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Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124

I used to hate leg day.
You know the feeling — you smash chest and biceps all week, but when it’s time to train legs, you suddenly have “urgent” laundry to do.
Then one day, I realized something that flipped my mindset completely.
First, I started putting more rest between sets. That shifted my training from a sweaty cardio session to real strength-building mode. But more importantly — I discovered the evil little thing inside all of us called myostatin.
What’s myostatin?
Think of it as your body’s muscle growth limiter. Too much of it, and you’ll stay small no matter how hard you train. Too little, and you’ll pack on muscle like those freakishly jacked Belgian Blue cows — or the rare kids born with natural myostatin deficiency.

This child was born with a rare myostatin deficiency — notice the defined musculature without any training.

Belgian Blue cattle — the poster child for low myostatin. Yes, that’s all-natural muscle.
Who’s usually high in myostatin?
Leg day is one of the best natural ways to crush myostatin levels — especially if you follow this order:
Why?
Because your legs are the biggest muscles in your body. Training them triggers a hormonal cascade — more testosterone, more growth hormone, and better nutrient partitioning for the rest of your muscles.
Even if science doesn’t motivate you, vanity should. Imagine this:
You’ve got a ripped upper body, perfect abs, broad shoulders… and then you take your pants off, revealing two pale sticks that look like you’ve never climbed a flight of stairs in your life.
That’s chicken leg syndrome — and it’s 100% avoidable.
Before diving into leg workouts, it’s crucial to understand the major muscle groups in your legs. Your leg muscles include:
Each of these muscle groups plays a crucial role in leg strength and overall lower body performance. A well-rounded leg muscles workout routine should target all of these areas for balanced development.
Incorporating leg muscles workout into your fitness routine offers numerous benefits:
If you’re new or returning after a break:
My own rule?
I know I’ve had a good leg day if I have to grab the railing to get upstairs afterward.
1. Sumo Squat

Stand with feet wider than shoulder-width, toes slightly turned out. Hold a dumbbell close to your chest. Keep your chest up and core engaged as you lower until thighs are parallel to the floor, then push back up.
2. Alternating Lunges

Step forward with one leg, lowering until both knees are at 90°. Push back to the start and switch legs. For reverse lunges, step backward instead — easier on the knees but still great for strength.
3. Dumbbell Squat

Stand with feet shoulder-width apart. Hold dumbbells at your sides. Lower until thighs are parallel to the floor, keeping chest up and core tight, then drive back up.
4. Bulgarian Split Squat

Place your rear foot on a bench. Lower until front thigh is parallel to the floor. Push back up through your front heel. Keep dumbbells steady at your sides.
5. Stiff-Leg Deadlift

Hold dumbbells in front of your thighs. With a slight bend in the knees, hinge at the hips and lower dumbbells along your legs until you feel a hamstring stretch. Squeeze glutes to return to start.
6. Single-Leg Calf Raise

Perform calf raises on one leg, holding onto a bench for balance. Raise onto your toes, hold, and lower slowly.
7. Seated Calf Raise

Sit on a bench, knees bent at 90°. Place dumbbells on knees. Push through the balls of your feet to lift heels, pause, and return slowly.
Pyramid Style: 15 reps (light), 12 reps (medium), 8 reps (heavy), 8 reps drop set at ~30% lighter weight.
When you hit the heavy set and the drop set, go until failure or damn close to it.
If you can blast past 8 reps with good form, keep going — but remember, that means you need to go heavier next time.
💡 Now don’t be an @hole and skip the warm-up, starting raw doggin’ it from rep one. That’s just asking for trouble — especially with heavy leg work.
Do a quick 5–10 minute warm-up (bodyweight squats, lunges, hip circles, light cardio) before you touch the weights.
After the workout, stretch. It speeds up recovery and keeps you walking like a human instead of a baby giraffe the next day.
| Exercise | Sets/Reps | Equipment | Target Muscles |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sumo Squat | 15 / 12 / 8 / 8 (drop) | Dumbbells, kettlebell, or barbell | Quads, glutes, inner thighs |
| Alternating Lunge | 15 / 12 / 8 / 8 (drop) | Dumbbells (optional) | Quads, glutes, hamstrings |
| Reverse Lunge | 15 / 12 / 8 / 8 (drop) | Dumbbells (optional) | Quads, glutes |
| Squat (shoulder-width stance) | 15 / 12 / 8 / 8 (drop) | Bodyweight or weights | Quads, glutes, hamstrings |
| Bulgarian Split Squat | 15 / 12 / 8 / 8 (drop) each leg | Dumbbells + bench/chair | Quads, glutes |
| Stiff-Leg Deadlift | 15 / 12 / 8 / 8 (drop) | Dumbbells or barbell | Hamstrings, glutes, lower back |
| Single-Leg Calf Raise | 30 sec each leg x 3 | Bodyweight or weights | Calves |
| Seated Calf Raise | 30 sec x 3 | Chair + weight on knees | Calves |
To get the most out of your leg muscles workout:
To support your leg muscles workout and promote muscle growth:
Remember, consistency is key when it comes to leg muscles workout. Stick to your routine, focus on proper form, and gradually increase the intensity to see significant improvements in leg strength and muscle growth.
Leg day isn’t just about looking balanced — it’s about building a foundation that carries your strength into every other lift.
Skip it, and you’ll never hit your true potential.
Forge it, and you’ll be unstoppable.
So bookmark this page, hit the Forge Legs program this week, and let me know how many stairs you can still climb afterward.