Contrary to popular belief, losing or even maintaining weight while training for a marathon can be incredibly difficult.
Many marathoners either find they can\u2019t quite achieve the weight loss they want, or, on the flipside, they\u2019re able to lose weight, but at the cost of performance.
It\u2019s a hard balance to strike, but with the latest research it\u2019s becoming much easier.
The research in question revolves around the two concepts of Nutrition Periodization and Metabolic Efficiency Training. Together they increase the body's ability to use fat as fuel during exercise and thus optimize both body composition and performance.\xa0
Joining us in this episode is Bob Seebohar, the creator of these two concepts.
Bob is a registered dietitian, exercise physiologist, NSCA Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist, USA Triathlon Level III Elite Coach. He also traveled to the 2008 Summer Olympic Games as a sport dietitian for the US Olympic Team and the personal sport dietitian/exercise physiologist for the Olympic Triathlon Team.
In this episode, Bob walks us through his findings on dietary efficiency and sheds some light on how best to achieve both the body composition and race day results you\u2019re after.
Oh and for those wondering, here\u2019s a breakdown of the \u201calphabet soup\u201d behind Bob\u2019s name:
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M.S. - Bob has three college degrees. His undergraduate is in Exercise and Sport Science. His two graduate/Master's degrees are in Health and Exercise Science, and Food Science and Human Nutrition. He successfully defended two theses during his graduate studies and knows his way around interpreting research and aligning it with real-life applications.
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R.D. - Registered Dietitian. A college degree studying food science and human nutrition is required to be able to sit for this national examination. Of course, this is after successfully completing a 9 - 12-month nutrition internship after graduation.
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C.S.S.D. - Board Certified Specialist in Sports Dietetics. A certification only given to Registered Dietitians who have years of experience working with athletes. A rigorous national examination must be passed and frequent continuing education credits upheld to acquire and maintain this certification.
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C.S.C.S. - Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist through the National Strength and Conditioning Association. Bob has worked as a trainer/strength coach since the mid 1990's and specializes in creating strength programs for endurance athletes.
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M.E.T.S - Metabolic Efficiency Training Specialist. Bob explains this in his interview. :)
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Questions Bob is asked:
5:06 Can you tell us about who you are and what you do?
7:45 What is Metabolic Efficiency Training and how does it relate to your concept of Nutrition Periodization?
11:50 How does Nutrition Periodization come into play with all the training variability runners experience?
14:34 How does Metabolic Efficiency Training work with runners who are trying to lose weight while increasing performance?
21:43 Why does eating become less intuitive to us over time?
24:40 How difficult is it for your athletes to change their nutrition philosophy?
27:45 How can runners adjust their macronutrient intake ratios to use fat as fuel more efficiently?
32:40 What is your opinion of Low-Fat, High-Carb and other \u2018extreme\u2019 diets?
39:01 Have you been able to get significant research yet into the role genetics plays with this?
40:39 Is the long-term goal to see where trends are and individualize athletes\u2019 diets based on gender, genetics, etc.?
45:14 Has there been any research on Nutrition Periodization and how it relates to menstrual cycles and menopause?
47:06 What do you mean by the \u2018Metabolic Efficiency Point\u2019?
53:28 How would someone go about manipulating this efficiency point via nutrition?
56:54 Is it hard to do Metabolic Efficiency Training with Vegan, Vegetarian and Paleo diets?
1:00:50 Do you offer personal consultations?
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Quotes by Bob:
\u201cEven for the leanest of the lean marathon runner, these elites that are almost breaking the 2-hour barrier, they still have about 30,000 calories of fat in their body but we\u2019re very limited in our carbohydrate stores.\u201d
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\u201cMetabolic Efficiency Training is really looking at the opportunity to use the fat that we have stored already, preserve our very limited carbohydrate stores and do that by altering the daily nutrition plan.\u201d
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\u201cNutrition Periodization is simply combining the right type and amount of nutrition to support physical training. So when you\u2019re going through the ebbs and flows of physical training (running), you go through ebbs and flows of nutritional support.\u201d
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\u201cThe best thing about Metabolic Efficiency Training is that it\u2019s not a diet. The worst thing about it is that it\u2019s not a diet.\u201d
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\u201cWhen we\u2019re young kids, we have this intuitive eating; we eat when we\u2019re hungry, we stop when we\u2019re not hungry. \u2026The environment shapes us\u2026 into becoming less intuitive eaters and more either habitual eaters\u2026 or (more) emotional eaters.\u201d
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Take a Listen on Your Next Run
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Mentioned in this podcast:
Book: Nutrition Periodization for Athletes: Taking Traditional Sports Nutrition to the Next Level
Bob's Author page on Amazon.com