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By Charles Staley, B.Sc, MSS
Director, Staley
Training Systems
http://www.staleytraining.com/ecm8/ezGaffurl.php?offer=xxxxx&pid=1
If youre a typical guy who loves to lift big weights, but considers
anything over 3 reps to be "endurance" training, you might not be
interested in this article. However, if you can bench press a Buick but get
winded when you bend down to tie your shoes, maybe I have an audience.
Look, we all do what we LIKE to do, but only the most successful among us find a way to also do what we NEED to do. If you think youre in the latter category, listen up. Ive got a quiver full of fun, challenging, cardio workouts that help you lose fat without losing strength or muscle.
Dont fall into the trap of thinking that cardio will turn you into a wispy, estrogen-soaked shadow of your former self - too many guys use this mindset as an excuse to avoid what they know they should be doing. In fact, the benefits of smart cardio training are too numerous to ignore. They include:
Before I introduce you to my favorite cardio tricks, Id like to share a few general principles that will make your cardiovascular sessions a lot more fun and rewarding:
Heres a little analogy that I use with my athletes: unfurl a paper clip into a straight piece of wire, and then start bending it back and forth, eventually youll break it. Think of your body that way.
Theres no need to use a single activity (such as running or biking) for your cardio workouts. After all, your heart, lungs, and circulatory system dont know what exercise activity is taking place - but your joints sure do. If you use running for all your cardio workouts for example, your knees and feet take a heavy beating. But if you distribute the workout among 2-3 activities, such as running, swimming, and cycling, youll be less prone to overuse injury, and youll have more fun to boot.
We all pay lip service to this principle, but how few of us actually employ it! Make sure your exercise technique is consistent at all times, no matter what. Know your best times for the various distances you cover and then, in your workouts, always stay close to those times. Finally, a quality performance is a pain-free performance. If youre experiencing elbow pain during a swim for example, change gears until you determine whats wrong.
I have a neighbor whos simultaneously fascinated and disturbed by my devotion to physical training. Hell often walk past my garage while Im lifting and exclaim Better you than me or words to that effect. I always respond that I only train because I love it.
Look - if you cant find some fun in your training, youll never last. So if you hate cardio, youll need to play some games with yourself to get in the mood. I think the best way to accomplish this is to challenge yourself. Keep a detailed training journal and record your PRs for everything you do. This adds purpose and excitement to your training.
I think the reason that a lot of people find exercise so tedious is because of all the pre-workout preparations - getting dressed in your workout gear, waiting for the perfect weather conditions, and taking your pre-workout supplements, just to name a few.
Try to adopt a no preparation attitude toward training. Dont worry what your hair looks like, if its raining out, if youve got your running shorts on, or if youll be sweaty while youre at the grocery store afterwards.
People often tell me that they dread the thought of doing cardio, but once theyre doing it, its not so bad. If you can relate, try to minimize the pre-workout gyrations. Just get out and do it.
Lose The Fat, Keep The Muscle: My Favorite
Cardio Training Methods.
The following 8 training methods have a few things in common: Theyre efficient, fun, challenging, time-efficient, practical, and most of all, they deliver.
This is both a training method and an assessment tool, especially for beginners or lifters who havent done any cardio in a while. The idea is to cover a measured distance (you can run, bike, swim, skate, or whatever form of locomotion you happen to like) such that the return trip is performed in the same time (or less) than the out trip.
Lets say you decide youre going to go out for a jog for example. Your goal is to jog to a nearby park and then turn around and come back. With the out and back method, your goal is to establish a pace that enables you to complete your return trip in the same time as your out trip. If the return trip takes longer than the out trip, it indicates that youre fatiguing faster than you should be - in other words, youre running beyond your current abilities.
You can even use the out and back method with cardio machines in your gym - if, for example, you plan to use the elliptical trainer for 20 minutes, notice how much work you do in the first 10 minutes (usually this will be displayed as distance, or, alternatively, in watts). Then strive to equal or surpass this workload in the remaining 10 minutes.
If you havent done any running in a while, you might be surprised at how much you suck at it. In fact, if you go out and try to run one mile, chance are you wont be able to finish at all. So dont even try. Instead, measure a one mile course (maybe 1/2 mile out, and 1/2 mile back), and go out and cover that course, through a combination of walking, running, jogging, whatever.
The main thing is to record your time, no matter how bad it might be. Then, the next time you go out, simply beat that time. And you will. Gradually, workout by workout, youll be running more and walking less. And youll experience a steady stream of PRs to keep your motivation flying.
400s are one of the best fat-loss workouts you can ever do - just look at the physiques of top 400-meter sprinters if you still need convincing! Get on out to your local high school track (if its close to home, walk instead of drive - thatll be your warm-up). Once around is 400 meters.
The current mens World record is less than 44 seconds, which will soon strike you as un-Godly as you try your hand at this simple but punitive track & field event! So first time out, go VERY easy for the first 200 meters, and then pick up the pace for the final kick if you still have anything left in the tank.
Record your time. After about 4-5 minutes rest, run one more and try to beat your PR. Thats it for the first workout. You can run 400s about twice a week, but start small and increase your reps very gradually. After several months, youll find you can do maybe 5 repeats per workout.
Running hills is a fun but intense cardiovascular workout with important strength-enhancing benefits to boot. Best of all, the inclined surface minimizes impact and spares your joints.
Find a moderate slope that tapes you about 10-20 seconds to climb at maximum effort. First time out, limit yourself to 3-5 reps. Gradually increase to 10-12 reps after several weeks. And of course, time every sprint and always seek to beat your PRs!
Recently, Dr. Tabata in Japan conducted a study in which he investigated the benefits of high intensity anaerobic exercise. Tabata discovered that a protocol consisting of 20 seconds of all-out cycling followed by 10 seconds of moderate cycling for a total of four minutes (8 repeats) was just as effective as forty-five minutes of aerobic exercise.
Interestingly, and perhaps surprisingly to some, the Tabata Protocol increases aerobic fitness in addition to its anaerobic benefits. This finding is consistent with my "ladder" paradigm that states that higher intensity training develops a wider spectrum of fitness benefits than lower-intensity exercise.
Clearly, the hallmark of this method is its time-efficiency, but there is a price to pay in pain and sweat - choose your poison!
I realize that most weight-trainers think they own the market on pain-tolerance, but the dot drill makes 20-rep squats look like a trip to Baskin Robbins by comparison. Particularly insidious is the fact that, unlike resistance training, repeated exposures to the dots will not make subsequent exposures any easier.
First conceived by basketball coach Adolph Rupp in the 1940s, and then later popularized by Bigger Faster Stronger Inc. a few decades later, the dot drill is both a remarkable agility, foot strength, and anaerobic conditioning exercise, as well as a superb and easy-to-administer testing tool.
It is unique in that it creates not only a high level of fatigue, but also a high quality of fatigue- fighters in particular will be able to relate to the feeling of panic that ensues when your heart rate soars to about 120% of age-predicted maximum.
The dot drill is a battery of 5 separate drills, performed in rapid succession, with each drill performed six times in a row before proceeding to the next drill (please refer to the diagram as you read the description).
D E
C
A B
The dot drill features (5), five-inch diameter dots orientated in a pattern
similar to the five dots on a pair of dice, expect that the square
is three feet by two feet. Use a solid surface such as weight room matting,
and tie your shoelaces. Tight.
Begin the drill as follows:
1) First drill: Starting position: your left foot is on A and your right foot on B. Hop forward and touch C with both feet simultaneously, then continue forward so that your left foot lands on D at the same instant your right foot lands on E. (a total of 2 hops). Now go back to the starting position by reversing what you just did (hopping backward). Thats one rep. Repeat for a total of six reps.
2) Second drill: From the starting position, lift your left foot in the air and with right foot only, hop to C, E, D, C, A, and back to B. Thats one rep. Repeat for a total of six reps.
3) Third drill: Repeat the last drill but using the left foot only (hop to C, E, D, C, A, and back to B.) Thats one rep. Repeat for a total of six reps.
4) Fourth drill: Repeat the last drill but using both feet, keeping the feet together- this looks somewhat like a skiing drill. Repeat for a total of six reps.
5) Fifth drill: This is very similar to drill number one, with a slight variation: When you reach the top of the pattern (left foot on D and your right foot on E.), instead of hopping backward to get back to the starting position, you instead jump-spin and land on the same two dots (only now your left foot will be on E and your right foot on D.), facing the opposite direction. Then hop forward and touch C with both feet simultaneously, then continue forward so that your left foot lands on B and your right foot on A. Lastly, jump-spin again to assume the starting position. Thats one rep. Repeat for a total of six reps.
Errors: Subtract .10 seconds for every missed dot from the total time.
Once youve done the drill a few times, youll notice that you cant help but be competitive once you start. Even if you dont feel terribly motivated, youll bust a gut trying to get a good time. Or maybe its just that you want to get it over with. Either way, the dot drill brings out your best (and Im not referring to your last meal).
The five dots of death (as my athletes refer to it) can be used as a warm-up for a strength training session (one drill will bring your heart rate to 100% and will get you sweating big-time), as anaerobic conditioning, and/or as a fantastic foot and calf strengthening tool. One precaution however: I suggest never doing more than 4 repetitions of the dot drill on any given day, and not more than 12 dot drills on any given week.
OK, youve done the dot drill a handful of times and you think youre a stud (or studette) because you finally broke the two minute barrier? According to Bigger Faster Stronger, youll need to break the 60 second barrier to be considered fast.
I live in Phoenix and hot weather is fast approaching. It often becomes tedious to get out there for sprints when the temperature is well over 100 degrees. If youve got a pool, and its never occurred to you that you can use it for exercise because its too small, try this: call around to some pool supply and/or diving shops and find an elastic cord with a nylon waist-belt. You attach the band to one side of the pool, and attach the band to your waist.
Attach the band in such a way that you can just barely reach the other side of the pool through an all-out sprint. Once you touch the other end, relax as the band pulls you back. Then repeat for the desired numbers of reps. This is a brutally tough and effective form of anaerobic exercise that delivers the fat loss goods in spades.
Ive added this last option for those of you who still have a hard time stomaching any "non-lifting" form of cardio. In this case were talking about various forms of snatches - a fast lift where the weight is "snatched" to an overhead position.
Of course, the snatch is one of the two Olympic lifting events, but there are several one-arm variants as well, including the one-arm dumbbell snatch, the kettlebell snatch, and the one-arm barbell snatch. All of these lifts create high levels of cardio-respiratory fatigue, in addition to the obvious speed strength and shoulder-function benefits. On top of that, snatches are actually fun!
One final note - as you begin to initiate some of these cardio workouts, realize that youre significantly increasing the demands on your body. I strongly suggest cutting back on the volume of your weight training exercises to make way for these new workouts.
The simplest way to do this is to cut your sets in halfó in other words, if you normally do 4 sets of 8, cut it back to 2 sets of 8 - at least for the first few months. Youll find that this approach will allow you to maintain both your strength and orthopedic health as you begin to address your cardiovascular fitness needs.
Following the suggestions Ive presented here, youll enjoy the health and fat loss benefits of a cardiovascular exercise program, and, who knows, you might even become a former cardio hater.
About The Author
Charles Staley...world-class strength/performance coach...his colleagues call him an iconoclast, a visionary, a rule-breaker. His clients call him The Secret Weapon for his ability to see what other coaches miss. Charles calls himself a geek who struggled in Phys Ed throughout school. Whatever you call him, Charles methods are ahead of their time and quickly produce serious results.
Click here to visit Charles' site and grab your 5 FREE videos that will show you how to literally FORCE your body to build muscle, lose fat and gain strength with "Escalating Density Training," Charles' revolutionary, time-saving approach to lifting that focuses on performance NOT pain.
http://www.staleytraining.com/ecm8/ezGaffurl.php?offer=xxxxx&pid=1