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Archive for the ‘nutrition’ Category


The Six BJJ Supplements That Really Work

Monday, January 10th, 2011

When it comes to supplements, most people either take nothing at all or far too many!

And most serious grapplers go through a phase of taking tons of supplements in hopes of boosting their jiu-jitsu game.

I went supplement-crazy myself about 8 years ago.   I was taking at least 50 pills and tablets each day, including thrice-daily multivitamins… Selenium… Reishi extract… Chromium picolinate… Turmeric extract… Branched chain amino acids… Phosphatidyl serine… Etc.  Etc.  Etc.  The list went on and on.  And I continued taking all these supplements for about 6 months

So what was the effect of all these supplements?  Did I get bigger?  Stronger?  Faster?  Did my jiu-jitsu game jump up a full belt level?

No! Despite the placebo effect (more on that later) I didn’t notice ANY improvements to my strength, energy levels or recovery times.

But I did spend oodles of money on various pills, tablets and powders…

Probably the only real effect was that my urine became very expensive!

Why do so many people take so many different kinds of supplements?  Here’s a few reasons off the top of my head:

1 – Wishful Thinking. Wouldn’t it just be easier if you could pop a few pills every day rather than doing the hard work to maintain a healthy diet, putting in time under heavy iron and doing cardio,

2 – Advertising. Bodybuilding magazines and fitness websites exist in order to sell supplements. I’ve followed this industry for the last 20 years and there’s ALWAYS the next best thing.  Last week it was fermented Siberian yak toenail clippings, and this week it’s 2,3-dimethyl-nitro-killyouquick.

These magazines and websites wouldn’t exist if they didn’t sell supplements.  It’s the advertising revenue that keeps them afloat and provides them with a reason for being.

But it’s not only the advertisements themselves – you can’t trust the ‘articles’ either.  Even if they’re not getting kickbacks directly for endorsing various products, the authors of these articles are financially tied to the well-being of the magazine or website.

3 – The Placebo Effect.   The placebo effect is known from medicine when a doctor ‘prescribes’ sugar pills to a patient and that person then experiences all sorts of positive results and improvements.

Basically a placebo is a drug (or a supplement) that works just because you think it’s going to work, not because of anything about the drug itself.

Scientific American summed it up by saying “belief is powerful medicine, even if the treatment itself is a sham.”

And every study that has ever looked for a placebo effect has found one…

The placebo effect is huge when it comes to sports supplements.  For example, there’s nothing more convincing than a friend who swears that a certain new product is ‘the bomb’ and urges you to try it too!

If someone tells you that extract of Saccharum edule helped 50 lbs onto their bench press then you might just want to rush out and buy yourself a bucket of that supplement too.  But Saccharum edule extract is just another name for table sugar….

4 – Faulty Research.  The wild claims made by the supplement companies and their cronies are usually backed up by so-called ‘research.’  But when you look at it more closely, this research is usually a just a single study (or a cherry-picked selection of studies which all back up the claims being made).

But a single study proves nothing!  And what’s even worse is that these studies are often small, poorly designed and improperly controlled experiments that nobody else has ever managed to duplicate.

And, by the way, the same people who did the study also own the company making the supplement…

That’s why in science nothing is ever proven until many different and unbiased researchers have found the same result.

I’ve spent enough time in academia and doing research to know how easy it would be for an unscrupulous individual to tamper with the results of a study to make it ‘prove’ whatever they want it to prove.

I could go on, but I think I’ve made my point.  When it comes to claims about sports supplements I urge EXTREME SKEPTICISM!!!  Distrust everybody

So, are there any good supplements you should be taking?

I recently had a conversation with Dr. Krista Scott-Dixon Ph.D. on the  topic of the science behind supplements.  We were trying to figure out which sports supplements have rock-solid track records.

(By the way, Krista is the research director for the Healthy Food Bank and runs the strength training site Stumptuous.com.  So she knows her nutrition inside-out.    And she also trains and competes in BJJ and grappling!)

Here’s Krista’s feedback about some of the supplements which have strong evidence for really working in a sports-enhancement context (plus my own comments)!

“Hi Stephan!

In order of preference, the supplements that have real science behind them are the following:

1. Colourful fruits and veggies (e.g. dark berries, dark leafy greens, beets, red grapefruit, etc.),

Stephan’s note: Absolutely!!!  The people I know who eat the least vegetables tend to have the MOST health problems.  And just for the record, potatoes and rice don’t count as vegetables…

2. Protein from varied sources – check (baseline 0.75 g/lb day for average people; 1 g/lb per day for athletes).

Stephan’s Note: that means if you’re an actively training 200 lb grappler then you should be consuming about 200 grams of protein every day.

3. Fish oil – yes, very useful. (5-15 g daily)

Stephan’s note: this is a LOT more fish oil than most people take.  Some recent studies suggest that you should be taking 900 mg of DHA, which is a component of fish oil, daily.  But the average fish oil capsule only contains about 100 mg of DHA, which means that you have to take about 9 capsules a day to get your DHA…

4. Vitamin D – 2000-4000 IU daily in the winter, purposeful sun exposure in summer.

Stephan’s note:  in the winter months I take about four vitamin D tablets a day, which works out to 4000 IU.  You definitely need Vitamin D if you live in northern climes, but don’t overdo it with this one – it IS possible to poison yourself with this vitamin if you take too much of it.

5. Creatine for athletes doing strength/power work.

Stephan’s note: I personally don’t take creatine all that often unless I’m trying to get ready for a specific event.  Also note that some people don’t respond to creatine, but for most people supplementing with 2 grams a day for a month will add about 5 lbs and a fair bit of strength if they’re also weightlifting at the same time.

6. Caffeine in SMALL doses (50-100 mg, about 1/2 to 3/4 cup coffee), 1 hour before training.

Stephan’s note: I don’t drink coffee, but if you’ve ever met me then you know that I’ve got a thing for dark chocolate.  So I guess I’m ‘supplementing’ with caffeine in my own way

There are other supplements of course.  For example, BCAAs (Branch Chain Amino Acids) are definitely well corroborated, but if folks get the first four items I mentioned right (or, frankly, even just the first two items), then things like BCAA are really just gravy. In my experience, almost nobody, even athletes, is really even doing #1 and #2 properly. Anyone who nails #1 and #2 consistently and correctly should see a significant increase in performance, wellbeing, and recovery.

And the big one, that trumps pretty much all others: SLEEP. If you get 30-60 min more sleep per night consistently, it kicks the ass of nearly any supplement! For the dudes in your audience, sleep bumps up regular endogeneous testosterone production more than just about anything else.”

Lose Fat or Gain Muscle First?

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010
Although I take my own nutrition very seriously, I don’t normally get involved in the weight loss field – it’s just not my area of specialization (‘dammit Jim, I’m a grappler, not a nutritionist…’).

But once in a while I can’t resist, so here’s a recent exchange I had with a loyal reader:

Q: “Hey, I have a question.  I am six feet tall and I barely weigh 180 pounds, but my body fat is like 30% body fat.  I would like to fight MMA as a middleweight (which is 185lbs)  but my question is should I first lose body fat and then put on more muscle mass, or just gain more weight.”

A: I am always loath to dispense specific fitness and nutrition advice unless I know someone personally.  Partially this is because I’m NOT a nutritionist, and NOT a doctor.  And coming up with definitive answers is really difficult because different people start at such incredibly different baselines when it comes to fitness and knowledge about fitness.

That being said, here’s some very general advice…

I think that your overall goal – to reduce your body fat percentage before competing in MMA – is exactly correct.  By and large, weight from bodyfat doesn’t help you punch, kick, or throw.  (It may help you when you’re on top if you’re grappling, but having it be ‘good weight’ as opposed to ‘bad weight’ is still a much, much better solution!)

Opinions vary on whether one should: A) bulk up first (i.e. put on muscle and fat) and then cut down, or B) lean out first (reduce body fat) and then bulk up while stay lean.

But regardless of which option you go for, the single-most important thing is to get your DIET under control first.

And you need to find a way to make sustainable changes to your diet.  Going on a crash diet and losing a bunch of weight isn’t healthy, and also means you’d be losing both fat and muscle.

Think about making one major change a week, for example:

  • week one – no more soda, only water and non-sweetened teas,
  • week two – tripling your fresh vegetable intake (yes, I really do mean triple),
  • week three – ensuring adequate daily protein,
  • week four – eating five small meals a day instead of two or three monster meals,
  • etc.

Cleaning up your diet WILL be a major struggle, but trust me, it’s the single best thing you can do for your grappling, your MMA career and your general health.

If you clean up your diet your weight may go up or down – it depends on how much muscle you gain while you’re losing fat – but the important thing is that your body composition (% body fat) should improve.

Eventually you’ll also regular weight training and cardio sessions to your routine, and then you’ll get you into killer shape.  Good luck with your transformation.

My 23 Year Nutritional Streak, Broken…

Sunday, November 1st, 2009

I have this thing against Mc Donalds’ Restaurants. It’s partially the taste, partially the poor nutritional quality of the food, and partially because the multinational logo of “billions and billions served” drives me nuts.

And I’ve felt like this a long time. In fact, when I was 12 years old I made up my mind not to eat at Mc Donald’s ever again.

I was a stubborn little tyke, and grew up to be a stubborn man. So I actually went for 23 years without eating any food from the golden arches. Not fries, not an ice cream, not a Big Mac.

I’ve only fallen off the wagon once since I made that decision as a pre-teen. And that happened six years ago when I was part of the emergency response to a flooded town zone. We were evacuating the citizens, setting up pumps, and wading around in cold, hip deep water for hours.

Eventually the fire chief showed up with food and – you guessed it – it was from Mc Donald’s.

I was cold. I was starving. I ate the food.

My system survived the assault of the yellow arches, but now I’ve had to start my crusade from the beginning again. As a result I’ve been Mc Donald’s free for six years now.

Now I’m not a saint when it comes to nutrition. I indulge in junk food occasionally. And anyone who knows me also knows that I couldn’t resist dark chocolate if my life depended on it.

But in the final analysis, I think I’m fairly nutrition conscious. I do a pretty good job of eating healthy food, even a lot of organic food, at least most of the time.

In fact, I think that nutrition is one of the most neglected aspects of grappling training. This is ironic, because it’s actually one of the training areas in which you have the most control. And the results are relatively immediate and altogether remarkable.

When it comes to performance you can’t do much about your genetics. You got what you got from your parents, and now you’re stuck with it (at least until gene-splicing technology takes a big jump forward).

You also may not have control over how often you train. Maybe hitting the mats twice a week is all you can get away with and not end up divorced.

And depending on your circumstances, you may not even have control over where you train and who you train with. if you live in a small town, for example, then your school may be the only show in town.

But nobody is forcing you to eat junk food, or to guzzle a giant soda, or to swing through the Mc Donald’s drive through on a daily basis (except if you’re in a flood zone).

Now there are a million miracle diets and eating plans out there. Each one of them claims to be the sole answer, and most of them contradict each other. But almost all experts agree on a few things, like:

  • sugar is bad for you,
  • excessive refined starches (flour, rice, etc) are bad for you,
  • deep-fried food is bad for you,
  • non-deep fried vegetables are good for you (and you should eat twice as many as you do now),
  • you should have a balanced diet with protein, carbohydrates and healthy fats,
  • you should drink lots of water,
  • you should have a source of Omega 3 fatty acids (like in fish oils),
  • you should eat (or drink) a mixture of carbohydrates and protein soon after you finish a workout,
  • etc.

I wouldn’t be going on and on about this, if I didn’t think that nutrition wasn’t so damn important to athletic performance. In a sense, nutrition is the very cornerstone of athletic performance.

In fact, if you clean up your diet you’ll be able to
  • train harder
  • recover faster
  • feel better
  • get injured less often
  • get sick less often
  • live longer

It amazes me how many people eat like crap and then spend hundreds of dollars on supplements. There are only a very few supplements that work, and even then good nutrition wins out over good supplements every single time.

If you’re not getting the nutrients you need, and if you’re not staying away from the bad stuff, then you’ll never reach your true potential in this sport!

P.S. One cool (and free) resource on the subject of nutrition is Billy Hofacker’s Ultimate Quick-Start Recipe Guide. Billy operates trainingformmafitness.com, and sends out a very informative training newsletter, so he understands the nutritional needs of grapplers.

Just click on the link below to download his recipe guide:

http://www.trainingformmafitness.com/support-files/ultimate-quick-start-recipe-guide.pdf

Then if you like what you get then go and sign up for his newsletter too!

How to Stay Fit on Holiday

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009
The view of the ocean from the hills above my cabaña

How many people do you know who gained 10 lbs or more over a relatively short trip to an all-inclusive resort, or a week of Christmas celebration? I bet it’s a fair number.

Well I’ve just come back from 7 days in the sunny Caribbean and had to put this to the test. I thought I’d share some ideas about staying ready for returning to training, even while you’re away from your regular training routine.

Here are my candidates for the four top factors creating the fitness implosions (and decrease in grappling skills) that often happen to both regular people and athletic types while they’re away on holidays:

1, Lack of general exercise
2, Over-eating
3, Over-drinking
4, Lack of sports-specific training

Let’s consider each of these in turn…

    1. LACK OF GENERAL EXERCISE

    On a holiday it’s often a struggle to get your exercise gear on and get sweaty. There are a lot of factors conspiring to keep you on the couch or on the poolside deck chair.

    That’s why you have to make getting some sort of exercise a priority. It doesn’t need to be long or super intense – it just needs to be something.

    Personally my goal when I’m on holidays is to get some sort of cardiovascular, muscular endurance or strength-based exercise every second day. Sometimes this gets stretched out a bit, and three days go by without an exercise session, but any more than that and I start to go off the deep end.

    Exercising while you’re traveling or visiting new locations ISN’T about improving your fitness level. You just don’t want your body to forget what you’re expecting it to do when you get back to your regular life and training routine.

    It’s great if you can find a gym, but that’s not always possible. That’s why I always bring my running shoes. You can almost always go for a quick run, and then find a place to do some pushups and pullups.

    On this last seven day beach vacation I only got in three exercise sessions:

    1, a six kilometer jog. Foolishly I did this at the hottest part of a of a scorchingly hot day on the open asphalt road, so this was no time to push myself. After the run I spent a few minutes doing bodyweight calisthenics (pushups, pullups, etc.)
    2, a seven kilometer run. This was after I had acclimatized to the heat a bit, and I also didn’t go during the hottest part of the day, so I could push myself a little bit harder.
    3, a short-and-easy bodyweight-only workout.

      I know, it’s not very impressive. Like I said earlier though – the goal at during this sessions wasn’t to improve my fitness level. I just want to guard against being totally out of the fitness loop when I get back to my regular world.

      2. OVER-EATING

      Most people’s day-to-day lives are busy, and that means that they don’t have hours and hours to stuff their faces. Transplant these same people onto a cruise ship with an all-you-can-eat buffet and you’ll often see some truly gluttonous behavior!

      This is one of many reasons that I don’t like staying at all-inclusive resorts, but it’s also a problem if you’re visiting people who think that hospitality means never having an empty bowl of chip dip.

      So if you want to be ready to get back to the mats and not feel truly gross after the holiday is over, then you somehow have to keep the recreational eating and general gluttony under control.

      Find something to amuse you on your holiday other than eating…

      3. OVER-DRINKING

      Let’s be honest – for a lot of people being on holiday means drinking. And drinking. And drinking…

      Obviously bingeing on alcohol can have pretty serious health consequences. But even if you don’t come down with cirrhosis of the liver then keep in mind that most alcoholic drinks have a LOT of calories.

      For example, a 12 oz beer has around 150 quick-to-absorb calories. Given that most of our caloric requirements are somewhere in the 2000 to 3000 calorie per day range, it’s easy to see how a few beers a day can significantly bump your total caloric intake.

      The amount of calories in mixed drinks and cocktails are even worse.

      When it comes to advice in this area, you’ve really got to find your own way. I don’t drink (at all), so I’m not the best person to offer advice in this area other than preaching moderation or abstinence.

      Just remember that increased calories from alcohol, combined with overeating and lack of exercise means crappy performance on the mats.

      4. LACK OF SPORTS-SPECIFIC TRAINING

      The first three points are applicable to just about everyone who wants to avoid the holiday bulge.

      However anyone doing BJJ or submission grappling knows that grappling skills also have a shelf life. If you stop training for a week or two then your timing, sensitivity and coordination also start heading south.

      Part of the solution is to keep working your skills, even though you’re away from your regular training environment. For some ideas you can check out what to do when schools and training partners are hard to find.

      On my last trip my plan was to watch a few BJJ instructional DVDs that I own but haven’t had the time to watch yet.

      I know that watching competition or instructional footage keeps my brain thinking about grappling. This in turn helps keep me sharp even when I can’t physically train, and has even led to some technical breakthroughs for me.

      (As a side note I should mention that your body has neurons that fire both when your DO something and when you WATCH something. These are called mirror neurons and some people think that they’re very, very important for the learning process. In any case, this suggests that watching BJJ might be a heck of lot better than not doing any BJJ at all.)

      Unfortunately my plan to use mirror neuron stimulation to achieve world grappling domination failed when my portable DVD player broke, but it was still a good idea…

      There’s an old joke that goes “take my advice – I’m not using it…”

      Well in this case I actually followed my most of my own advice (other than the DVD watching)! Hopefully sharing my advice helps someone avoid the post-holiday grappling blues!

      And finally, here’s a video I shot while backpacking around the Pacific Coast of Mexico. Watch me suffer during the Prisoner Workout and Superlegs!