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Mustafa Information & Articles
Mustafa began bodybuilding after his military service in 1986. He initially trained at the Al-Hussein Center
for bodybuilding, under the supervision from coach Khalid Abu Saad.
| Mustafa's Stats |
| Constest Weight |
270lbs (122.5kg) |
| Height |
5'8.5" (174 cm) |
| Arm |
21.65" (55 cm) |
| Leg |
32.29" (82 cm) |
| Name |
Mustafa M. Hassanen |
| Date of birth |
3 - 1 - 1966 (Mar 1) |
| Place of birth |
Amman - Jordan |
| Home country |
Vienna - Austria |
| Marital status |
married and has three children |
Lunar
mission: How Mustafa Mohammad Built his Space-Age Delts
It was said that 1965-66 Mr. Olympia Larry Scott
had "cannonball" delts--shoulders so full and round that they
drew comparison to the ammo of choice for pre-20th century militaries.
So potent was the metaphor that it would be invoked time and again
over the next four decades as a means of describing the shoulder
caps of laterally gifted bodybuilders.
This being 2004, the time is right for a new metaphor,
one that more accurately describes the new breed of deltoid development--shoulders
that are not only full and round, but striated, etched with lines
and contours befitting a topographical relief map of the lunar
surface. In other words: How to describe the shoulders of Mustafa
Mohammad?
Even in a sport where outstanding shoulders are
de rigueur, Mohammad's are standouts. They, like the rest of his
supersized physique, have a three-dimensional quality. When you
see them in person for the first time, you feel as if someone
slipped a pair of 3-D glasses in front of your eyes. The front
heads jut a good three inches from the clavicle toward you, while
the rear heads project an equal distance away. The side heads,
striped by the burgeoning masses of muscle fiber of which they
are composed, divide and spread apart the other heads, creating
clusters of sinewy masses that resemble cannonballs only in the
way that grassy knolls resemble mountain ranges.
Mohammad's deltoids weren't always so formidable.
"Early in my career, people would tell me that my shoulders weren't
big enough for my arms and chest, which grow very quickly," admits
the Vienna-by-way-of-Jordan resident. The 38-year-old, who qualified
for the 2004 Olympia, his first, by finishing third at the 2003
Dutch Grand Prix continues, "So I concentrated very hard on bringing
them up to match the rest of my physique." Indeed, through years
of diligent well-planned training, he has managed to bring them
to a point where they not only match the rest of his gargantuan
physique, but they also eclipse those of most of his pro peers,
as when the moon passes in front of the sun. In fact, his delts
are so round and rock hard that they might even be compared to
lunar bodies orbiting a planet-sized torso.
The routine that Mohammad devised to transform
his shoulders from a self-professed weak point into what can best
be described as full-moon delts is set out in the accompanying
sidebar.
WE'RE BREAKING UP ... | "I always train my rear
delts and traps apart from my shoulders," Mohammad says. Although
it's not entirely unusual for a bodybuilder to cleave either his
traps or his rear delts from his shoulder training, he separates
both.
"My neck [referring to his traps] was always a
weak point. I would often get headaches after training it with
my shoulders or back. It seems to be a sensitive area for me.
I separated it from my back and shoulder workouts so I can focus
on it more," he explains. He decided to pair his traps with his
triceps training, as the latter would not infringe upon, or impinge,
his sensitive neck. His entire traps workout consists of five
sets of barbell or dumbbell shrugs.
As for his rear delts, Mohammad says, "I train
my rear shoulders with back. It is just something that I decided
to try one day, and it has been very successful for me. I've been
training for over 20 years, and I'm always learning something
new." Four or five sets of bent laterals added to his back program
fill out the rear heads of his delts nicely.
GALACTIC GASTRONOMY | To build moon-sized delts
and a body to match, you need a lot of fuel. For Mohammad, that
means consuming more than 5,000 calories per day in the offseason,
divided among six to eight meals per day. "I've been blessed with
a very fast metabolism," he says.
Being able to burn calories the way a Saturn V
burns rocket fuel doesn't mean that Mohammad feels free to flood
his system with junk. "I always eat good clean food--lots of chicken
and turkey, and sometimes beef. It is very fresh, never frozen.
In all of Europe, the best quality of food is in Vienna."
He also makes sure to consume plenty of fresh
fruits and vegetables and, in stark contrast with today's Atkins-inspired
low-carb mania, a good deal of basmati white rice. "I love to
eat rice. It's never been a problem for me to burn it off. But
sometimes I'll eat black bread [similar to pumpernickel] instead
during precontest."
Although Mohammad isn't likely to be found waiting
in line at a Viennese Krispy Kreme, he will allow himself a dessert
every now and then during his offseason. "I like to eat pie,"
he confesses. Fresh baked, of course.
HOME BASE | Mohammad's passion may be bodybuilding,
but his family is his lifeblood. It is their love that keeps him
strong for his professional quest of garnering the top honor in
his chosen sport.
"My children always come first," he states, referring
to sons Hamza, 9, and Omar, 3, and daughter Maysun, 6. He also
credits Susie, his wife of 16 years, with helping him maintain
a successful career and happy home life concurrently. Together,
they have run American Fitness gym in Vienna for the past 12 years,
where Mohammad spends 12 hours every day managing the floor and
operating a successful personal-training business.
If his family is his lifeblood, then Mohammad's
mother, Fawzia, is surely the heart from which it pumps. "I get
all of my strength--for my family and my gym and my training--from
my mother. She prayed for me when I was young for me to have everything
good in my life and now I do."
In return for Fawzia's love and undying support,
Mohammad now devotes a good deal of his limitless energy to helping
her in her battle with diabetes, which has taken her sight and
ability to walk. He supports her medical care needs and visits
her in their native Jordan whenever he can. "I do everything I
can for her, and I am happy to do it. It gives me power in my
life."
REACHING FOR THE STARS | Despite his disappointing
placings in early 2004 contests (12th at the Arnold Schwarzenegger
Classic and seventh at the San Francisco Pro), Mohammad impressed
most leading pundits, who felt he only needed to be a tad sharper
and a shade darker to have fared better. With that knowledge,
he plans to make an asteroidlike impact at this year's Olympia.
"I am 174 centimeters tall [about 5'8 1/2"] and am bulking up
to a lean 130 kilograms [287 pounds] by the end of July. Then
I will cut down to 118-120 hard, dry and ripped kilos [260-265
pounds] for the Olympia.
Suffice it to say, Ronnie Coleman and Jay Cutler
might not be the only ones leaving footprint-shaped craters in
the Mandalay Bay stage this October.
| MUSTAFA MOHAMMAD'S FULL-MOON DELTS WORKOUT |
| EXERCISE |
SETS |
REPS |
WEIGHT |
| Behind-the-neck military presses |
1* |
12 |
|
| |
4 |
10 |
60, 80, 100, 110 ([dagger]) |
| Seated dumbbell presses |
4 |
10 |
35, 40, 45, 50** |
| Dumbbell one-arm lateral raises |
4*** |
|
12, 10, 8, 8 |
|
NOTE: Mohammad rests two minutes between all sets.
* Warm-up set
** Weight in kilograms
*** Mohammad performs four sets on the left side, then four sets on the right side.
|
| MUSTAFA MOHAMMAD'S TRAINING SPLIT |
|
MORNING |
EVENING |
| Day 1 |
Calves/Chest |
Biceps/Abs |
| Day 2 |
Hams/Shoulders |
Back/Rear delts |
| Day 3 |
Traps/Triceps |
Quads |
|
NOTE: Mohammad uses a three-on/one-off split. When he feels tired, he switches to a two-on/one-off split.
|
BY SHAWN PERINE
SENIOR WRITER
PHOTOGRAPHY BY CHRIS LUND
COPYRIGHT
2004 Weider Publications
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0KFY/is_7_22/ai_n6170375
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