Preparing for your first powerlifting meet: tips and
Preparing for your first powerlifting meet can be both exciting and intimidating. Powerlifting is a strength sport that features some of the world's strongest athletes [1], and the squat is one of its three core lifts [2]. The sport exposes the body to great forces, making proper preparation essential [3]. Yet many who train regularly, like the one-third of Australians who perform resistance training, still fall short of health guidelines [4], underscoring the need for structured programming. Effective meet preparation involves several evidence-based strategies. Prior to competition, athletes often use peaking protocols such as tapering or training cessation to optimize performance [5]. Caffeine supplementation has been shown to enhance strength [6], while proper warm-ups can influence both strength and skin temperature [7]. Some athletes also manipulate body mass in the short term to qualify for lower weight classes [8][9], and variable resistance training has become a popular component of strength programs [10]. Understanding how strength changes with training is critical for maximizing your performance on meet day [11]. By combining these strategies, tapering, strategic supplementation, warm-ups, and potentially weight management, you can give yourself the best chance of a successful first competition. With careful planning and adherence to best practices, your debut can be a rewarding experience.
Practical Playbook
How do you pick the right weight for your openers?
Your openers are the first of three attempts. Pick something you could grind out on a bad day, no lower than 85% and no higher than 90% of your training max. Ego kills more first meets than technical errors. Trust me: three white lights on a conservative weight is a better experience than bombing out on a PR you had no business chasing.
Learn the rules before you step on the platform
Every federation is different on commands, rack heights, and judging lights. Watch a full meet video from the same organization. For bench, you need to wait for 'start,' 'press,' and 'rack.' For squat, wait for 'squat' and 'rack.' Miss a command and you get red lights. That lift didn't happen. Don't waste a training cycle on a technical foul.
Simulate meet conditions in your training prep
Two to three weeks out, run a mock meet. Use the same warm-up timing, attempt structure, and have a friend call commands. You'll discover logistics you never thought about: what to wear, how to load the bar yourself, how to stay calm between attempts. Dorsi can structure the warm-up and rest intervals to match the exact meet pace.
What should you eat on meet day?
Stick to foods you've tested during training. White rice, bagels, fruit, simple carbs you digest well. Eat your last real meal 2, 3 hours before weigh-in if your federation has one. During the meet, small snacks every 30, 60 minutes. Add electrolytes to your water, don't rely on plain water alone. No experiments, no surprises.
Treat your first meet as a data-gathering mission
The only real goal is three successful total lifts and learning how the process feels. Records don't matter. Walk onto the platform, feel the lights, and after each attempt jot down what worked and what didn't. That information is worth more than any number on the scoreboard. It'll make your second meet ten times smoother.
Common Mistakes
- Mistake
- Cutting weight hard the week before your first meet.
- Why
- Drastic weight cuts crash your strength and recovery. You'll feel flat and risk missing lifts because your body is still dehydrated or glycogen-depleted.
- Fix
- Pick a weight class you can make without more than 2-3% bodyweight loss in the last week. If you're off by ten pounds, compete in the heavier class.
- Mistake
- Testing a new grip width, stance, or belt on the platform.
- Why
- Your nervous system needs reps to groove a pattern. Changing something mid-meet wastes a lift and can throw off your confidence.
- Fix
- Lock in your competition technique at least three weeks out. Use your final heavy sessions, typically 10-14 days out, to rehearse the exact start positions you'll use.
- Mistake
- Opening too heavy because you think you need to 'prove' something.
- Why
- A miss on your first squat rattles most lifters mentally. It shifts the meet from executing your training to catching up emotionally.
- Fix
- Open at a weight you've tripled easily in the gym, 85-90% of your training max. Treat attempt selection like a checklist, not a test.
- Mistake
- Wasting energy before the first lift.
- Why
- Jumping around, pacing, or taking extra warm-ups in the back room burns through your CNS and leaves you fried for the third attempt.
- Fix
- Walk into the warm-up room already dressed and rehearse only the number of reps your tracking has proven works. For most, that's 3-5 singles starting at bar, stepping up in weight, with at least 2 minutes between each.
- Mistake
- Forgetting to pace your rest between attempts.
- Why
- Two minutes between squat and bench might feel fine in training, but under meet adrenaline, fatigue compounds faster. A rushed attempt often fails from bad setup.
- Fix
- Start a timer after each lift. Give yourself a hard minimum of 3 minutes between attempts, more if it was a grinder. If your next flight is called before you're ready, signal the loaders to wait a minute.
Sources we drew from
- 1
Silverthorne K et al. · 2025 · Sports medicine (Auckland, N.Z.)
<h4>Background</h4>Powerlifting is a strength sport featuring some of the world's strongest athletes.
- 2Biomechanical analysis of hip, knee, and ankle joint contact forces during squats in elite powerlifters.Peer-reviewed
Pürzel A et al. · 2025 · PloS one
The squat is one of three lifts within the sport of powerlifting.
- 3
Ulrika Aasa et al. · 2016 · British Journal of Sports Medicine
BACKGROUND: Olympic weightlifting and powerlifting are two sports that expose the body to great forces.
- 4
Daniel van den Hoek et al. · 2024 · International Journal of Sports Science & Coaching
Background In Australia, one-third of people ≥15 years perform regular resistance training and 90% of those do not meet current health guidelines.
- 5
S. Kyle Travis et al. · 2020 · Sports
Prior to major competitions, athletes often use a peaking protocol such as tapering or training cessation to improve performance.
- 6
Jozo Grgić et al. · 2019 · Journal of Human Kinetics
Abstract In this paper, we review the effects of caffeine on muscle strength and provide suggestions for caffeine supplementation in powerlifting competitions.
- 7Are Strength Indicators and Skin Temperature Affected by the Type of Warm-Up in Paralympic Powerlifting Athletes?Peer-reviewed
Marcelo de Aquino Resende et al. · 2021 · Healthcare
(1) Background: the present study aimed to evaluate the effect of different types of warm-ups on the strength and skin temperature of Paralympic powerlifting athletes.
- 8
Matras A et al. · 2025 · Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition
<h4>Background</h4>Rapid weight loss (RWL) is a common strategy among competitive powerlifters aiming to qualify for lower weight categories and improve competitive advantage.
- 9Short term body mass manipulation in powerlifting: a narrative review and best practice recommendations.Peer-reviewed
Renner A et al. · 2025 · Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition
Short Term Body Mass Manipulation (SBM) is frequently used in powerlifting by athletes to qualify for lower weight classes and improve relative competitiveness.
- 10Evaluation of Training with Elastic Bands on Strength and Fatigue Indicators in Paralympic PowerliftingPeer-reviewed
Felipe J. Aidar et al. · 2021 · Sports
Background: Variable resistance training has recently become a component of strength and conditioning programs.
- 11Long-Term Adaptations in the Squat, Bench Press, and Deadlift: Assessing Strength Gain in Powerlifting AthletesPeer-reviewed
Christopher Latella et al. · 2022 · Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise
ABSTRACT Purpose Understanding strength changes with resistance training is important in human performance.
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