Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle
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Nutrition
Or Training - Which Is More Important?
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Title: Nutrition Or Training -
Which Is More Important
By line: By Tom Venuto, CSCS, NSCA-CPT
URL: www.burnthefat.com (replace with
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Related keywords: Exercise, diet,
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Nutrition Or
Training - Which Is More Important?
By Tom Venuto, NSCA-CPT, CSCS
www.burnthefat.com
Legendary bodybuilding trainer Vince, "The Iron
Guru" Gironda was famous for saying, "Bodybuilding is 80% nutrition!"
But is this really true or is it just another fitness and bodybuilding
myth passed down like gospel without ever being questioned? Which is
really more important, nutrition or training? This IS an interesting
question and I believe there is a definite answer:
The first thing I would say is that you cannot
separate nutrition and training. The two work together synergistically.
Regardless of your goals - gaining muscle, losing fat, athletic
conditioning, whatever -you will get less than-optimal or even
non-existent results without paying attention paid to both.
In fact, I like to look at gaining muscle or
losing fat in three parts - weight training, cardio training and
nutrition - with each part like a leg of a three legged stool. pull ANY
one of the legs off the stool, and guess what happens?
In reality, it's impossible to put a specific
percentage on which is more important - how could we possibly know such
a number to the digit?
Nutrition and training are both important, but at
certain stages of your training progress, I do believe placing more
attention on one component over the other can create larger
improvements. Let me explain:
If you're a beginner and you don't posses
nutritional knowledge, then mastering nutrition is far more important
than training and should become your number one priority. I say this
because improving a poor diet can create rapid, quantum leaps in fat
loss and muscle building progress.
For example, if you've been skipping meals and
only eating 2 times per day, jumping your meal frequency up to 5 or 6
smaller meals a day will transform your physique very rapidly.
If you're still eating lots of processed fats and
refined sugars, cutting them out and replacing them with good fats like
the omega threes found in fish and unrefined foods like fruits,
vegetables and whole grains will make an enormous and noticeable
difference in your physique very quickly.
If your diet is low in protein, simply adding a
complete protein food like chicken breast, fish or egg whites at each
meal will muscle you up fast.
No matter how hard you train or what type of
training routine you're on, it's all in vain if you don't provide
yourself with the right nutritional support.
In beginners (or in advanced trainees who are
still eating poorly), these changes in diet are more likely to result
in great improvements than a change in training.
The muscular and nervous systems of a beginner are
unaccustomed to exercise. Therefore, just about any training program
can cause muscle growth and strength development to occur because it's
all a "shock" to the untrained body.
You can almost always find ways to tweak your
nutrition to higher and higher levels, but once you’ve
mastered all the nutritional basics, then further improvements in your
diet don't have as great of an impact as those initial important
changes...
Eating more than six meals will have minimal
effect. Eating more protein ad infinitum won't help. Once you're eating
low fat, going to zero fat won't help more - it will probably hurt. If
you're eating a wide variety of foods and taking a good multi
vitamin/mineral, then more supplements probably wont help much either.
If you're already eating natural complex carbs and lean proteins every
three hours, there's not too much more you can do other than continue
to be consistent day after day...
At this point, as an intermediate or advanced
trainee who has the nutrition in place, changes in your training become
much more important, relatively speaking. Your training must become
downright scientific.
Except for the changes that need to be made
between an "off season" muscle growth diet and a "precontest" cutting
diet, the diet won't and can't change much - it will remain fairly
constant.
But you can continue to pump up the intensity of
your training and improve the efficiency of your workouts almost
without limit. In fact, the more advanced you become, the more crucial
training progression and variation becomes because the well-trained
body adapts so quickly.
According to powerlifter Dave Tate, an advanced
lifter may adapt to a routine within 1-2 weeks. That's why elite
lifters rotate exercises constantly and use as many as 300 different
variations on exercises.
Strength coach Ian King says that unless you're a
beginner, you'll adapt to any training routine within 3-4 weeks. Coach
Charles Poliquin says that you'll adapt within 5-6 workouts.
So, to answer the question, while nutrition is
ALWAYS critically important, it's more important to emphasize for the
beginner (or the person whose diet is still a "mess"), while training
is more important for the advanced person... (in my opinion).
It's not that nutrition ever ceases to be
important, the point is, further improvements in nutrition won't have
as much impact once you already have all the fundamentals in place.
Once you've mastered nutrition, then it's all
about keeping that nutrition consistent and progressively increasing
the efficiency and intensity of your workouts, and mastering the art of
planned workout variation, which is also known as "periodization."
The bottom line: There's a saying among strength
coaches and personal trainers...
"You can't out-train a lousy diet!"
If your nutrition program is your weakest area,
either because you're just starting out or you simply don't have the
nutritional knowledge you know you need to get results, then be sure to
take a look at the Burn The Fat program at: www.burnthefat.com
About the Author:
Tom Venuto is a lifetime natural bodybuilder, an
NSCA-certified personal trainer (CPT), certified strength &
conditioning specialist (CSCS), and author of the #1 best-selling
e-book, "Burn the Fat, Feed The Muscle.”
Tom has written hundreds of articles and been featured in IRONMAN,
Australian IRONMAN, Natural Bodybuilding, Muscular Development,
Exercise for Men and Men’s Exercise, as well as on dozens of
websites worldwide. For information on Tom's Fat Loss program, visit: www.burnthefat.com
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