Fat Burning Tips- An Interview with Chad Waterbury


fatburnchad2 Fat Burning Tips  An Interview with Chad WaterburyAbout three or four years ago Chad Waterbury and I connected for the first time through our mutual friend, Alwyn Cosgrove. Over several Jack & Red Bulls at a bar in Santa Monica, we discussed training for hours on end.  Despite the fact that we went into the meeting with seemingly very different views and theories, we concluded that we agreed much more than we disagreed. Since that night Chad’s become one of my good friends and we discuss training on a weekly basis. He’s one of the guys I trust most and I’m always interested in hearing what he’s been experimenting with as of late.

Since summer’s in full swing and a large number of people are in fat loss mode I grabbed Chad last week for a few minutes to sit down and share some of his top fat burning tips.

Here’s how it went…

Jason Ferruggia: Chad, the majority of people reading this site want to get bigger and stronger but many of them would also like to be leaner as well. The problem, however, is that when most people embark on a fat burning phase the first thing that happens is they start losing muscle faster than King Kong Bundy pinned S.D. Jones at WrestleMania I (which I was at, BTW) How can this be avoided?

Chad Waterbury: You’re right. I’ve lost count how many guys I’ve seen who’ve lost almost half the muscle they gained once they try to get six-pack abs. It’s not easy to build muscle, but it’s definitely easy to lose it.

There are three keys to avoiding this. First, stimulate as many muscle fibers as possible with full-body workouts comprised of strength and cardio strength exercises that are performed at top speed.

Second, follow a systematic progression plan in order to make your body do more work over time.

Third, feed your muscles the nutrients it needs at the right times.

JF: What are the three biggest mistakes you see people making when trying to lose fat?
boston03 Fat Burning Tips  An Interview with Chad Waterbury
CW: The first mistake is performing long duration cardio at a low intensity. Nothing wastes muscle tissue faster than jogging for an hour. When muscles are forced to continuously contract for 45 minutes or an hour, that energy has to come from somewhere. The body is very stubborn and doesn’t want to use fat for energy because it’s much easier to break down muscle tissue instead. This is why marathon runners are skinny and weak.

Second, when people try to lose fat they drop too many calories, too fast. Your anabolic hormones are fed by certain, key nutrients. When people go on a low-calorie diet they end up giving their muscles fewer nutrients for support and recovery. This quickly puts the body in a very catabolic state.

The third biggest mistake guys tend to make is choosing the wrong exercises and workouts to lose fat. Most people end up lifting light weights for a ton of reps. This is the exact opposite of what they should be doing because they’re not recruiting the muscle fibers they’re trying to keep: the biggest, strongest ones.

Think about it. When people try to burn fat they instinctively do the three worst things possible to maintain muscle. I’ve seen guys lose 10 pounds of muscle in a matter of weeks when they combine low-intensity cardio, high rep weight training, and a low calorie diet. This is a travesty.

JF: What are your top three fat burning tips? Actually, let’s start with three for training and then we’ll go into three for nutrition.

CW: The first step is to make your cardio training short and intense. Tabata’s research taught us that high intensity cardio is the way to go because you’ll boost your anaerobic and aerobic power at the same time, and you’ll stimulate your metabolism to burn calories long after you leave the gym. Low-intensity cardio only burns calories while you’re doing it. High intensity cardio stimulates your metabolism to keep burning calories long after you stop.

Next, for every other workout it’s important to lift weights that are heavy enough to recruit your biggest, strongest muscle fibers. A 6-10 rep maximum is enough to get the job done when you accelerate the lift. There are two reasons why this is important. First, you’ll keep the muscle you have because you’re recruiting all of your muscle fibers. As I’ve mentioned in my books and articles, when you recruit the largest muscle fibers you’re also recruiting all of the other muscle fibers because of the size principle. As the saying goes: if you don’t use it, you lose it. Second, when heavy weights are performed in a full-body circuit with short rest periods, it drastically increases the metabolic cost of a workout. That’s essential for burning fat. But you can’t do much heavy training while cutting fat, so that’s why the next step is so important.

Third, you must perform cardio and cardio strength exercises at top speed.  There are no typical cardio exercises in my world. Instead of jogging on a treadmill I have my clients perform a circuit of, say, split jacks, jumping jacks, and burpees for multiple rounds as fast as possible. Then I have them do exercise pairings that don’t require a lot of weight, but still recruit all your muscle fibers when performed at top speed. I call this “cardio strength” training. A good example is the kettlebell swing and push-up pairing. Start with 13 swings, then immediately drop to the floor and do 13 push-ups. Jump back to your feet and do 12 swings followed by 12 push-ups. Then do 11 swings and 11 push-ups. Continue with this sequence until you reach one rep of each exercise.

Tomorrow I’ll be back atcha with part 2 where Chad discusses his top fat burning nutrition tips, shares some real life examples of what he’s doing with his current clients and reveals who won when he and I raced in a hundred meter dash…

The Renegade Diet

16 Comments so far


  1. Michael
    12. Jul, 2010
    at 8:03 am
    #


    Thank you for having one of the only weight lifting blogs with consistently good information. Between this and your ebooks you have totally changed my physical fitness life for the better. Keep it up!

    Michael


  2. Andy Campbell
    12. Jul, 2010
    at 8:43 am
    #


    I am proof positive – in training for a half-marathon earlier this year I killed my fast-twitch muscle fibers and lost muscle & strength. It took a few weeks to catch back up after the race. Thanks for sharing this info – Can’t wait for Part 2.


  3. Aaron
    12. Jul, 2010
    at 8:47 am
    #


    This “sounds” good (we’d all rather lift weights than perform cardio) but can you really get cut and defined abs with this type of routine? I hesitate to say it but nothing gets me cut for summer like low intensity cardio before breakfast. I know there’s a lot of debate about that approach but you can’t argue with results.


  4. jasonferruggia
    12. Jul, 2010
    at 9:29 am
    #


    Michael, thanks for the comment. Glad to hear I was able to help out.

    AC, that was a dark day.

    Aaron, personally I don’t mind fasted LOW intensity cardio first thing in the morning and think it can work well for a lot of people. It’s the mid range stuff that really jacks up your cortisol and burns muscle tissue. I like low or high, no midrange stuff, which is what 99% of the people do.


  5. Raymond - ZenMyFitness
    12. Jul, 2010
    at 12:39 pm
    #


    Great stuff! I still get confused with all the contradictory information on how to lose fat and gain muscle I get caught up in that, & just go around in circles. Chad makes it very clear what needs to be done and its sounds really simple.
    Thanks for choosing Chad to interview I thinks an excellent perspective from a runners back ground.
    Raymond


  6. Byron
    12. Jul, 2010
    at 12:52 pm
    #


    I couldn’t agree with Aaron enough. With all of my physique shows, I have performed 30-45 mins of brisk walking first thing in the morning with no food and It works a treat. I completely agree with you Jason re the mid range and It annoys me as a trainer when some clients persist on doing 2-3 aerobic sessions back to back, day in, day out and get 0 results.

    Long live Tabatas for my evening sessions!


  7. MR TODDY
    12. Jul, 2010
    at 4:10 pm
    #


    thanks for that useful info.I weight trained for 13 years and got bored and put on fat,changed my routine to circuit training with weights twice a week,high intensity cardio once a week and my legs once a week since january this year.Ive kept my muscle and lost 5 kilo of bodyfat so far.Its hard work
    at 43 but its paying off slowly but surely.I recommend this workout to those of you in the same boring routine that i was in,plus im in and out of the gymn in 45 mins max feeling great that ive achieved so much in such a short length of time.


  8. Heather
    12. Jul, 2010
    at 6:02 pm
    #


    Men and women alike excessively cut their calories, reduce their training loads in favor of high reps, while doing endless amounts of steady state cardio in hopes to achieve a leaner physique. Unfortunately they can end up looking soft and flat. I must say there is nothing more disappointing than a man who has…well…gone soft.


  9. Chris
    12. Jul, 2010
    at 8:48 pm
    #


    I know you’ve said in the past Jay that you don’t like midrange stuff because humans weren’t born to run long distances. Almost all the research articles that I’ve found show the complete opposite. I have no doubt that high-intensity will get you jacked, but is really because we’re born to it? Is there something I’m missing?


  10. Bill Pairaktaridis
    13. Jul, 2010
    at 2:03 am
    #


    Great interview Jason! I’ve seen a lot of guys do this kind of stuff along with a lot of other mistakes (the high rep thing is predominant with guys wanting to get lean. Have no idea why). Can’t wait for the next part!


  11. jasonferruggia
    13. Jul, 2010
    at 5:39 am
    #


    Chris,
    Way back in the hunter gather/ caveman days humans did two things- they walked for long durations going out to gather food and supplies needed to build shelters, and they sprinted after their prey or away from predators who were trying to eat them. They never jogged for the sake of jogging or if they were migrating to another region they walked, not jogged.

    Yeah, you can run long distances if you want to. But it is the worst form of exercise for your body.


    • Isaak emery
      12. Aug, 2010
      at 2:52 am
      #


      @jasonferruggia:
      Hi Jason dont want to be a pain ive tried to order your book when it was on special with no luck. Infact my mother tried to order it for me as I was out of town and not near a computer. Can you help. could you email me. Thanks


  12. HG
    13. Jul, 2010
    at 9:34 am
    #


    i did the 13swings/push-up today as finisher …. seeing stars when complete!!
    btw, great interview, looking forward to pt 2.:)


  13. Brandon Cook
    13. Jul, 2010
    at 12:31 pm
    #


    Awesome interview so far! Chad Waterbury is the man and of course you ain’t too shabby yourself. Although, I’ve enjoyed jogging in the past it has eaten up my muscle when trying to get leaner. I don’t have a lot of muscle to spare… so yeah I’m all about the high intensity circuits now! Plus, they are a lot of fun. Good tips


  14. Taipari Waaka
    14. Jul, 2010
    at 8:25 am
    #


    I’ve been on 3XM for a few weeks and have packed on the most size in my life, and after 25 years of being midrange weight, i refuse to give it up! Me and my partner are planning to get this programme, i love the thought of maintaining muscle, and loosing fat! while bulking my tummys gone out a bit so i really wanna torch it off. cant wait to start!


  15. wrestler strength
    28. Oct, 2010
    at 4:31 am
    #


    Great interview Jason. The 3 keys to not losing muscle while burning fat Chad discusses are undoubtedly the 3 big solutions to a lot of guys’ problems!

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