POWERFUL cardio exercises?

"Sprints" for 1000-1300 meters broken down into segments like 10x50, 5x200, etc
 
HIIT is the best form of aerobic training. Find yourself a class and sign up.
 
HIIT is the best form of aerobic training. Find yourself a class and sign up.
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Its like making pizza dough with your dick. You dont know how it will twist and turn and you just hope it turns out good
 
Jumping rope, especially if you mix it up, do hiit stuff, lots of doubles, etc. Also helps with balance/timing/coordination.
 
Jumping rope, especially if you mix it up, do hiit stuff, lots of doubles, etc. Also helps with balance/timing/coordination.

Also helps the calf’s grow. Kept seeing how all the boxers in mma (and in general) always had at least proportional calves. Started skipping and now mine are a strength not a weakness (despite small ankles, long calf tendons, thin muscle shape etc).
 
- running on hills/mountains
- climbing rocks/walls
- fast swimming
- rowing
 
Much too complicated, there isn't any one 'best exercise' for everyone. (Except drag curls @MIDMOBOX )

The majority of athletes will benefit from an 'aerobic base'- high output of the cardiovascular system and secondary adaptations in the aerobic system (like development of mitchondria in the slow twitch fibers). For this you do long, slow exercise like long slow runs, swims, cross trainer, stuff like that. If you are a runner you should be doing running, if you are a cyclist you should be cycling. But if your sport doesn't have a form of 'cardio' that resembles what you do in the sport, you just want to pick something that is low impact, recruits a lot of muscle and which you enjoy, or can at least motivate yourself to do.

When it comes to developing anaerobic output and endurance above the lactate threshold, you do short/intense workouts. Intervals, sprints, things like that. it's even more important if the selection is as sports-specific as possible. So if endurance in your arms is important than you really don't want to be doing too many hill sprints. For many sports there may be no single exercise that perfectly captures everything you do in your competition, so you may have to do a bunch of different exercises.

For the high intensity workouts, you can't say that one modality (like "40 seconds on/20 seconds off" or "10 sprints of Xm") is best for everyone. It really depends on the demands of your sport. E.g. maybe in a football ("soccer") game a player sprints 40m 50 times in a game, then jogs back into position... what they need to work on is 40m sprints. Maybe in a fight there are flurries of activity of 5-10 seconds, followed by 5-10 seconds circling or regrouping over three minute rounds... maybe they need to 10 seconds on/10 seconds off intervals of three minutes duration. But even then, you won't necessarily spend all your time working with the exact modality. When you do something again and again without changing it in any way improvement tends to slow down and you often get injured. So the 'ideal' modality is something that you might build up to over time.

According to Joel Jamieson, you can also get 'weak links' in your energy systems. Even if your sport is about doing lots of 40m sprints, your conditioning problem might not actually be the energy system which is dominant in doing 40m sprints, it might be another one. He thinks that the most common 'weak link' is lack of an aerobic base. So if you have a weak link then the high intensity exercises and modalities that are most suitable for your sport aren't actually the 'best exercises' for you in terms of results.
 
Much too complicated, there isn't any one 'best exercise' for everyone. (Except drag curls @MIDMOBOX )

The majority of athletes will benefit from an 'aerobic base'- high output of the cardiovascular system and secondary adaptations in the aerobic system (like development of mitchondria in the slow twitch fibers). For this you do long, slow exercise like long slow runs, swims, cross trainer, stuff like that. If you are a runner you should be doing running, if you are a cyclist you should be cycling. But if your sport doesn't have a form of 'cardio' that resembles what you do in the sport, you just want to pick something that is low impact, recruits a lot of muscle and which you enjoy, or can at least motivate yourself to do.

When it comes to developing anaerobic output and endurance above the lactate threshold, you do short/intense workouts. Intervals, sprints, things like that. it's even more important if the selection is as sports-specific as possible. So if endurance in your arms is important than you really don't want to be doing too many hill sprints. For many sports there may be no single exercise that perfectly captures everything you do in your competition, so you may have to do a bunch of different exercises.

For the high intensity workouts, you can't say that one modality (like "40 seconds on/20 seconds off" or "10 sprints of Xm") is best for everyone. It really depends on the demands of your sport. E.g. maybe in a football ("soccer") game a player sprints 40m 50 times in a game, then jogs back into position... what they need to work on is 40m sprints. Maybe in a fight there are flurries of activity of 5-10 seconds, followed by 5-10 seconds circling or regrouping over three minute rounds... maybe they need to 10 seconds on/10 seconds off intervals of three minutes duration. But even then, you won't necessarily spend all your time working with the exact modality. When you do something again and again without changing it in any way improvement tends to slow down and you often get injured. So the 'ideal' modality is something that you might build up to over time.

According to Joel Jamieson, you can also get 'weak links' in your energy systems. Even if your sport is about doing lots of 40m sprints, your conditioning problem might not actually be the energy system which is dominant in doing 40m sprints, it might be another one. He thinks that the most common 'weak link' is lack of an aerobic base. So if you have a weak link then the high intensity exercises and modalities that are most suitable for your sport aren't actually the 'best exercises' for you in terms of results.
No one will enjoy reading all that as much as you enjoyed writing it.
 
Much too complicated, there isn't any one 'best exercise' for everyone. (Except drag curls @MIDMOBOX )

The majority of athletes will benefit from an 'aerobic base'- high output of the cardiovascular system and secondary adaptations in the aerobic system (like development of mitchondria in the slow twitch fibers). For this you do long, slow exercise like long slow runs, swims, cross trainer, stuff like that. If you are a runner you should be doing running, if you are a cyclist you should be cycling. But if your sport doesn't have a form of 'cardio' that resembles what you do in the sport, you just want to pick something that is low impact, recruits a lot of muscle and which you enjoy, or can at least motivate yourself to do.

When it comes to developing anaerobic output and endurance above the lactate threshold, you do short/intense workouts. Intervals, sprints, things like that. it's even more important if the selection is as sports-specific as possible. So if endurance in your arms is important than you really don't want to be doing too many hill sprints. For many sports there may be no single exercise that perfectly captures everything you do in your competition, so you may have to do a bunch of different exercises.

For the high intensity workouts, you can't say that one modality (like "40 seconds on/20 seconds off" or "10 sprints of Xm") is best for everyone. It really depends on the demands of your sport. E.g. maybe in a football ("soccer") game a player sprints 40m 50 times in a game, then jogs back into position... what they need to work on is 40m sprints. Maybe in a fight there are flurries of activity of 5-10 seconds, followed by 5-10 seconds circling or regrouping over three minute rounds... maybe they need to 10 seconds on/10 seconds off intervals of three minutes duration. But even then, you won't necessarily spend all your time working with the exact modality. When you do something again and again without changing it in any way improvement tends to slow down and you often get injured. So the 'ideal' modality is something that you might build up to over time.

According to Joel Jamieson, you can also get 'weak links' in your energy systems. Even if your sport is about doing lots of 40m sprints, your conditioning problem might not actually be the energy system which is dominant in doing 40m sprints, it might be another one. He thinks that the most common 'weak link' is lack of an aerobic base. So if you have a weak link then the high intensity exercises and modalities that are most suitable for your sport aren't actually the 'best exercises' for you in terms of results.
Good post.

Joel has really been instrumental in curbing the anerobic fever. Seems like things are evening out in the MMA community finally.
 
No one will enjoy reading all that as much as you enjoyed writing it.

It was pretty awesome. What made it even better is that when I started writing it I should have left for the office. So writing it also spared me ten minutes at work.
 
AMRAP LISS with RAMPing RPE and METCON RHABDO WILKS
 
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