Alessandro Cavagnola's Blog

Building Strength, Inside and Out


  • Tuesday Travelogue: Five Guys — Salt, Steel, And The Geography Of Recovery

    Tuesday Travelogue: Five Guys — Salt, Steel, And The Geography Of Recovery

    Travel usually brings to mind coastlines, mountain air, unfamiliar streets, and the subtle ways a place changes you. Over the years, I’ve traveled to various beaches, gyms, cities, and cultures that left a mark long after I left. But there’s another destination that has quietly followed me across borders and competitions, one that deserves its own Travelogue.

    Five Guys.

    I say that seriously, in the sense that tomorrow is April Fools Day.

    Five Guys

    No matter where I am — different countries, different cities, different stages — there’s a strange comfort in knowing that somewhere nearby, red and white tiles are waiting. The menu will look familiar. The smells will be unmistakable. The ritual will be the same, even as the surroundings change.

    That consistency is part of the culture.

    Each Five Guys has its own micro-identity. The layout might shift slightly. The staff cadence changes. The energy of the room reflects the city it’s in. Some locations feel rushed and loud, full of people coming off long days. Others feel almost ceremonial, slower, quieter, like everyone understands why they’re there. You start to notice these details once you’ve “traveled” enough.

    Five Guys

    After a competition, especially, Five Guys becomes something more than a meal. It’s a checkpoint. A signal that a phase has ended. The body is depleted, the nerves are flat, and recovery is no longer theoretical — it’s urgent. Salt matters. Calories matter. Satisfaction matters.

    Five Guys delivers all three in each bite.

    Chowing Down

    The beauty is in the customization. This isn’t fast food you rush through. This is a menu that invites reflection. Toppings are chosen carefully, the way you’d plan a day in a new city. Mushrooms or not. Grilled onions or raw. Jalapeños if you’re feeling bold. The wrong combination can overwhelm you. The right one feels like alignment.

    There’s an art to ordering.

    Start simple. Let the base speak first. Add layers gradually. Respect the fries — especially the portion size. A small is never small, and thinking otherwise is a rookie mistake. Vinegar is optional, but context matters. Post-show, it hits differently.

    Fiveguys4

    And then there’s the setting. Sitting there, (greasy) paper bag in hand, body still holding traces of stage condition, you become a quiet observer. Other patrons have no idea what your last few weeks looked like. The early mornings. The structure. The discipline. The restraint. All they see is someone eating a burger, perhaps with a big grin on their face.

    Five Guys

    In that moment, Five Guys feels every bit as significant as a beach in Bali or a café in Rio. Not because of scenery, but because of timing. Because travel isn’t only about distance — it’s about contrast. And few contrasts hit harder than moving from peak restriction to full permission in a single meal.

    Five Guys

    If you’re planning your own visit, treat it like a destination. Don’t rush. Sit down. Hydrate. Accept that napkins are not optional. And understand that this is not indulgence — it’s restoration.

    Five Guys

  • Motivation Monday: Through the Looking Glass

    Motivation Monday: Through the Looking Glass

    That pause between sets matters more than people think. It’s where the breathing settles, the heart rate comes down just enough, and you decide how the next set is going to go. Sitting here, I’m not zoning out — I’m resetting. Feeling what just worked, what’s still there, what needs a little more control when I grab the weight again.

    Progress doesn’t come from rushing the clock. It comes from respecting the space between efforts, staying present, and making sure each set builds on the last. Rest is part of the work when you use it well.

    (Photo source: Instagram.)

  • Sculpting Sunday: The Sets That Don’t Count (And Why People Still Do Them)

    Sculpting Sunday: The Sets That Don’t Count (And Why People Still Do Them)

    There are sets that build your physique, and there are sets that just burn time.

    You know the difference when you’re honest about it. The set that counts has tension in the right place, a clean path, a rep you can repeat, and a clear purpose. The set that doesn’t count feels like effort, looks like effort, and leaves you sweaty… but it never really loads the muscle you’re trying to build. It’s just motion. Noise. A way to say you “worked out.”

    Most junk sets happen for the same reason: people want the workout to feel dramatic. They chase fatigue because fatigue is easy to understand. They chase a pump because the pump is immediate feedback. They chase that shaky, out-of-breath feeling because it gives them emotional proof that something happened.

    The problem is, your body doesn’t grow off emotion. It grows off stimulus.

    Stimulus

    A set stops counting the moment the target muscle stops doing the work. That’s the line. If you’re doing rows and your lower back takes over, the set is done. If you’re doing lateral raises and it turns into a trap-and-swing festival, the set is done. If you’re pressing and you’re bouncing through the bottom while your shoulders shift around trying to find a safer route, the set is done. You’re still moving weight, but you’re no longer building what you came in to build.

    Another way junk sets sneak in is through autopilot volume. People love round numbers. Three sets. Four sets. Five sets. They do them because that’s what the paper says, even when the first two were already sloppy, or even when the muscle is clearly done. They’re collecting sets like receipts, thinking the total matters more than the quality.

    It doesn’t.

    One clean, controlled set that hits the muscle exactly the way you want is worth more than three “almost” sets where you’re just surviving. In bodybuilding, survival reps are rarely the reps that shape you. The shape comes from repeating the same clean pattern long enough for the body to adapt to it.

    Focus

    So why do people keep doing the sets that don’t count?

    Because they’re addictive. Junk sets let you feel productive without being precise. They let you avoid the harder skill: discipline. It’s easier to do more than it is to do better. It’s easier to add a drop set than it is to admit your setup is wrong. It’s easier to chase exhaustion than it is to build a repeatable standard you can follow for months.

    And there’s also ego. Junk sets protect pride. You can swing a heavier dumbbell. You can load more plates. You can turn the workout into a performance. Meanwhile, the muscle you actually want to grow is sitting there like, “Cool. Call me when you’re ready to train.”

    Here’s the practical fix: make your sets earn the right to continue.

    Before you start, decide what the set is supposed to accomplish. Target muscle, range, tempo, and the main cue you need to keep it honest. Then, during the set, the job is simple: keep tension where it belongs. The moment you lose it, either adjust immediately or end the set. That’s not quitting. That’s precision.

    If you want a simple standard: stop counting sets by how many you did. Start counting sets by how many were clean enough that you’d be proud to repeat them exactly the same way next week.

    That’s how physiques get built. Fewer junk sets. More sets that actually count.

  • 2026 Arnold Sports UK – Result

    2026 Arnold Sports UK – Result

    Prejudging and Finals wrapped up today at the Arnold Sports UK, and I finished 6th in a very competitive Men’s Physique lineup.

    Thank you to everyone who followed along and supported me throughout this journey!

    (Photo credit: stephenblackphotography)

  • Saturday Summary: Precision, Patience, and Perspective

    Saturday Summary: Precision, Patience, and Perspective

    This week’s posts circled around a simple idea: real progress comes from paying attention to what’s actually happening beneath the surface.

    On Sculpting Sunday, we started with shoulder training and one of the most common mistakes in the gym — letting traps take over movements that are supposed to build the delts. Small cues, controlled weight, and better exercise choices can make the difference between simply moving weight and actually shaping the muscle.

    Training shoulders

    Motivation Monday reminded us that not all progress happens under bright lights. Some of the most important work happens quietly — focused reps, disciplined sessions, and the intention you bring to each movement.

    Shadows

    On Truth Tuesday, we addressed plateaus. What many people blame on genetics is usually something simpler: adaptation. When training becomes predictable, progress slows. Often the answer isn’t a dramatic change, but tightening the basics — execution, recovery, and smarter programming.

    Plateaus

    Midweek we stepped away from training technique and into the mental side of the sport with The Reality of Judging. Competition results don’t always match expectations, but the process stays the same: respect the judges, learn from feedback, and return to the work with clearer direction.

    Judging

    Throwback Thursday offered a reminder that discipline and balance can coexist. A cheat meal, when it’s earned and appreciated, becomes part of the rhythm of the lifestyle rather than a break from it.

    Cheat Meal

    Finally, Friday Flex brought the focus back to the gym floor. Back development doesn’t come from dramatic moments — it’s built through thousands of controlled rows, patient pulls, and consistent effort that slowly turns invisible work into visible progress.

    Back

    If there’s a theme this week, it’s this: the physique is built in the details — the muscles doing the work, the habits that shape progress, and the mindset that keeps you improving whether the spotlight is there or not.

  • Arnold Sports UK – Let’s Go

    Arnold Sports UK – Let’s Go

    The Arnold Sports UK starts today, and it’s always a bit surreal arriving at a show like this. You spend months in a very controlled routine—training, diet, recovery—and then suddenly you’re here, surrounded by athletes who’ve done the same.

    The Men’s Physique lineup is a strong one this year:

    • Joshua Atease (GBR)
    • Alessandro Cavagnola (ITA)
    • Vitor Chaves (BRA)
    • Riccardo Croci (ITA)
    • Andrei Deiu (ROU)
    • Paul Gustave (FRA)
    • Emanual Hunter (USA)
    • Benquil Marigny (USA)
    • Clarence Mcspadden (USA)
    • Nam Tran Quang (POL)
    • Tyler Smith (USA)

    Prejudging is Saturday from 11:00 AM to 12:00 PM, with Finals later that evening from 7:00 PM to 9:30 PM (UK time). View the full event schedule here. The event is being streamed live here:

    https://arnoldsports.brandlive.com/Arnold-Sports-Festival-UK-2026/en

    I’ll also be at the Meet & Greet on Friday from 1:00–3:00 p.m. and again on Sunday from 12:00–2:00 p.m., so if you’re at the expo, feel free to stop by and say hello!

  • Friday Flex: Back to Work

    Friday Flex: Back to Work

    A strong back is built quietly. It’s hours of rows where you control the weight instead of jerking it, pulls where you stay patient through the contraction, and deadlifts done with intent instead of ego. Most of that work doesn’t show up day to day, and it’s easy to underestimate how much time it takes when you’re standing in front of a mirror.

    Shots like this are just a checkpoint. They tell me whether the upper back is opening up, if the mid-back is getting denser, and whether everything ties together from shoulders to hamstrings. When it does, it’s a reminder that boring consistency works — and that the stuff you repeat week after week eventually becomes visible, whether you’re looking for applause or not.

    (Photo source: Instagram.)

  • Throwback Thursday: Enjoying a Cheat Meal

    Throwback Thursday: Enjoying a Cheat Meal

    May, 2020. A proper cheat meal, enjoyed slowly and without guilt. By that point, training had already taught me something important: food tastes different when it’s earned. Not rushed, not inhaled, not used to fill a hole—just appreciated for what it is.

    Moments like this were never about excess. They were about balance. About understanding when to stay strict and when to relax the grip without losing respect for the work. The discipline didn’t disappear just because the meal was bigger. It showed up in knowing exactly when to enjoy it—and when to get back to routine the next day.

    (Photo source: Instagram.)

  • The Reality of Judging: When Competition Results Sink In

    The Reality of Judging: When Competition Results Sink In

    From the outside, bodybuilding competitions might look simple. You see the lights, the tan, the poses, the body at its sharpest. What you don’t see is what happens a few minutes later, when the music stops, the pump fades, and the judges’ decisions land.

    That’s the quiet moment people rarely talk about. The one where adrenaline drains out of your system and you realize the outcome may or may not match how you felt on stage.

    It’s emotional in a very specific way. Because in this sport, your body isn’t just flesh and bone. It’s months of structure, restraint, missed meals, early mornings, and small choices stacked on top of each other. When you step onstage, you’re not just being looked at — your work is.

    Sometimes the callouts confirm what you believed. Other times, they don’t. And when they don’t, it can feel personal, even when you know it isn’t.

    Judging Is Expert — and Still Human

    Judges bring a great deal of expertise to the table.

    They’re not guessing. They’re experienced, educated, and tasked with ranking elite physiques that are often separated by subtle details most people wouldn’t even notice. That’s not easy.

    At the same time, judging will always involve a human element. Bodybuilding isn’t a stopwatch sport, where one competitor clearly crosses a finish line before another. It’s visual. It’s comparative. It’s about balance, flow, conditioning, structure, and overall impression — all evaluated in a short window, under bright lights, while athletes are moving.

    Pre-Stage

    Two physiques can both be excellent and still land differently depending on what the judges prioritize that day.

    When It Goes Your Way

    When the judging lines up with your expectations, it feels like confirmation. Not just that you looked good, but that your decisions were right. That your prep made sense. That your coach read the situation correctly. That the sacrifices had direction.

    Stage

    Bodybuilding doesn’t give you constant feedback. You can’t check your progress with a scoreboard every week. So when a result affirms your approach, it feels like someone finally says, “Yes. That worked.”

    Those moments matter. They keep you grounded in the process.

    When It Doesn’t

    The harder moments come when you step off stage feeling confident — and the placements tell a different story.

    That’s the part people underestimate. You don’t always lose because you cut corners. Sometimes the lineup is simply strong. Sometimes your strengths don’t line up with what’s rewarded in that comparison. Sometimes your best look didn’t show up the way you needed it to that day.

    And yes, sometimes it just doesn’t feel fair.

    Loss

    That’s a dangerous feeling if you don’t manage it properly. If you let disappointment turn into resentment, it will stall you fast. A loss can be the most powerful thing: it motivates you to reach even higher.

    Why Feedback Matters More Than Emotion

    This is why I always seek feedback after a show. Not to defend myself, or to complain, but to learn.

    The judges see the sport from the perspective that actually matters on stage. If I want to move forward, I need to understand what they saw — not just what I felt. Was it balance? Conditioning? Structure? Presentation? Something holding the look back at the next level?

    On stage

    Sometimes the feedback confirms what I already suspected. Other times it surprises me. Those surprises are usually the most valuable part, because they help me build a smarter plan the next time around.

    How I Process a Result

    Over the years, I’ve learned this: you can’t let a result define you, but you also can’t ignore it.

    The only mindset that works long-term is simple. Respect the judges. Respect the process. Accept the outcome. Then respond by improving something specific.

    Bodybuilding rewards consistency, especially when things don’t go your way. In fact, the shows that sting tend to teach you more than the ones you win. Winning feels great. Falling short forces you to evolve.

    More Than a Physique

    This sport isn’t just about muscle. It’s about how you handle pressure, how you absorb disappointment, and how you stay disciplined when your ego wants answers immediately.

    No one owes you a trophy. You earn it repeatedly, over time, through adjustment and persistence.

    Stage

    Judging will always create highs and lows. That’s part of the deal. But it’s also what gives the stage meaning. Because you’re not chasing a perfect score — you’re checking whether your work is moving in the right direction.

    No matter the placement, I come back to the same approach every time:

    Learn. Adjust. Repeat.

    That’s the job.

  • Truth Tuesday: Most Plateaus Aren’t Genetic

    Truth Tuesday: Most Plateaus Aren’t Genetic

    “Bad genetics” is one of the most common explanations I hear when someone feels stuck. Strength isn’t moving. A body part won’t change. Conditioning keeps stalling. It’s an easy conclusion to reach, because it takes the pressure off. If it’s genetic, then there’s nothing to fix.

    The reality is usually less dramatic — and more useful.

    Most plateaus don’t come from limitations you were born with. They come from habits you’ve repeated long enough that your body has fully adapted to them. Same exercises, same loads, same rest times, same execution, same recovery patterns. The body is very good at surviving predictable stress. When nothing changes, nothing needs to.

    Change

    In bodybuilding, progress slows not because the body “can’t” grow anymore, but because the signal has stopped being clear. You might still be training hard, but hard isn’t the same as effective. Maybe the weights went up, but the target muscle stopped doing the work. Maybe volume crept higher while recovery quietly slipped. Maybe sleep, food, or stress fell just enough out of alignment that adaptation stalled. None of that is genetic — it’s systemic.

    This is where awareness matters. Plateaus usually leave clues before they fully settle in. Pumps get flatter. Strength fluctuates. Joints start talking more than muscles. You feel busy in the gym, but nothing is sharpening. Those are signs that something in the system needs adjusting, not that you’ve reached your ceiling.

    I’ve seen this over and over, both in my own training and in the athletes I coach. When we step back and tighten the basics — cleaner execution, better exercise selection, smarter volume, more consistent sleep — progress often resumes without anything dramatic. No miracle program. No exotic technique. Just clearer input.

    Basics

    Genetics matter at the highest levels, no question. They influence structure, shape, and ultimate limits. But most people hit plateaus long before genetics become the deciding factor. They stall because the plan stopped evolving, or because they’re repeating what once worked without checking whether it still does.

    The honest question to ask when you’re stuck isn’t “Do I have bad genetics?”

    It’s “What has my body already adapted to — and what needs to change?”

    Plateaus aren’t a verdict. They’re feedback. And if you’re willing to listen, they usually point you toward the next step forward.

  • Motivation Monday: In the Shadows

    Motivation Monday: In the Shadows

    Sometimes the work happens in the shadows, where it’s just me, the cables, and my focus. In moments like this, I’m reminded that the real gains come from the intention behind every rep, not the spotlight on it.

    (Photo source: Instagram.)

  • YouTube Video: One Day Out From The Arnold Classic

    YouTube Video: One Day Out From The Arnold Classic

    I just shared a new video on YouTube from Columbus, Ohio — filmed one day before the Arnold Classic.

    In the video, I meet up with my coach Giuseppe for a final chest workout during peak week. After more than a month of check-ins through photos and video, it was the first time he saw my condition live again before stepping on stage.

    We walk through how we approach training this close to competition: controlled weights, clean execution, and keeping the muscles active without creating unnecessary fatigue. At this stage, the goal isn’t building anything new. The focus is on maintaining activation, moving the body, and making sure everything responds well as peak week adjustments come together.

    Giuseppe also shares his perspective on my condition, the lineup at this year’s Arnold, and what we’re aiming for heading into the show.

    You can watch the full video below.

  • Sculpting Sunday: Stop Letting Your Traps Steal Your Shoulder Day

    Sculpting Sunday: Stop Letting Your Traps Steal Your Shoulder Day

    A lot of people think they’re training shoulders… but they’re really just training traps.

    If your delts refuse to grow, or your shoulders look “flat” from the front, there’s a good chance your traps are taking over the movement. It’s common — especially if you’re strong, you shrug naturally under effort, or you’ve built years of tension in your upper back from stress, posture, or heavy pulling.

    The fix isn’t just changing exercises. It’s changing what your body does when it gets tired.

    The problem

    When you press, raise, or row, your body wants to help you. And the traps are always ready to help — they lift the shoulder up, stabilize the neck, and take stress away from the delts. That’s great for survival… but terrible for building round shoulders.

    If your shoulders rise toward your ears on every rep, you’re giving the trap a job it doesn’t need.

    The cue that changes everything

    Before you start the rep, think:

    “Shoulders down. Neck long. Delts work.”

    Not forced. Not stiff. Just a light “down and away” feeling — like you’re keeping space between your ears and your shoulders.

    If you keep that position, the delt stays loaded. If you lose it, the trap steals the rep.

    Shoulder training

    Three quick fixes I use

    First: lower the weight.

    Heavy weight makes you recruit whatever muscle can survive. If you want delts, use a load you can control without shrugging.

    Second: slow down the top.

    Most trap takeover happens at the top of lateral raises and pressing. Add a small pause or slow the last third of the rep — it forces the delt to finish the movement.

    Third: choose shoulder movements that punish cheating.

    I like machines or cables for this, because the tension stays consistent and you can’t hide behind momentum.

    The goal

    You’re not trying to “avoid traps” completely — traps will always be involved. But you are trying to stop them from becoming the main mover.

    The next time you train shoulders, don’t ask: “How heavy can I go?”

    Ask: “Did my delts actually do the work?”

    That’s how shoulders start looking 3D.

    Shoulder training
  • Saturday Summary: Precision Over Hype

    Saturday Summary: Precision Over Hype

    This week kept returning to one idea: precision beats hype.

    On Sculpting Sunday, we started with stimulants — coffee and pre-workout. Used correctly, they sharpen focus. Used poorly, they become a crutch. The real work still comes down to execution: clean reps, controlled rest, and attention to detail. Supplements can support intensity, but they should never replace it.

    Coffee

    Motivation Monday zoomed in on what that precision looks like during a set. A controlled arc on the cables, constant tension through the chest, and deliberate movement from start to finish. When the form is locked in, every rep becomes targeted work instead of random effort.

    Controlled Arc

    That idea expanded on Truth Tuesday, where the question was simple: Why are you doing that exercise? If a movement doesn’t have a clear purpose, it’s probably just noise. Training works best when every exercise has a job — building a muscle, strengthening a pattern, or correcting a weak point.

    Purpose

    Midweek we went deeper into one of the most important skills in bodybuilding: mind–muscle connection. Strength matters, but connection determines where the work actually lands. When the right muscle controls the rep — from the first repetition to the last — progress becomes measurable and intentional.

    Mind-muscle

    On Throwback Thursday, we stepped outside the gym to Muscle Beach in 2019. Training there reminds you that discipline doesn’t depend on perfect conditions. It’s about control — showing up, doing the work, and letting the effort speak for itself.

    Working Core

    And Friday Flex brought the week back to its simplest form: a gym flex from April 2023. A quiet checkpoint that progress comes from consistency — showing up again and again with focus and commitment.

    Flexing

    If there’s a theme running through the week, it’s this: the physique isn’t built by excitement or novelty. It’s built by control, intention, and attention to where the work actually goes.

  • Friday Flex: Gym Flexing

    Friday Flex: Gym Flexing

    Flexing in the gym, locking in on the progress that comes from showing up day after day. Focus, commitment, and will — those are the real drivers behind every rep and every result. April, 2023.

    (Photo source: Instagram.)