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Sunday, 16 December 2012

What is Tabata?

A short, good article which gives a relevant summary of the Tabata training:
 
Extract:
"Incorporate intense 4-minute workouts into a max-effort 15-minute session
Tabata training sessions are high-intensity intervals, incorporating hardcore 20-second bursts of exercise split up by 10 seconds of rest. Exercises include anything from squats to high-knees. Repeat these 30-second routines for eight bouts and you're done - phew!
Tabata isn’t the latest fad or fitness gimmick, but based on a scientific study, carried out by Dr Izumi Tabata. Dr Tabata set out to investigate the minimum amount of training needed to increase fitness."

 
Full article: http://uk.lifestyle.yahoo.com/tabata-131700975.html
 

Friday, 30 November 2012

Tabata: high intensity, fast results

In this article, the author describes :
"With short, all-out blasts of energy and even shorter breaks, the 30-minute workout technique is drawing clients who want results fast."
So usual Tabata is only 4mn, but including warm up and cool, plus 2 or 3 sets of Tabata, you can work out around 30mn;
Interestingly, one fitness manager says ""We've used interval training before, but we started offering Tabata classes in January because we were getting so many requests," . So the demand is there and increasing! No surprise, Tabata works
!
As usual however, the exercises chosen are not always intense enough or sollicitate enough large muscle groups to reach the 170% of VO2max, so the sessions are probably more like a HIIT:
"Adherents use four or five different exercises during a workout, and often different ones during the next one. Often included are pushups, situps, squats, chin pulls, punches, kicks, sprinting in place, riding stationary bikes and lifting weights."
 
Full article:
 
 

Saturday, 17 November 2012

What are Tabata workouts? Should I be doing them at the gym?

The question: A friend keeps on telling me that Tabata workouts are the best way to lose weight. What do you think of them?
 
Read the answer in the article:
 
But once again the Tabata protocol is misunderstood:
 
"Any exercise can be made into a Tabata interval. At home, or in a hotel room, make a Tabata set out of jumping jacks or running the hotel stairs. At the park, use a bench to do step-ups or push-ups. At the gym, you have tons of equipment to choose from, so be creative!"

No, any exercise cannot be used, else it is not Tabata..because to reach 170% of VO2max you need to activate large muscles groups, and at least 2/3 of your muscles. Tabata exercice which doesn't use the legs is unlikely to trigger the intensity required. And did I mention that push-ups are not appropriate for Tabata? :-)
 
 

Tabata in the Three hot fitness trends for 2013

Extract:
 
"HIIT - or High-Intensity Interval Training: The buzz over HIIT is only going to get stronger next year, bloggers say, as the principle of short, quick, intense workouts gets applied to everything from track drills to swimming to push-ups. One of the hottest HIIT workouts is known as Tabata style: you work at maximum effort for 20 seconds, then rest for 10 seconds, then repeat. Expect dizziness. "And because it offers valid, proven fitness benefits, Tabata-style interval training will start popping up in boot camp classes, kettlebell formats, and spinning workouts this year," writesThe Organic Triathlete & Runner. "It can also be used in muscle sculpting classes as a ‘finisher' for the lower body, where you do a Tabata of jump squats and a ‘finisher' for the upper body, where you do a Tabata of pushups."
 
 
But... Stop thinking that doing push-ups for Tabata! You cannot reach 170% of VO2max!!
 
 

Monday, 12 November 2012

15-Minute Double Tabata Workout

In this article, I think the author makes a confusion between interval training and Tabata:
 
Have you ever heard of a Tabata? They’re a great way to maximize your workout if you’re short on time. A Tabata is basically interval training. For 20 seconds, you perform an exercise at maximum intensity, which is then followed by 10 seconds of rest and repeated 8 times for a total of four minutes. The total time for the workout below, including warm-up and cool-down, is just 15 minutes, but it will definitely get your heart-pumping and burn calories!
 
Once again, the only part of the Tabata protocol is the 20/10 seconds for 8 times, and the intensity (170% of VO2max) is forgotten!
 
Consequently, the work-out includes... sit-ups or push-ups...How many times should I repeat that you cannot get 170% of VO2 max with push-ups or even worse sit-ups...
 
Anyhow, it is an initiation to HIIT and Tabata. Later, more intense exercices can be replaced to benefit fully from Tabata. What do you think?
 

Wednesday, 7 November 2012

Tabata called a fat-burning 'miracle'

 
Tabata training is popular, and more and more gym schedules specific Tabata class work-out to benefit from this incredible method.
 
And people love it apparently!
"It's caught on like wildfire," says Assael, who, after reading about Tabata a year ago, incorporated it into her exercise boot camps and then broke it out into a class of its own. "People are always looking for the next new thing to try. They get bored easily. But Tabata is never boring. And it allows you to get a lot of work done in a short amount of time."
 
And it works:
 
Cassandra Threatt, 48, of Martinez, is a firm believer, proudly saying that she has dropped two dress sizes since starting Assael's classes in June.
"I've done various workouts for years, but (Tabata) has done more to boost my metabolism," she says. "And I can really tell the difference. I've tightened up parts of my body that I couldn't before."

Full article here:
http://www.mercurynews.com/health/ci_21905084/tabata-called-fat-burning-miracle

 

Friday, 26 October 2012

EXCLUSIVE: The Secrets To Why Teresa Giudice Is So Tough

Guess what? Her coach makes her doing Tabata training!
 
"One of the secrets she uses with Teresa is Tabata training, which is 20 seconds of one exercise with 10 seconds of rest. Nicole says, ‘This will get your heart rate through the roof and I am constantly changing up Teresa’s routine. Teresa works out at least five days a week. The quote that I live by is ‘Pain is weakness leaving the body.’
 
Full article:
 
 
 
 
 

Tuesday, 16 October 2012

This 19-minute workout gets your heart pumping

Another kind of interval work-out, supposidely based on Tabata principle.
However, once again as you can see in the video, this is not Tabata! The intervals are based on 20s on, and 10s off (rest). But the exercises chosen are definitely not taxing enough to reach 170% of VO2max (and for abs for instance, I doubt it can even reach more than 70%...)
Judge yourself, it's nevertheless a good interval training!
 

 

Tuesday, 9 October 2012

Train like a Navy Seal

In this article, the training is based on TRX and the last exercice is based on "Tabata":
 
"WE ALL KNOW Navy Seals are the most extreme of the hard core, and with fitness trends getting progressively more intense, it was only a matter of time before someone thought regular people should train like Navy Seals. Of course we should.We finished the class with a sequence called Tapata interval training, which is 20 seconds of high-intensity squats or other aerobic activity, with 10 seconds of rest, repeated eight times. By the end, I was ready to toss those TRX straps aside."
 
 
 
 
 

Wednesday, 3 October 2012

Wellness: Tabata Training

Is the Tabata training a good thing? Do you think that pushing your body to the max is a good idea?
In this article, the author explains:
 
 
“This training is very taxing on all levels, including cellular,” Writer says. “Your body was healing from the damage to the muscular, endocrine, and nervous systems and returning to its equilibrium state.” Can all this damage be a good thing? Writer says yes: “When you train at a high intensity, you are retraining your body to become a more efficient machine.” It takes a little adjusting at first, but eventually, that damage means I’ll burn more calories during exercise and afterward at rest.
According to Writer, the difference is load. The intensity of these shorter intervals is so much greater that they’re more effective than a normal workout. Hour-long cycling classes are my usual go-to exercise, but this 30-minute class was much more taxing. Maybe it’s time to switch up the routine for good.

Full article: http://www.5280.com/blogs/2012/09/26/wellness-tabata-training