Health & Fitness

What Comes First: Build Muscle or Shed Fat?

 

You want to get rid of the flab. You also want to put on muscle. But you know that you can’t optimally (or even remotely) do both at the same time. So what plan should you embark on first?

The answer depends entirely on 1) your honest assessment of what you look like now, and 2) what you hope to look like in the not-too-distant future. Says Mike Wunsch, a certified strength and conditioning specialist and the director of fitness at Results Fitness in Santa Clarita, Calif.: “Every guy wants abs and arms” -- meaning cut abs and big arms. But, he adds, that’s like wanting to look like the chiseled bodybuilder … on the day of competition. “Ronnie Coleman doesn’t look like that 99 percent of the time,” he explains. “He’s usually 30 pounds heavier, having built up a ton of muscle before he goes into his cutting phase and then dehydrating just before the contest.”

Determine Your Goal

What you want to do is develop a sustainable physique that you can live with day in and day out. Take a look at yourself in the mirror: Do you have a decent amount of muscle but too much fat? Or are you pretty defined but lack any real muscle?

Once you’ve determined your goal, the next step is to embark on a fitness-and-nutrition plan that will change your shape accordingly. “If you have respectable strength, go right into a cutting program,” says Wunsch. “If you’ve got a six-pack but want to get bigger, you’re going to have to put on some fat along with that new muscle.” He gives an example of a 6-foot guy who’s a ripped 160, but who would rather be a ripped 190. To get there, he’s going to have to be a softer-looking 200 first.

First, Eat Right

If your goal is to get lean,
says Michael J. Sokol, a personal trainer recognized by the American Council on Exercise and owner of One-on-One Fitness in Chicago and Scottsdale, Ariz., you should consume six smaller balanced meals/snacks every two to three hours per day. Each one should contain protein (eggs, nuts, lean meat, fish, tuna, cottage cheese), quality, low-glycemic carbohydrates (wheat-berry bread, sweet potatoes, wheat pasta, fruit, brown/wild rice, steel-cut oats), dark veggies and plenty of water.

If your goal is to pack on the muscle, Wunsch advises getting at least 1 gram of protein per pound of body weight. Those six meals per day must be sizable, and one should include a post-workout whey protein recovery shake. While you don’t need to eat as “clean” (lower in fat, no junk) as those trying to get lean, you should still aim for nutrient-dense calories (e.g., a free-range, grass-fed hamburger with a whole baked potato, rather than a Whopper with fries). Just don’t skip those workouts -- with all that food, your body will be generating both muscle and fat, and intense workouts will ensure that much of it is the hard stuff.

Now: Build Strength or Burn Fat

Strength-building
is all about hoisting heavy weights approximately three workouts a week. A good approach is to do a push day (chest, shoulder and triceps), a pull day (back and biceps) and a leg day. Emphasize major compound moves (involving more than one muscle group), such as bench presses, incline presses, military presses and triceps presses on push days; pull-ups, deadlifts, back rows and straight bar curls on pull days; and squats, lunges and calf presses on leg days. Keep your reps below 10 per exercise, and rest 2 to 3 minutes between sets.

Meanwhile, says Wunsch, do zero cardio. “Aerobic conditioning has a negative influence on muscle gain,” he says. “You don’t want to tax the lean body mass that you’re trying to add.”

Wunsch’s fat-burning program is actually not that different, but everything is done at a quicker pace and with a higher rep range. While you’ll still do three workouts a week, the breakdown will be chest/back, shoulders/arms, and legs, which more freely allows you to superset exercises. For example, if you’re doing three supersets of push-ups/deadlifts, you’ll do the two exercises back-to-back (one superset) and rest 45 seconds between each superset. Aim to get at least 15 reps per exercise, per superset.

So, what about the cardio? Surprisingly, Wunsch doesn’t advocate standard cardio for fat loss either. “Running or biking is not what works best,” he says. “Look at the research.” Instead, you need to activate as many muscle fibers as possible with strength training to create a metabolic effect, and when you do any kind of fast movement, it should be done as equally timed intervals, such as sprints or heavy rope-jumping -- 20 seconds on, 20 seconds off -- for 10 to 20 minutes only.

Finally, whichever program you’re on, make sure to include some core conditioning. “Remember, your core is not for your six-pack,” says Wunsch. “It’s for resisting movement in your low spine and transferring energy from your upper body to your lower, and vice versa.” In other words, ditch the isolated crunches and go for total core moves, like ball roll-outs and planks.

Ronnie Coleman Photo by www.localfitness.com.au


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Ethan Boldt writes for such magazines as Men’s Health, SELF and Maximum Fitness. A former certified personal trainer, Boldt co-authored 5-Factor Fitness with celebrity trainer Harley Pasternak.

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Comments
Mike K. on 2011-05-05 at 11:05:43

"At least" 1 gram/day of protein per pound is WHEY too much! The CDC recommends much less. A MAX of .70 grams/day/lb. would be a much healthier target, even for an athlete - that would still be DOUBLE the CDC's recommended amount for an adult male.

chad k on 2011-05-19 at 09:26:29

mike i bet your chubby

Des on 2011-06-03 at 12:15:35

Really, chad? That's the best you've got? "Ignore science, I go by what I read online."

Mike L. on 2011-06-06 at 11:46:26

Hmmm. Let me think. The CDC. Aren't these the same people who pushed building our diet around cereals and grains? Read up a little first. Some of these "recommendations" from the CDC, FDA, etc, were business driven and not in the best interests of health.

Joe S. on 2011-06-15 at 11:48:05

I love how this article puts up that picture and discusses Ronnie C, but makes no mention of the use of Anabolic Steriods. You CANNOT get the body of Ronnie C without drugs. I would love to get cut and big, but with my mesomorph frame I could only ever hope to get at 200 pounds max when ripped. Look for realistic goals, not illegal pipe-dreams.

Orange Rhino on 2011-10-30 at 12:10:53

Skipping the cardio is a great way to have a heart attack.  Not many hot babes near the intensive care unit.

Rob B. on 2011-11-21 at 09:46:19

Skipping the cardio is not a big deal if you are performing exercise of some kind. A 45 minute power metabolic circuit or speed work consisting of quarter or half mile sprints is just as good or better than long distance runs or bikes.

No Roids on 2011-12-15 at 12:51:13

There is no such thing as a single plan that works for everyone. Cardio is a must, but it also has to fit in with the rest of your plan. If you do not consume enough protein, your body will literally cannibalize it self. This article has good points, but anyone thinking a single short article can provide all the information you need, is mistaken. P.S. You do not have to gain fat if you want to gain muscle. This is archaic thinking. Lean muscle burns fat. The steady building of lean muscle can be maintained removing the need for the extreme cutting phase after bulking. “Eat more and lift bigger rocks.”

Common Sense on 2011-12-16 at 08:56:38

This short article is about as close to the truth as you can get...packed with great information. If you follow any of the guidelines above you will achieve or could achieve your goal. With that said I can't believe all the negative comments on this article.  For anyone out there curious about how to lose weight, this is the truth. For anyone wanting to gain muscle this is the truth. For anyone who want's to get in shape or stronger, depending on your level of health this is true. However if you want to look like a body builder, you do have to take steroids...which while good for your esteem, is bad for your health and illegal.  Don't ever let anyone tell you more than these basic truths, there is no secret, or magic routine that will keep you from having to live a healthy lifestyle. Abs are made in the kitchen! Muscle are made in the gym and kitchen! And health is kept by education, and nutritional trial and error for ones own-self. Loved the article and printed it for my own file!!! 

James on 2012-01-09 at 07:16:06

I followed a simliar routine, I got from flex mag. It is pretty close to this articles suggestions. I would lift heavy and run for 30 mins on workout days, on rest days I would run for 45 mins and walk for 15 to cool down. My numbers don't lie. I was 5' 10 an 325 lbs when I started 2 yrs ago. In the first two weeks I lost 30lbs. After that the numbers stablized to about 2 to 3 lbs a week. The formula works. I'm now a much healther 265 lbs. I have not met my goal of 230 but I'm only 35 lbs away.

Meena on 2012-02-03 at 02:21:00

How much are u wklaing thoygh? I walk 5miles 5x a week and eat 1500 and lost 58 lbs in 4 months. No sugar no caffine. Caffine prevents ur body from burning fat. U burn the caffine instead. Good luckReferences :

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