip and block work to bias upward, explosive shapes
41:08 - Squat jerk versus split jerk - body shape, femur length, and selection
54:34 - Box squats, touch-and-go versus deloading - individualize by athlete shape
58:29 - Practical breathing cues to create and switch the funnel shape
1:07:24 - Applying shapes to sport - who benefits from which strategies
Quotes
"When you do the lifts, it's not just one shape you need because you have to go up, but you also have to go down.
"If you're breathing like a power lifter in the start position, you're making your job more difficult."
"In weightlifting, the squats happen after the catch. So all of your squats are from the bottom up actually."
"People who overhead squat from the rack, they're not going to get as deep. They're not going to bend the same way as they would in a snatch because the snatch is unweighted when you get under it."
"People would blame the nervous system, it's like, does not help me in real time when I'm coaching athletes. I need something else and the shape is easier to see."
"You totally can bend bone, you know, and they do bend throughout the movements."
"All of it is working together. And so you have to find a way to put it all together rather than try to separate it because you'll get lost."
About Manuel Buitrago
Manuel Buitrago, PhD, is a coach, author, and the founder/director of MaStrength, where he teaches the techniques, theory, and programming principles of Chinese weightlifting to athletes and coaches around the world. He launched MaStrength in 2014 and has since delivered more than a hundred seminars and training camps internationally while building a widely followed library of articles, videos, and social content on Chinese methods. Buitrago holds an honorary weightlifting coaching credential from Chengdu Sports University, reflecting years of study, mentorship, and translation work with Chinese sports scientists and coaches. He is also a certified USA Weightlifting coach and referee. His books—Chinese Weightlifting: A Visual Guide to Technique and Chinese Weightlifting: Technical Mastery & Training—distill the system’s technical model and practical programming into accessible resources that have been translated into multiple languages.