cld617 said:Running is not killing your squat potential at those weights/run times. With proper training, you should be able to work up to a double bodyweight squat and still pull off a 20 min 5k before you have to sacrifice one for another.
cld617 said:Running is not killing your squat potential at those weights/run times. With proper training, you should be able to work up to a double bodyweight squat and still pull off a 20 min 5k before you have to sacrifice one for another.
cld617 said:The whole point is to not have muscle's which have only been trained for strength/hypertrophy, hence the concurrent strength and aerobic/anaerobic training programming everyone should be on who wishes to build strength. A 180lb lifter who trains a 360lb squat does not require leg and torso size of a powerlifter competing to lift 600lbs, so his structure does not inhibit him from attaining those strength levels as well as respectable run times, including runs of 10k+. I'm not saying he should be breaking records, but he is fully capable of being at the front of the pack on a 10k run among your average 6' 180lb infantry soldiers. It's all about proper training, diet and training more than one facet of fitness exclusively to create tissue that adapts to the demands.
cld617 said:No, you posted poor information and I chose to correct it so new people trying to gain knowledge didn't think it was true. There's no gospel when it comes to fitness, but there is misinformation that makes its rounds.
You would be betting very, very wrong. Many olympic lifters can snatch twice their weight, squatting twice your weight is something any reasonably trained person should be doing a few years into lifting. Not trying to start a pecker measuring contest here, I just despise this attitude that you need to give up one for the other. Is that level of fitness required for the military? Of course not, but excuses that set limitations should be kept to yourself.
Bbmoveup said:Let’s say a marathon runner trains and trains for marathons.... you would say he should still squat 2X their weight. Ok :
cld617 said:Look up Alex Viada. No there is nothing physically holding someone back from being able to both run a marathon, and squat double bodyweight, Alex squats well over that and does ultramarathons, triathlons and long distance cycles. Is he or someone else who trains both disciplines going to be a record setter? Nope, but that does not prevent him from being capable in both. Just as squatting 2x+ bodyweight does not prevent people in the military from running fast times as compared with their peers. I accept that focusing on one hinders you in another area, I do not accept the claims that getting above a novice level 200lb squat is going to hurt you from progressing in your running if you're not an extremely fast runner. You're not going to be knocking out 16 minute 5k's, but you're certainly capable of breaking into 18's.
Army to scrap traditional pushups, situps as part of fitness test
By Douglas Ernst - The Washington Times - Tuesday, July 10, 2018
Military officials say the U.S. Army will roll out its new and improved fitness test by October 2020.
The Army Physical Fitness Test that soldiers have known since the 1980s — 2 minutes of pushups; 2 minutes of situps; the 2-mile run — will be retired before the end of the decade. While the 2-mile run will still conclude the assessment, five other events seen as a better predictor of successfully completing combat tasks have been added.
“The Army Combat Fitness Test [ACFT] will ignite a generational, cultural change in Army fitness and become a cornerstone of individual Soldier combat readiness,” Maj. Gen. Malcolm Frost, commander of the Army’s Center of Initial Military Training, said Monday. “It will reduce attrition and it will reduce musculoskeletal injuries and actually save, in the long run, the Army a heck of a lot of money.”
ACFT’s events include:
Strength deadlift: “With a proposed weight range of 120 to 420 pounds … ACFT will require Soldiers to perform a three-repetition maximum deadlift … and the weights will be increased.”
Standing power throw: “Soldiers toss a 10-pound ball backward as far as possible to test muscular explosive power that may be needed to lift themselves or a fellow Soldier up over an obstacle or to move rapidly across uneven terrain.”
Hand-release pushups: “Soldiers start in the prone position and do a traditional pushup, but when at the down position they release their hands and arms from contact with the ground and then reset to do another pushup.”
Sprint/drag/carry: “Soldiers will perform sprints, drag a sled weighing 90 pounds, and then hand-carry two 40-pound kettlebell weights.”
Leg tuck: “Soldiers lift their legs up and down to touch their knees/thighs to their elbows as many times as they can.”
2-mile run.
“The current PT test is only a 40 percent predictor of success for performing in combat and executing warrior tasks and battle drills,” Maj. Gen. Frost said, Army News Service reported. “This test is approximately an 80 percent predictor of performing based on our ability to test the physical components of combat fitness.”
Michael McGurk, director of research and analysis at Center for Initial Military Training, told ANS that scoring would differ depending on each soldier’s military occupational specialty.
“The more physically challenging your MOS, the more you’ll be required to do at the minimum levels,” Mr. McGurk said. “In 1980, running shoes were relatively a new invention. The Army was still running in boots for the PT test back then. Change is difficult, but we’re an Army that adapts well to change.”
Over 2,000 soldiers have already taken the test and provided feedback to Army Training and Doctrine Command and Forces Command, ANS reported.
Thucydides said:TheUS Army is instituting a new fitness test. Interestingly, in the article it states the old fitness test (pushups, sit-ups, 2 mile run) is a "40% predictor" of success in performing field tasks:
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/jul/10/armys-new-fitness-test-ready-by-2020-officials-wan/?utm_source=Boomtrain&utm_medium=manual&utm_campaign=20171227&utm_term=newsletter&utm_content=morning
Volidyr said:Hi daftandbarmy,
Thanks for the 10/10 treadmill workout. Very interesting! I will give it a try tomorrow!