Dieting Down
for Heavyweights by Shawn "Bud" Lyte
Over the years, unfounded rumors, myths and half-truths have arisen
and taken hold in regards to the detriments of cardio and dieting to power and strength performance. Cardio
allegedly drains a powerlifter's power akin to Superman wearing a Kryptonite codpiece. This is true only if the
cardio is pre-workout, intense, and in excess of 15-20 minutes, and depends on the subsequent workout. For
example, one would not want to spend 20 minutes on a stepper or hammering on a cycle before their squat
training.
I've found that doing only a light and brief (5
minute) cardio warm up on squat days helps keep my legs and squats strong for training. Typically, my trainees,
teammates and I will do 20 minutes of post-workout cardio on bench days and off days, which comes out 3 days a
week on average. For those who only do evening workouts, 20-30 minutes of morning cardio, every other day, works
very well.
As far as weight loss, I never rely on or look to
cardio as a sole or primary means to that, preferring diet modification. Approach that I take with my trainees,
that continues to work well, is to drop calories over the course of 3-4 weeks to about 70% of my maintenance
calories, then hold at 70% until the target weight range is reached. That usually does not take more than four
weeks if the lifter is not trying to drop more than 30 pounds.
Example:
wk 1: 9 x bodyweight integer (250 lb) = 2250
calories
wk 2: 8 x bodyweight integer (250 lb) = 2000
calories
wk 3: 7 x bodyweight integer (250 lb) = 1750
calories
From here, calories are brought (over the course
of 3-4 weeks) back up to 90% which becomes the lifter's new maintenance calorie intake. The key here is to keep
the calories as lean as possible. No processed foods (except on a cheat day here and there), no saturated or
hydrogenated fats at any time, and always, always, always consuming protein with carbs. That means if someone is
drinking PowerAde, they have some nuts or a protein bar with it.
A lean operation is an efficient one, and the
same goes for bodies. You will find that when you keep your body fat and weight under control, your training and
metabolic efficiency and performance improve considerably and comparatively effortlessly.
Stay with it,
Shawn "Bud" Lyte
BMF Sports
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