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Obviously there something about the quicker application of force that is upsetting your tissues, messing with your core stability (usually the case), etc. Make sure you are using much lighter weights. The purpose of this phase is to increase the speed at which you can generate force and the speed component is what is key, not the strength. I don't know how much you went down in weight but it's a substantial decrease from the prior phase. Start there, the lower weight and pick one of the two offending exercises to work on first once you are recovered. Focus on core integrity and generating the speed at the very beginning of the movement (recruitment, think about starting hard and "coasting" through the rest of the movement since you were so explosive at the beginning) and only do one set to start and progress from there. Since you are injured, I would just back the period up and start over so you get the full four weeks of the period in before you next rest week. Just keep in mind that the set needs to be done at the say second rep speed. If you slow down before the set is done, you have to drop the load. Make sense? So, reduce load to correct load, focus on core integrity and stabilization, start with one exercise and one set done at speed, all other sets at regular speed/load and progress from there.
_________________ Coach Seiji www.coachseiji.com 
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