Tuesday, July 14, 2009

High-Speed Fat Loss


Start by taking a baseline measurement of your endurance at high speeds. Head to a track, football field, or other measured area with room to run. Sprint for 45 seconds and record your distance. Rest for 60 seconds, then sprint again for 45 seconds. If you don't regularly run intervals or don't participate in intermittent sports, your second span will probably shorten by as much as 25 percent, says Craig Ballantyne, M.Sc., C.S.C.S., owner of TurbulenceTraining.com. "A distance drop of only 10 percent between runs is excellent," he says. Use this plan to improve your endurance and burn fat, measuring your progress every week.
The Program
Alternate between workout A and workout B for a total of 3 sessions a week for 6 weeks.
Workout A
Jog 2 minutes, do the exercises on pages 2 and 3, then do the intervals below.
REPS EFFORT TIME REST
1 50% 60 sec 60 sec
1 75% 60 sec 60 sec
3 OR 6* 100% 30 sec 90 sec
Workout B
Jog 2 minutes, do the exercises on pages 2 and 3, then do the intervals below.
REPS EFFORT TIME REST
1 50% 60 sec 60 sec
1 75% 60 sec 60 sec
3 OR 6* 100% 45 sec 90 sec
* Do 3 of these high-intensity intervals the first week, and 6 each week after.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Burn Fat for Tight Abs

If you want to lose your gut, don't think of lifting weights as an option; consider it a requirement. Why? When dieters don't pump iron, 22 percent of their weight loss comes from losing muscle, according to a Penn State study. So if you drop 20 pounds without lifting, almost 5 pounds will be from muscle.

That won't happen with this program. It's designed to work your muscles intensively 4 days a week so you can banish your belly but keep your biceps. In fact, scientists discovered that men using a similar approach lost 37 percent more fat than those who didn't hit the weights. The end result: the lean, muscular body you want.

Directions:
Perform these workouts 4 days a week. Do the upper-body and lower-body workouts on consecutive days, rest a day, and repeat. For your first upper-body day, use the low-rep workout. For your first lower-body day, follow the high-rep workout. Then switch for your second 2 days of training, so every week you end up performing both high and low reps for your upper and lower body.

For the upper-body workout, alternate between the exercises that have the same number (1A and 1B, for example). Do 1 set of the first exercise and rest, followed by 1 set of the second exercise, and rest again. Complete all your sets for each exercise pair and then move to the next pair (2A and 2B).

For the lower-body workout, do 1 set of exercise 1, rest, and repeat until you've finished all the sets.

Do the same with 2. Then perform 3A and 3B as pairs, alternating between them as you did with the upper-body workout. Do the same for exercises 4A and 4B.

Low-rep workout
Complete 5 to 8 repetitions of each exercise, resting 60 seconds between sets.
Upper body: Do 2 or 3 sets of each exercise
Lower body: Do 2 or 3 sets of each exercise*

High-rep workout
Perform 12 to 15 reps in each set. For exercises 1 and 2, rest 60 to 90 seconds between sets. For 3A, 3B, 4A, and 4B, rest 30 to 45 seconds between sets.
Upper body: Do 2 or 3 sets of each exercise
Lower body: Do 2 sets of each exercise*

*Do just 1 set of the Swiss-ball plank

Sunday, July 12, 2009

7 Fixes to Help You Play Tennis Like a Pro

Before you blame your shaky tennis stroke on your racket or the distracting girl in the tank top, look at your form. We asked some of the top tennis pros in the country about the most common mistakes they see casual players make, and how to fix them.

1. The Workout
Joggers "play a more subdued form of tennis," says David Lampson, tennis director at the Cortina Inn and Resort in Killington, Vermont. Instead of a slow slog, do interval training—sprints with rest in between. Like the game itself.

2. The Grip
Hitting it high and long? Try a Western grip. Lay your racket on the ground and pick it up so that the base knuckle of your index finger is facing up.

3. The Stance
"In a good ready position, there's no need to bend at the waist," says Dennis Ralston, tennis director at the Broadmoor in Colorado Springs. "Stand up straight and track the ball with your eyes, not your entire head."

4. The Serve
Sure, it's a tense moment, but try to stay loose, says Lampson. The tighter your grip, the less racket-head speed you generate.

5. The Backhand
People usually wait too long to turn into position, says Craig Wittus, instructor at the Westin Diplomat in Hollywood, Florida. For better aim, turn early and point your shoulder at the contact point.

6. The Forehand
Again, it's positioning. Turn and load up on your right foot (if you're right-handed). Point your left shoulder toward the net post to your right. When you finish the stroke, your weight should be on your left foot, and your right shoulder should be pointing at the same net post. This way you're balanced, Wittus says, and can recover to react to your opponent's return (or celebrate his inability to return).

7. The Volley
"If you have a swinging volley (a short hit before the ball bounces), you're more likely to make an error," Ralston says. Work on a short, compact stroke. Wittus suggests a trick his college coach used: Stand with your back against a fence and practice volleys. It eliminates your backswing and teaches you to step into the volley.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Swim Your Way to a 6-Pack

Swim Tall

"Water is 1,000 times denser than air," says Laughlin. "So the single most important factor is to slip your body through the smallest hole in the water." Imagine a central axis extending from the top of your head to the opposite end of the pool. Rotate your body along this axis with each stroke, stretching your leading arm (the one reaching out front) as far forward as you can. Keep the muscles in your lower back and abs taut as you power through the water—doing so will keep the propulsion coming from both your arms and legs and stop your midsection from sagging like an old first-mate's belly.

Drop an Anchor

Swimming with just your hands is like jumping with just your feet. Instead, grip the water with your entire forearm and hand, holding your forearm at a right angle to your upper arm and digging in like you're gathering sand with a shovel. Keep your hands broad, flat, and firm. You're not pushing your arm through the water as much as anchoring it and pulling your body over it.

Put Yourself on Heavy Rotation

Each stroke begins with your leading arm having entered the water, and that side of your body—the low side—pointing almost at the bottom of the pool. The other side of your body—the high side—should be raised, with the arm that just finished its stroke getting ready to return to the water. Power is triggered when you drive down the high side of your body, Laughlin says, throwing your high-side arm forward along the central axis into the leading position and forcefully rotating your hips and torso. Meanwhile, your low-side arm becomes the pulling arm underwater, working with your rotating torso to provide acceleration.

Keep Your Head Down

Freestylers used to hold their heads high. That forced the rest of the body to drop, turning it into a high-drag plow. "I look pretty much straight down at the bottom of the pool," says Phelps. Not only does this technique cut drag, it keeps your torso high, reducing strain on your neck and lower back.


Find Your Glide Path

In the pool, fewer strokes is better. Your goal should be a high DPS—swim-speak for "distance per stroke." Elite swimmers like Phelps can easily traverse a 25-yard pool in seven strokes (each hand entry counts as a stroke). Try to keep yours below 20 by conserving momentum. Pull yourself over your anchor and continue to glide forward with one arm forward and the other back. "You'll travel farther and faster with your legs streamlined near your axis," says Laughlin. When you begin to slow, start the next

Drag Your Feet

"If you're a good kicker, you're a good swimmer," says Phelps. The secret is turning your feet into fins. Here again, leverage rules: Your legs should be taut, scissoring you through the water, while your feet remain flexible. This will help them snap at the downstroke of each kick, adding oomph and helping twist your torso along the central axis. If your feet don't flex well, buy a set of kicking fins (we like the Slim Fin, forcefin.com) to add flexibility.

Don't Waste Your Breath

Gasping for air every time your head nears the surface is a great way to drown. Instead, make each breath count. Emphatically exhale the air from your lungs (all of it, not just 90 percent) before snagging a quick, full breath on the high side. Beginning swimmers need to breathe after each stroke, but as your endurance improves, try breathing on alternate sides—that is, after three strokes. It'll reduce the strain on your neck and shoulders that results from always breathing on the same side.

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

The Fastest Payoff


Circuit 1
Do 5 rounds, then rest for 2 minutes.

ADVERTISEMENT

Sprint on a treadmill at 10% gradient or use a stairclimber - 40 sec
Dumbbell squat (in rounds 1, 3, and 5 only) - 10 reps

Body-weight squat (in rounds 2 and 4 only) - 20 reps

In round 1, do a front bridge - 40 sec

Rd 2: Side bridge on left arm - 40 sec

Rd 3: Side bridge on right arm - 40 sec

Rd 4: Front bridge - 40 sec

Rd 5: Hold bottom of a pushup - 40 sec


Circuit 2 Do 3 rounds, then rest for 2 minutes.

Run or climb at top speed - 80 sec

Rest - 20 sec

Pushup - 30 sec

Dumbbell bent-over row - 10 reps


Circuit 3
Do 4 rounds, then rest for 2 minutes.


Run or climb at top speed - 60 sec

Single-leg rotation squat - 5 reps/leg

Ab exercise of choice - 60 sec


Circuit 4
Do 3 rounds, then stop.


Run or climb at top speed - 40 sec

Rest - 40 sec

Hold bottom of a pushup - 40 sec



Friday, July 3, 2009

Switch to Cable

Squat and Row

Attach a rope handle to a low-pulley cable and grab with both hands. Stand facing the weight stack, your elbows bent and your hands next to the sides of your torso. Lower your body by bending at your hips and knees as you allow your arms to straighten in front of you. When your thighs are parallel to the floor, reverse the movement back to the starting position.

Punch and Pull

Grab the handle of a low-pulley cable with your left hand, and the handle of the opposite high-pulley cable with your right. Face the low pulley and stagger your feet, left foot forward. Hold your right hand next to your shoulder, keeping your left arm straight. Pull your left hand back as you punch your right hand forward. Do all your reps, then switch arm and leg positions and repeat.

Split Squat and Press

With the weight stack to your left, grab the handle of a low-pulley cable with your left hand and bring it to your shoulder. Stagger your feet, right leg forward. Bend at the knees and lower your body as you press the weight overhead and bend your torso to the right. Do all your reps to one side, then switch arm and leg positions and repeat.

Woodchopper

With your left side toward the weight stack, grab the rope pulley of a high-pulley cable with both hands. Keeping your arms straight, bend your knees and rotate your hips as you pull the rope down and across your body until your hands are just outside your right knee, then reverse the motion. Finish your reps before switching sides and repeating the movement.

Perform three or four sets of eight to 12 reps of each exercise, resting 30 seconds after each set.


Thursday, July 2, 2009

Marsh column: Strength workouts for football players

Q. Getting ready for football season, should a receiver have the same strength workout as a linebacker?

A. Absolutely not. When you develop a strength program for your athletes, you look at the purpose of your strength workout. For example: The main need for your running backs, receivers, cornerbacks, and safetys is strength and speed. The purpose for your offensive and defensive lineman, tight ends, linebackers and half backs is mainly strength and power.

I was talking to one of our Salisbury Speedsters sprinters who is also getting ready for football season (by the way, look for awesome results from AAU State championships and the USATF Jim Law invitational of our Salisbury Speedsters coming soon!).

He started a program which is completely geared toward strength and power, meaning short bursts of strength and power. Continuing this workout would actually defeat the purpose of him creating more strength and speed as a receiver but also as a Salisbury Speedster 100m and 200m track star! If I were working with a football team in a pre-season strength workout, this is what I would do:

For strength and speed:

No less than 10 reps per exercise, preferable 12-15 reps for 3 sets no more than 1 minute rest in between.

Squats

Lunges

Leg extensions

Leg curls

Knee ups (for hip flexors)

Calf raises

Bench press

Incline d-bell press

Cable row

Lat pull

Shoulder press

Front lateral raises

Hammer curls

Triceps push down with rope

Crunches, 4 sets of 25 reps

Obliques, 4 sets of 20 reps (each side)

Leg raises 4 sets of 20 reps

I would hit the weights with them two or three times a week, preferably full body with at least one day in between. Other days, I would work on cardio drills, push- ups, plyometrics.

Now our "big" boys:

No more than 8 reps per exercise focusing on 4-6 reps per exercise, 4-5 sets. Three to five minutes, rest in between. Split body parts example can be: Legs and shoulders, chest and triceps, Back and biceps, core each day

Day one

Squats

Hack squats

Thrusts

Lunge squats

Leg extensions

Leg curls

Calf raises

Barbell shoulder press

Side lateral raises

Front lateral raises

Bent over flies

Day two

Dead lifts

Clean and press

T-bar rows

Lat pull

D-bell rows

Barbell curls

D-bell curls

Seated concentration curls

Day three

Bench press

Incline bench press shoulder width grip

D-bell flies

Cable cross over

Chest expanders (also called pull-overs)

Reversed grip shoulder width bench press

Triceps "skull crushers"

Triceps push down

Core added each day, every other day add neck strengthening exercises. Put LOTS of emphasis on flexibility (yes, even your big power guys). It will help prevent injuries.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Gain a Pound of Muscle Every Week

overview

Maybe you've had sand kicked in your face. Maybe you've lost one too many attainable women to beefier guys. Or maybe you've read so much about weight loss that actually admitting you want to gain weight is a societal taboo. Whatever the reason, you want to bulk up. Now.
But forget about your alleged high-revving metabolism, says Doug Kalman, R.D., director of nutrition at Miami Research Associates. "Most lean men who can't gain muscle weight are simply eating and exercising the wrong way," he says.
Here's your fix: Follow these 10 principles to pack on as much as a pound of muscle each week.

Maximize Muscle Building

The more protein your body stores—in a process called protein synthesis—the larger your muscles grow. But your body is constantly draining its protein reserves for other uses—making hormones, for instance. The result is less protein available for muscle building. To counteract that, you need to "build and store new proteins faster than your body breaks down old proteins," says Michael Houston, Ph.D., a professor of nutrition at Virginia Tech University.

Eat Meat

Shoot for about 1 gram of protein per pound of body weight, which is roughly the maximum amount your body can use in a day, according to a landmark study in theJournal of Applied Physiology. (For example, a 160-pound man should consume 160 grams of protein a day—the amount he'd get from an 8-ounce chicken breast, 1 cup of cottage cheese, a roast-beef sandwich, two eggs, a glass of milk, and 2 ounces of peanuts.) Split the rest of your daily calories equally between carbohydrates and fats.

Eat More

In addition to adequate protein, you need more calories. Use the following formula to calculate the number you need to take in daily to gain 1 pound a week. (Give yourself 2 weeks for results to show up on the bathroom scale. If you haven't gained by then, increase your calories by 500 a day.)
A. Your weight in pounds.
B. Multiply A by 12 to get your basic calorie needs.
C. Multiply B by 1.6 to estimate your resting metabolic rate (calorie burn without factoring in exercise).
D. Strength training: Multiply the number of minutes you lift weights per week by 5.
E. Aerobic training: Multiply the number of minutes per week that you run, cycle, and play sports by 8.
F. Add D and E, and divide by 7.
G. Add C and F to get your daily calorie needs.
H. Add 500 to G. This is your estimated daily calorie needs to gain 1 pound a week.

Work Your Biggest Muscles

If you're a beginner, just about any workout will be intense enough to increase protein synthesis. But if you've been lifting for a while, you'll build the most muscle quickest if you focus on the large muscle groups, like the chest, back, and legs. Add squats, deadlifts, pullups, bent-over rows, bench presses, dips, and military presses to your workout. Do two or three sets of eight to 12 repetitions, with about 60 seconds' rest between sets.

Have a Stiff Drink

A 2001 study at the University of Texas found that lifters who drank a shake containing amino acids and carbohydrates before working out increased their protein synthesis more than lifters who drank the same shake after exercising. The shake contained 6 grams of essential amino acids—the muscle-building blocks of protein—and 35 grams of carbohydrates.
"Since exercise increases bloodflow to your working tissues, drinking a carbohydrate-protein mixture before your workout may lead to greater uptake of the amino acids in your muscles," says Kevin Tipton, Ph.D., an exercise and nutrition researcher at the University of Texas in Galveston.
For your shake, you'll need about 10 to 20 grams of protein—usually about one scoop of a whey-protein powder. Can't stomach protein drinks? You can get the same nutrients from a sandwich made with 4 ounces of deli turkey and a slice of American cheese on whole wheat bread.
But a drink is better. "Liquid meals are absorbed faster," says Kalman. So tough it out. Drink one 30 to 60 minutes before your workout.

Lift Every Other Day

Do a full-body workout followed by a day of rest. Studies show that a challenging weight workout increases protein synthesis for up to 48 hours immediately after your exercise session. "Your muscles grow when you're resting, not when you're working out," says Michael Mejia, C.S.C.S.,Men's Healthexercise advisor and a former skinny guy who packed on 40 pounds of muscle using this very program.

Down Carbs After Your Workout

Research shows that you'll rebuild muscle faster on your rest days if you feed your body carbohydrates. "Post-workout meals with carbs increase your insulin levels," which, in turn, slows the rate of protein breakdown, says Kalman. Have a banana, a sports drink, a peanut-butter sandwich.

Eat Every 3 Hours

"If you don't eat often enough, you can limit the rate at which your body builds new proteins," says Houston. Take the number of calories you need in a day and divide by six. That's roughly the number you should eat at each meal. Make sure you consume some protein—around 20 grams—every 3 hours.

Make One Snack Ice Cream

Have a bowl of ice cream (any kind) 2 hours after your workout. According to a study in theAmerican Journal of Clinical Nutrition, this snack triggers a surge of insulin better than most foods do. And that'll put a damper on post-workout protein breakdown.

Have Some Milk Before Bed

Eat a combination of carbohydrates and protein 30 minutes before you go to bed. The calories are more likely to stick with you during sleep and reduce protein breakdown in your muscles, says Kalman. Try a cup of raisin bran with a cup of skim milk or a cup of cottage cheese and a small bowl of fruit. Eat again as soon as you wake up. "The more diligent you are, the better results you'll get," says Kalman.

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