Last edited by Heavy Metal; 05-07-10 at 16:55.
My brother saw Deliverance and bought a Bow. I saw Deliverance and bought an AR-15.
my respectful opinion of this
. In the past 6 months, I've never been to a single workout with my SEAL motivator that didn't last at least 3 hours. I doubt working out more than 45 min will do more harm than good.
"Doc, can you check out this thing I got?"
-Every Marine, ever.
As a 4 time marathoner and a dozen half marathons mixed with a half dozen triathlons under my belt I can say emphatically that my stomach isn't getting developing a beer belly and my testosterone levels are very healthily high. 45 minutes? That's just a warm up. Bite me ScienceMan!
I do a lot of bike riding, and see a lot of serious bike riders out there.
None of them have any muscle mass to speak of. They are skinny, yes, and doubtless in very good cardiovascular health, but none of them look like they have any upper body strength at all.
"The secret to happiness is freedom, and the secret to freedom is courage." - Thucydides, c. 410 BC
Wes, just stating my opinion here, not attacking you
You also see a lot of serious weightlifters who look really big. That said, I've never seen a "serious" bike rider that looked really buff. Being very slim and slender seems to be the ideal body type for that particular sport. They don't need a large amount of muscle mass, it's not what is most important to succeed in their sport.
"Doc, can you check out this thing I got?"
-Every Marine, ever.
There is a reason the serious racers are built like that. Because they choose to be. It is the best build for their chosen sport. I have friends who are training with the goal of losing upper body muscle mass because it does nothing for their performance on the bike other than slow them down.
If you are an athlete you direct your training to maximum performance in your chosen sport, if upper body muscle mass isnt needed, you get rid of it.
As for the 45 minutes of exercise at a time, straight bullshit.
Or maybe that is the way their bodies are going to be anyway, and they just found their way into that sport because it "felt right"?
"The secret to happiness is freedom, and the secret to freedom is courage." - Thucydides, c. 410 BC
It all depends on what you're training for. If you want to run a marathon or hold your breath for a long time underwater you need to run a lot or swim a lot, respectively. Neither type of training is going to result in great upper body strength. I think the study the OP was talking about was geared more toward strength training with weights. In my experience the conclusion that anything more than an hour or so in the gym, is pointless or even counterproductive.
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