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Fighting Made Easy
By
Jamie Wadman
http://boxingkent00.tripod.com
Now that I have your
attention lets talk about ways to condition your body in
preparation for combat. First of all, it is not easy,
you need to train HARD to achieve this objective. Combat
in sport or self defense is very stressful to the body
and highly anaerobic in nature therefore your training
should be, now, it is not feasible to spar or fight
every day of the week for safety reasons so we have to
find other intense exercises to get similar results.
When out running,
many combat athletes are happy with an easy 3-4 mile
jog, they feel that they are getting all the fitness
they need from this exercise alone, well nothing could
be further from the truth.
When we are fighting
in any combat sport we rely on our fast twitch muscle
fibers (the ones that are used for explosive power), but
when training at a slow pace we are promoting our slow
twitch muscle fibers (the ones used for long distance
running etc). We need to find the balance, anaerobic
training should be dominant (around 70-80%) with aerobic
training making up the rest of the equation, we know for
aerobic training we can do skipping, jogging and
swimming etc, but what about anaerobic training?
HIIT (high
intensity interval training)
This
means working for a period at full intensity (around 20
seconds) and then light exercise (active rest) for the
same period before repeating the cycle. The most obvious
way to incorporate this type of training is in running,
Lets look at an example:
At
first I recommend doing seven intervals, working your
way up to twelve, here is a sample six week programme:
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Week 1 - seven intervals
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Week 2 - eight intervals
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Week 3 - nine intervals
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Week 4 - ten intervals
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Week 5 - eleven intervals
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Week 6 - twelve intervals
As you
can see, there is clear progression in this type of
exercise, by just adding one extra interval a week, in
just six weeks you would have taken your anaerobic
fitness to new levels!
Try
this simple but VERY effective routine for the next six
weeks and notice the difference, it will blast any 4
mile jog out of the water!
WHAT ELSE?
You
can incorporate this training principle into any
workout, lets look at a few examples:
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Squat
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Punch out drills
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Star jumps
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Press ups
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Burpees
You
can do one exercise for the complete circuit i.e seven
intervals of squats, or you can use variety and hit
different body parts per interval. Lets see an example:
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Squats - 20 seconds
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Light jog on spot - 20 seconds
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Punch out drills - 20 seconds
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Light shadow boxing - 20 seconds
Thats
two intervals, repeat this double four times (for a
total of eight) and you have yourself another very
effective exercise. Here’s more:
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Burpees - 20 seconds
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Light jog - 20 seconds
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Star jumps - 20 seconds
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Light jumping jacks - 20 seconds
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Press ups - 20 seconds
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Light jog - 20 seconds
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Squats - 20 seconds
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Jumping jacks - 20 seconds
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Punch out drills - 20 seconds
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Shadow boxing - 20 seconds
That's five intervals, you can repeat some of the
exercises eight times or use different exercises, either
way make sure you enjoy it and it won't let you down!
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