How Was Turbulence Training
Created
My friend, Craig Ballantyne, is the creator of the #1
bodyweight workout program on the Internet... and today, he
wrote how he started his program. It is such an interesting
read I thought I should post this article on my website.
Enjoy!
Matt
The Craig Ballantyne
Story...
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The creator of
Turbulence Training... Craig Ballantyne
Like most folks in the fitness industry, I played a lot of
sports when I was younger. That led to weight training. From
there, I realized I wanted to be a strength coach in
professional sports.
I went to school for Kinesiology, which then led to a
Master's Degree in Exercise Physiology. Along the way I studied
what made a good NHL Strength Coach (they had Master's Degrees
and were Certified Strength And Conditioning Specialists -
CSCS).
I also started training athletes, along with men and women
for fat loss.
In 1998-99, I was but a lowly grad student, studying the
effects of androstenedione (the supplement taken by the mighty
baseball player, Mark McGwire during his record-breaking home
run quest in '98).
In my study (which was published in the Canadian Journal of
Applied Physiology for any science nerds like myself out
there), we had guys use the supplement and go through a couple
of weight training sessions. By February of '99 I was stuck in
the lab, analyzing the blood samples using some fancy
radio-active isotopes.
And when I say stuck in the lab, I mean STUCK. I'd get there
at 7am, and record my last data point at 11pm. Sixteen hours of
mad science. And if I wasn't there, I was downstairs in the
medical library, studying papers on testosterone and
training.
Now coming from a very athletic background, this sedentary
lifestyle didn't sit well with me. But there I was, studing for
a degree in Exercise Physiology and left with no time for
exercise.
Or so I thought.
Fortunately, I actually had a 50 minute window once per day
of "down-time" while the lab's gamma-counter analyzed blood
samples.
That left me 50 minutes to get to the gym (5 minutes across
campus) and get a workout in the remaining 40 or so minutes. I
knew that if I applied my studies to the workout, I could get
maximum results in minimum time.
As a former athlete, I knew that I had to find a way to stay
fit and to avoid the fat gain that comes with working long
hours in a sedentary environment. And I also had to stay true
to the high-school bodybuilder I once was. So there was no way
I was willing to sacrifice my muscle to one of those
long-cardio, low protein fat-loss plans that were popular at
the time.
Instead, I had to draw on my academic studies and my
experiences working with athletes as the school's Strength
& Conditioning Coach.
I knew that sprint intervals were associated with more fat
loss than slow cardio. And I knew that you could also increase
aerobic fitness by doing sprints (but you can't increase sprint
performance by doing aerobic training).
So clearly, intervals were (and ARE!) superior to long slow
cardio.
I had seen first hand the incredible results of sprint
intervals in the summer and fall, as the athletes made huge
fitness improvements and shed winter fat in a short time using
my interval programs. I knew that intervals had to be the next
step in the evolution of cardio.
The biggest benefit of intervals? A lot of results in a
short amount of time. I knew that I only had 40 minutes to
train, and therefore I could only spend 15-20 minutes doing
intervals.
Now onto the strength training portion of the workouts. I
knew that a high- volume bodybuilding program wasn't going to
cut it - I just didn't have time. But in the past year I had
read so many lifting studies, that I knew exactly what
exercises I needed to do to maximize my lifting time in the
gym.
Those exercises were standing, multi-muscle, movements such
as squats, presses, rows, and plenty of other standing
single-leg exercises. I knew that those exercises would bring
me far more results than those people sitting on machines would
ever achieve.
And I also knew that I had to lift heavier than the average
Joe or Jane Gym-goer lifts. I just knew that doing lighter
weights and high-reps wasn't going to cut it.
And a research study from 2001 later showed that I was right
- when women did 8 reps per set, they had a significantly
greater increase in post- workout metabolism than if they did
15 reps per set.
So I had my plan. Bust my tail over to the gym, through the
cold, dreary Canadian winter afternoon, and do a quick but
thorough warmup (specific to my lifts - none of that 5 minutes
on the treadmill waste of time).
Once I got through the warm-up, I did as many sets as I
could in the remainder of the 20 minutes for strength
training.
At that point, I knew that supersets were the only way to go
if I wanted to maximize the number of sets I could do...so the
non-competing superset of Turbulence Training was put in
place.
By non-competing, I mean that the 2 exercises in the
superset don't interfere with one another. So you can use upper
and lower body exercises together, or pushing and pulling
exercises. Just be careful not to use two grip-intensive
exercises together in a superset - otherwise, one exercise will
suffer, if not both.
And then I followed up the strength training with intervals,
as I knew these had to follow the lifting, otherwise it would
not be the correct exercise order. Remember, intervals first
leads to premature fatigue. Lift first, cardio later. Forget
that old wives tale about doing cardio first to burn more fat.
That's junk.
You know, I remember the exact day and exact workout that
this all came together into the Turbulence Training program. It
hit me as I was finishing my intervals. I knew I had found
something that was like fat loss magic.
Unfortunately, I couldn't find a way to put it in a pill.
But I've been able to put it down on paper in all of the TT
manuals.
Click on this link to get more information about
what Craig Ballantyne can do for
you.
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