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- Apr 25, 2002
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I know that most people advocate short bursts of cardio for reducing bodyfat levels, especially for competition in HIIT style. This theory seems to hold up quite fine...I did it myself for FAME 2003 and it worked great.
Recently I made the switch from bodybuilding to multi-sport training (triathlons, duathlons, etc...long distance training) and at every race there are many athletes who not only have good amounts of muscle mass, but are ripped to boot, due to all of the long distance cardio that they do. These are people who often bike/run for hours at a time, which according to popular theory would destroy their muscle mass and leave them tiny little twigs with great cardio abilities.
However, contrary to this many of the competitors are not only incredibly well defined but have large arms, shoulders (due to swimming) and immense legs (due to cycling/running).
I'm sure that many of them incorporate lifting into their routines (as I do) but the focus is obviously not on that aspect of their training.
My theory is that since much of their training is above the anaerobic threshold (in terms of heart rate) they manage to maintain much of their muscle mass while doing this sort of long distance training.
Any comments or does anyone know more about this? IAB, I'd be interested to hear your thoughts...
Recently I made the switch from bodybuilding to multi-sport training (triathlons, duathlons, etc...long distance training) and at every race there are many athletes who not only have good amounts of muscle mass, but are ripped to boot, due to all of the long distance cardio that they do. These are people who often bike/run for hours at a time, which according to popular theory would destroy their muscle mass and leave them tiny little twigs with great cardio abilities.
However, contrary to this many of the competitors are not only incredibly well defined but have large arms, shoulders (due to swimming) and immense legs (due to cycling/running).
I'm sure that many of them incorporate lifting into their routines (as I do) but the focus is obviously not on that aspect of their training.
My theory is that since much of their training is above the anaerobic threshold (in terms of heart rate) they manage to maintain much of their muscle mass while doing this sort of long distance training.
Any comments or does anyone know more about this? IAB, I'd be interested to hear your thoughts...