Conjugate Method Guide — The Westside Barbell System for European Powerlifters

Conjugate Method Guide — The Westside Barbell System for European Powerlifters

Reading time: 13 minutes | Last updated: May 2026

The Conjugate Method is one of the most influential and misunderstood powerlifting systems ever developed. Popularised by Louie Simmons at Westside Barbell, it combines Soviet sports science with American powerlifting to create a system built on simultaneous development of maximal strength and explosive power. This is the complete guide for European lifters across the Netherlands, Scandinavia, and Europe, with IPF/EPF competition context throughout.

Table of Contents

  1. What Is the Conjugate Method?
  2. Origins
  3. The Four-Day Weekly Structure
  4. Max Effort Days
  5. Dynamic Effort Days
  6. Accommodating Resistance
  7. Footwear for Conjugate Training
  8. Conjugate & IPF/EPF Competition
  9. Honest Pros & Cons
  10. Who It’s For — Who It’s Not For
  11. The Research Behind the Conjugate System
  12. FAQ

📋 What Is the Conjugate Method?

The Conjugate Method simultaneously develops multiple physical qualities — maximal strength, speed-strength, and strength-speed. Built on two types of training days:

  • Max Effort (ME) days: Work up to a 1–3 rep max on a variation of the competition lift
  • Dynamic Effort (DE) days: Multiple sets of 2–3 reps at 50–70% of 1RM with maximum bar speed

🏛️ Origins

Louie Simmons developed the Conjugate Method by studying Soviet sports science — particularly Verkhoshansky and Siff’s Supertraining (6th edition, 2009). His writings are collected in The Westside Barbell Book of Methods (2007). Westside Barbell has produced over 100 elite-total lifters.


🗓️ The Four-Day Weekly Structure

Conjugate 4-Day Structure

The Conjugate four-day split: Max Effort and Dynamic Effort for both upper and lower body

Day Type Main Exercise
Monday Max Effort Lower Work up to 1–3RM squat/deadlift variation
Wednesday Dynamic Effort Upper 8–10x3 bench @ 50–60% + bands/chains
Friday Max Effort Upper Work up to 1–3RM bench variation
Saturday Dynamic Effort Lower 10–12x2 squat @ 50–60% + bands/chains

💪 Max Effort Days

Work up to a 1–3RM on a variation of the competition lift, rotated every 1–3 weeks to prevent accommodation. Siff & Verkhoshansky (2009) in Supertraining documented the accommodation principle — the body adapts to any repeated stimulus within 3–6 weeks.


💨 Dynamic Effort Days

Multiple sets of 2–3 reps at 50–70% of 1RM with maximum intentional bar speed, developing rate of force development. Kawamori & Haff (2004) in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research demonstrated that training at 30–70% of 1RM with maximal intent produces the greatest RFD improvements.


🔗 Accommodating Resistance

Bands and chains increase resistance as the lift reaches lockout. Rhea et al. (2009) in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research found that accommodating resistance training produced significantly greater strength gains than free weight training alone over 7-week blocks.


👟 Footwear for Conjugate Training

  • Box squat (wide stance): Flat shoes standard.
  • High-bar squat variations: Weightlifting shoes (~€170–€220) recommended. Free EU shipping, no import costs.
  • Deadlift variations: Flat shoes or deadlift slippers.
  • Bench press: Any flat shoe with stable base.

See our Best Squat Shoes 2026 — Europe guide for recommendations.


🏅 Conjugate & IPF/EPF Competition

  • The Conjugate Method was originally developed for equipped powerlifting. European raw lifters using Conjugate need to modify DE percentages (65–75% for raw) and exercise selection.
  • IPF and EPF competition is predominantly raw — a modified Conjugate approach is more appropriate than the classic Westside system for most European lifters.
  • Nordic federation lifters (NPF, SPF, DPF, FPF) and KNKF follow IPF equipment rules — weightlifting shoes are approved for competition squat.

✅ Honest Pros & Cons

Pros Cons
✅ Proven at the elite level ❌ Extremely complex
✅ Prevents accommodation through variation ❌ Requires bands, chains, specialty bars
✅ Develops maximal strength and explosive power ❌ Not suitable for beginners or intermediates
✅ Highly customisable ❌ Originally for equipped lifting — raw requires modification

🎯 Who It’s For — Who It’s Not For

✅ Who it’s for

  • Advanced European powerlifters who have exhausted simpler periodisation models
  • Dutch and Scandinavian lifters with access to bands, chains, and specialty bars
  • Equipped IPF/EPF competitors

❌ Who it’s not for

  • Beginners and intermediates — run 5/3/1, nSuns, or Sheiko first
  • Raw lifters without modification
  • Lifters without specialty equipment

📚 The Research Behind the Conjugate System

  • Siff, M. & Verkhoshansky, Y. (2009), Supertraining (6th ed.): Concurrent quality development and the accommodation principle.
  • Kawamori, N. & Haff, G. (2004), Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research: Training at 30–70% of 1RM with maximal intent produces the greatest RFD improvements.
  • Rhea, M. et al. (2009), Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research: Accommodating resistance produced significantly greater strength gains than free weight training alone.
  • Simmons, L. (2007), The Westside Barbell Book of Methods.

FAQ

Is Conjugate good for raw IPF/EPF lifting?
With modification, yes. Increase DE percentages to 65–75% for raw lifting and adjust exercise selection.

Do I need bands and chains?
For the full system: yes. A basic band set is sufficient to start. Free EU shipping on weightlifting shoes available.

Do I need weightlifting shoes?
Depends on the ME exercise. Box squats (wide stance): flat shoes. High-bar variations: weightlifting shoes recommended.

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Written by T-K — Creative Director & Brand Strategist, Castiron Lift.

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