Bodybuilders all over the world are currently chasing Olympia qualification, as they aspire to become the very best flexors on stage, but with so many details to perfect, there are a myriad of mistakes to be made while preparing a winning physique. Fortunately, Kovacs Ervin, a respected competitor, coach, and the Head of Bodybuilding for the IFBB Pro League in Hungary, is no stranger to the pressures of gaining the perfect pump on show day, and he’s shared the most common mistakes that bodybuilders tend to make, and how to avoid them.

“One thing I’ve noticed after seeing so many athletes on show day is that most physiques don’t get ruined because someone suddenly lost condition overnight,” explained Ervin in an informative Instagram post that could be a gamechanger for fledgling competitors. “Usually, it’s the opposite. The athlete already looks good… but starts chasing an even better look and ends up overdoing everything.”

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What Are the Most Common Peak Week Mistakes in Bodybuilding?

Mistake 1: Letting Panic (and Chaos) Set in

“This is probably the most common mistake on show day,” explained the hench Hungarian. “The athlete wakes up looking slightly different: a little flatter, a little softer, holding some water from stress/ travel/ lack of sleep, and immediately starts forcing some changes.”

Ervin observed that these last-minute changes often lead to epic fails however, such as eating too many carbs, cutting water, sodium manipulation, gauging on random cheat meals, and even turning to diuretics. “Most of the time this doesn’t improve the physique, it just creates chaos,” he explained. “The best show day ‘looks’ usually come from athletes who keep things stable and predictable.”

Mistake 2: Reacting emotionally to ‘Flat’ or ‘Spillover’ phases

“A physique can look flat, watery, and soft for completely different reasons,” explained Ervin, encouraging bodybuilders to hold their nerve instead of making “blind” changes. While a ‘flat’ physique is of concern because the muscles appear less full, and ‘spillover’ from too much glycogen or water retention can present an unwanted softer look, this coach says that knee jerk reactions could make matters worse.

“Sometimes the athlete is stressed, inflamed, not digesting, dehydrated, sleep deprived,” explained Ervin. “And the physique only LOOKS worse temporarily. The mistake is reacting emotionally instead of understanding what the body is actually showing you. Good peak week decisions come from patterns of recognition.”

Mistake 3: Force feeding for muscle fullness

“This is one almost nobody talks about enough,” shared Ervin, noting that a lot of physiques get ruined because digestion stops functioning properly.” Indeed, the quest to cut and bulk at the same time can confuse the body, rendering it unable to process the various foods and nutrients that are thrown at it. “You’ll see stomach distention, bloating, reflux, constipation,” and “poor waist control,” explained the coach. “Then the athlete keeps forcing more food because they think they need more fullness. Usually, that only makes things worse,” he concluded.

Ervin emphasizes that great conditioning and a pumped-up appearance are the result of “stable digestion,” coming from a “controlled food intake,” noting that athletes who take a more measured approach will “always present better than someone force feeing all day backstage.”

Mistake 4: Pumping past perfection

As the time to tread the boards becomes mere moments away, competitive bodybuilders, backstage, are working their muscles, chasing the pump to impress the all-important judges. But pumping past perfection is a mistake that Ervin sees on a regular basis.

“The goal of pumping up is simple,” he explained “Bring blood into the muscle without creating fatigue. But a lot of athletes start pumping up way too early, do far too much volume,” and “sweat excessively backstage,” he observes. “Then, by stage time, muscles flatten out, separation decreases, control worsens, posing quality drops.”

Ervin says that over-pumping is futile. “Certain areas become too tight, too fatigued or too filled with blood,” he explained. “Which can make transitions harder and reduce visual separation in some body parts. You are not trying to add muscle backstage. A good pump-up should feel controlled, not exhausting.”

Mistake 5: Don’t peak too soon

Peak week is a time of high pressure, where each bodybuilder knows that they are getting closer to the point when they can present the total package on stage. But being too aggressive with training and diet in those few remaining days is a common predictor of failure, says Ervin.

“Peak week should refine the physique. Not recue it,” he explained. “If someone still needs aggressive fat loss, massive depletion, huge carb loads, extreme manipulation, a few days before the show. they were probably not truly ready yet.”

Instead, Ervin encourages that the most successful peak weeks “are usually the most boring ones.” The bodybuilder and coach advises “small adjustments, predictable responses, low stress,” in order to create a “stable condition.” The big man also believes that the athletes who look their very best on show days “are usually the ones who were already close to stage ready, 1-2 weeks earlier.”

The take home message? Stay calm and keep consistent. “Most of the time the best thing you can do backstage is calm down and stay patient,” reassured Ervin as he concluded his competition masterclass. “The work was already done weeks and months before the show. Show day is just about presenting it properly.”

To follow Kovacs Ervin on Instagram, click here.