I decided to try Rp coaching and forked…
I decided to try Rp coaching and forked out $800 dollars due to exchange rate
1/5 – Don’t Waste Your Money on This Amateur Hour
I bought into RP Strength expecting a professional, well-thought-out program, but what I got with Workout D is an absolute joke—a sloppy, incoherent mess that wouldn’t even pass muster with a bargain-basement personal trainer you’d find on Gumtree for $20 a session. Honestly, RP Strength, if this is the best you can do, you’re in over your head. It’s painfully clear you’re used to dealing with gym newbies who don’t know any better, but for those of us who actually understand training, this is a slap in the face.
Workout D (Hack Squat, Bench Press, DB Flye, Skull Crusher, Conditioning) is a disaster from start to finish. It kicks off with Hack Squat—a leg exercise for quads and glutes—then abruptly pivots to Bench Press, DB Flye, and Skull Crusher, which are all upper-body push movements for chest and triceps. What on earth is this supposed to be, RP Strength? A leg day? A push day? It’s neither, and it’s embarrassingly bad at both. In a proper push/pull split—which your program seems to half-heartedly attempt—a push day should be all pressing movements: chest, shoulders, triceps. Legs don’t belong here. And if this was meant to be a leg day, why is there one measly leg exercise, followed by a random assortment of upper-body fluff? There’s no hamstring work, no calf work, nothing to balance it out. Hack Squat is left hanging like a sad afterthought while the rest of the session ignores your lower body. It’s not just poorly designed—it’s outright lazy.
The sequencing is a complete trainwreck too. Going from a heavy leg compound like Hack Squat to upper-body pushing is so disjointed it’s laughable. I’ve seen better structure from rookie trainers who just got their cert last week. Your other workouts, like Workout C (Press, Deadlift, Romanian Deadlift, Chin-Up, Seated Calf Raise), at least make an attempt at a logical flow with compounds and isolation. But Workout D? It’s like you handed the programming to a toddler with a list of exercises and said, “Go wild.” There’s no logic, no progression, and no intensity strategy. The Conditioning at the end is the only semi-decent part, but by then I’m too furious to care. I paid for a premium program, not this garbage that any cut-rate trainer could outdo without breaking a sweat.
It’s obvious RP Strength is used to working with clients who are brand new to the gym—people who don’t know a deadlift from a dumbbell and won’t question this kind of nonsense. But for those of us who actually know what a proper program should look like, this is a massive letdown. I bought this expecting expertise, not something that feels like it was thrown together in five minutes by someone who’s barely grasped the basics of training. You’re charging premium prices for subpar work, and that’s unacceptable.
What You Should’ve Done – A Leg Day That Isn’t a Joke:
If RP Strength had any idea what they were doing, Workout D would’ve been a proper leg day since they started with Hack Squat. A $20-an-hour trainer could’ve written this better:
A: Hack Squat – Keep this as the main quad-focused compound movement.
B: Romanian Deadlift – Add this to target hamstrings and glutes, actually balancing the leg work instead of pretending half your lower body doesn’t exist.
C: Leg Extensions (with drop sets) – Isolate the quads with some real intensity: 10-12 reps, drop the weight 20-30%, then 6-8 more reps. Something to make it feel like a real workout, not a random checklist.
D: Leg Curls (with drop sets) – Hit the hamstrings to complement the Romanian Deadlift: 10-12 reps, drop 20-30%, 6-8 more reps. This would’ve made it a complete leg session, not a half-baked mess.
E: Seated Calf Raise – Add calf work, like in your Workout C, to actually finish the lower body properly.
F: Conditioning – Keep this, but make it leg-focused, like sled pushes, to stay on theme.
This version would’ve been a cohesive leg day with a clear focus—quads, hamstrings, calves—following a logical flow from compounds to isolation, with drop sets to add some actual challenge. Instead, RP Strength gave me a Frankenstein’s monster of a workout that doesn’t know what it wants to be. I’m done with this program, and I’m warning everyone else: don’t waste your money on RP Strength. They’re clearly out of their depth, pandering to beginners while charging premium prices for something any cheap trainer could outshine. Save your cash and go elsewhere