Pavel Tsatsouline: Building Endurance the Right Way

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  • Опубликовано: 21 дек 2024

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  • @johnpedouify
    @johnpedouify 4 года назад +23712

    Pavel looks like a fusion of David Goggins and Joe Rogan

  • @CartoonzUniverseTz
    @CartoonzUniverseTz 5 лет назад +18499

    If you’re an athlete, this guy just summarized a whole book on fitness for you in 10mins

    • @jasonosunkoya
      @jasonosunkoya 5 лет назад +809

      Literally condensed down the idea of base then build training. Pretty dope, although these days there aren't many amateur athletes who aren't aware of all this now.

    • @SamuelGomes-ed8ux
      @SamuelGomes-ed8ux 5 лет назад +22

      Yeah pretty nice

    • @nihlify
      @nihlify 5 лет назад +337

      @@jasonosunkoya people know this but a lot don't follow it.

    • @MrBrooklyn456
      @MrBrooklyn456 5 лет назад +136

      Jason Osunkoya sorry can you summarize what he meant. I’m just starting off training and need some advice

    • @shavneelnand1976
      @shavneelnand1976 5 лет назад +54

      Really can someone help with a simplified understanding or what to search up in this discussion

  • @jdw6580
    @jdw6580 5 лет назад +18637

    You know a guest is informative when you don't hear Joe say a single word for 8 minutes straight.

    • @gorkyd7912
      @gorkyd7912 5 лет назад +681

      Or he was too busy communicating with extraterrestrials using DMT and didn't say anything for 8 minutes.

    • @IrLosin
      @IrLosin 5 лет назад +102

      I had the same, When It ended I thought "what 10 minutes passed already??"

    • @elvisitor3225
      @elvisitor3225 5 лет назад +149

      and he didn't even sniff once into the mic...

    • @anujjyothykumar4667
      @anujjyothykumar4667 5 лет назад +59

      Watch the Tyson fury podcast. Didn't say a word for 10 mins straight. I was in tears listening to it

    • @lukerennie2991
      @lukerennie2991 4 года назад +4

      Hahaha On fucking point sir 👏

  • @MoosaIslamic
    @MoosaIslamic 3 года назад +3577

    Summary:
    -> Two types of endurance: cardio and muscular. Muscular more crucial. Train intensely, for 30-40 mins+, but never train above 90%.
    1. Cardio (lesser priority, still important):
    => AIM: Develop larger heart (higher stroke vol.)
    - Method 1 (best for most) is steady state (~70% Max.HR), enough where you can talk to your buddy.
    - Method 2 is interval training* (85-90%), but should be used sparsely, and after steady state.
    -Method 3 is dynamic exercises 80-90%, in repeat, and then walk around drop back to 60-65%.
    2. Muscular (larger priority):
    => AIM: Develop mitochondria in different types of muscle cells, to not make acid accumulation toxic.
    - Method 1 (slow fibre): Running right below anaerobic threshold (failing talk test)
    - Method 2 (fast fibre): Repeat training* Sprint intensely just until slight fatigue, but before any actual fatigue, then walk to ordinary period, sprint intensely again, walk, and repeat.
    Notes:
    *Three types of rest periods between exercise define types of training:
    1. Stress period - next set is more difficult (Interval). Low-rest
    2. Super-compensation - next set after long rest is not worse, possibly easier.
    3. Ordinary period - same level of performance (repeat) - Medium rest

    • @diantevonberg6293
      @diantevonberg6293 3 года назад +44

      Thank you

    • @dhldt1021
      @dhldt1021 3 года назад +16

      Great transcript you've written. Was there a part 2 video ?

    • @sayidrayhan5442
      @sayidrayhan5442 3 года назад

      Nicd

    • @wickedowitch1652
      @wickedowitch1652 3 года назад +24

      How do we know what 60, 70, 80, etc, percent of our heart rate is.

    • @MoosaIslamic
      @MoosaIslamic 3 года назад +51

      @@wickedowitch1652 Maximum Heart Rate will be roughly 220-(your age). The rest are just percentages of that heart rate

  • @Nick-ji7ly
    @Nick-ji7ly 4 года назад +3435

    He is bald with a serious look and deep voice. I trust this man

    • @adoboFosho
      @adoboFosho 4 года назад +18

      Like the opposite of Joe

    • @lijomathew8373
      @lijomathew8373 4 года назад +11

      So like Jason Statham, if he went to the U.S for endurance training.

    • @SnailHatan
      @SnailHatan 4 года назад +38

      @@lijomathew8373 Jasan Statham has neither a serious look or a deep voice. He just looks angry that his voice is so airy.

    • @lexadaweed1057
      @lexadaweed1057 3 года назад +1

      nice name lol

    • @adoboFosho
      @adoboFosho 3 года назад +1

      @James Tarantula Joe Rogan voice aint deep

  • @mathiasweinkauftungelund607
    @mathiasweinkauftungelund607 4 года назад +5185

    Introduction - 00:30-01:41
    Steady state exercise (cardio) - 00:30-01:41
    Interval training "best after steady state exercise" (cardio) - 01:41-05:20
    Introduction til muscular endurance - 05:20-07:06
    Aerobic threshold training (muscular endurance slow fibers) - 07:06-08:16
    Repeat training (musclular endurance fast fibers) - 08:16-09:39
    Repeat vs. interval training (muscular endurance fast fibers) - 09:39-10:54

  • @mmnaddaf122193
    @mmnaddaf122193 5 лет назад +3565

    Mitochondria, the powerhouse of the cell

    • @plutonium120
      @plutonium120 5 лет назад +36

      somebody paid attention in 7th grade science class...

    • @Dontbustthecrust
      @Dontbustthecrust 5 лет назад +26

      Learned this from Parasite Eve.

    • @plutonium120
      @plutonium120 5 лет назад +1

      @@Dontbustthecrust for some ungodly reason i am the one person in all these threads who knows what that is.

    • @Dontbustthecrust
      @Dontbustthecrust 5 лет назад +13

      @@plutonium120 no you're the other person who knows what that is. Nice to meet you.

    • @tonynieves7206
      @tonynieves7206 5 лет назад

      Damn you beat me to it

  • @titanius_anglesmith_i2323
    @titanius_anglesmith_i2323 3 года назад +3877

    Notice how quiet joe rogan gets when his guest is talking, no interruptions, no talking over each other, no laughing, just pure “shut up and listen” mode and I love it

  • @hychap
    @hychap 5 лет назад +6784

    This guy sounds so intense.. I feel like he is telling me how to disarm a bomb

    • @patagonia816
      @patagonia816 5 лет назад +17

      🤘😆

    • @ll2240
      @ll2240 5 лет назад +200

      He is. Your heart won't explode in 20y like this.

    • @Unknown_plays-e4c
      @Unknown_plays-e4c 4 года назад +5

      Lol

    • @zolozek3327
      @zolozek3327 4 года назад +5

      Some good ass brain exercise 😂😂

    • @AriGoldAlb
      @AriGoldAlb 4 года назад +2

      😂😂😂😂😂

  • @SqueezeLift
    @SqueezeLift 4 года назад +1902

    Agent 47 giving out his secret athletic tips to becoming a professional assassin

    • @thisismagacountry1318
      @thisismagacountry1318 4 года назад +8

      He just consulted Jean Reno.

    • @lorib360
      @lorib360 4 года назад +7

      😂🤣

    • @krozy3
      @krozy3 3 года назад +3

      😂

    • @8fz3mm13
      @8fz3mm13 3 года назад +1

      Wow theres only 2 other replies on this glorious comment?

    • @ivartheboneless5969
      @ivartheboneless5969 3 года назад +2

      Don’t laugh out loud at a lot of things on the internet but this one got me bro lol.

  • @petercruz1993
    @petercruz1993 4 года назад +5951

    These two guys look like kettle bells with these headphones

  • @fountaintrackandfieldclub1845
    @fountaintrackandfieldclub1845 4 года назад +3968

    I have a BS in Exercise Physiology and he just summed up my 4 years in 10min.

    • @mohamedorayith4626
      @mohamedorayith4626 4 года назад +123

      Is that a good thing for you or bad, emotion wise?
      hahahahaha

    • @francobenegas6484
      @francobenegas6484 4 года назад +42

      Can you summarise it for me, I don't get what he means what's the best way to increase endurance? Does he mean like doing HIIT or not?

    • @Lucas4wordtees
      @Lucas4wordtees 4 года назад +68

      ​@@francobenegas6484 I believe you're asking about endurance in fast twitch fibers, right? What I get from this is HIIT is Interval training into Lactic Acid production and higher burn, harder recovery. Think of high pump or training to failure. Acid accumulation is high in HIIT and it's not 'repeatable' in comparison. As I understand his explanation for "repeatable training", the intensity is high, but it's shorter than HIIT as you don't cross the full burn of the acid dump into the muscle group you're training. I think it would be more sets, shorter sets, shortish rest/recovery for upwards to 40 mins... For cardio endurance both steady state and HIIT work (which also work for slow twitch endurance).

    • @mrzed2349
      @mrzed2349 3 года назад +17

      The problem is you have a BS

    • @julianfrederick9082
      @julianfrederick9082 3 года назад +131

      Now I have a BS in exercise physiology, and it only took me 10 minutes!

  • @Satanictilatuby
    @Satanictilatuby 5 лет назад +3619

    I just realized Joe doesn't put ads on his videos. Thank you Joe.

    • @therealyassassin
      @therealyassassin 5 лет назад +108

      He does tho

    • @thiesboel3969
      @thiesboel3969 4 года назад +1

      PnBy 69 it’s not lol

    • @sugarlife485
      @sugarlife485 4 года назад +1

      @@thiesboel3969 yes it is

    • @FREEGEMS
      @FREEGEMS 4 года назад +37

      Brian Jones i got 2 ads on this video

    • @FREEGEMS
      @FREEGEMS 4 года назад +21

      SUGAR LIFE is it? i thought jamie and the team chop the podcast up and make these videos with it.
      If it’s fan made, this dude made 200-400k off reposting joe’s podcast lmao

  • @plutonium120
    @plutonium120 5 лет назад +4938

    this guy's one of those dudes who's crazy intelligent, but talks in squigglies and zigzags. let's break it down for these kids:
    *improving cardiovascular endurance* (aerobic system): sustained aerobic activity (10min or more) at ~80% of aerobic threshold. regular or punctuated conversational pace.
    *decreasing lactate acidosis* (glycolytic system): interval training just at or below acidosis threshold. meaning high intensity but not fatiguing. 2-5min intervals at 80-90% output.
    *improving explosive power* (creatine phosphate system): explosive exercise: lifts, jumps, sprints, etc. less than 60 seconds.
    **** i should add that these times might be specific to my body, and everyone's body might be a little different.
    sound off below if you have any questions or anything else you'd like to add.
    edit: thanks for all the comments and questions everyone. this has turned out to be an awesome thread.
    edit 2: i just reread this entire thread. through all the comments and questions and responses, no one has degenerated to calling each other names, politics, and all the other nonsense going on that we see on social media these days. big congrats to everyone here. that's huge. thanks for being awesome commenters. cheers.

    • @fightcampro1358
      @fightcampro1358 5 лет назад +21

      Phil Pacific do you know the ergogenesis for BJJ?

    • @shaan702
      @shaan702 5 лет назад +261

      Did Epstein kill Baby Yoda?

    • @garyroberts3020
      @garyroberts3020 5 лет назад +44

      Can you break down the rest periods... How long a walk how long a rest etc for each...

    • @BahtaHagos6
      @BahtaHagos6 5 лет назад +20

      Phil Pacific yeah, question for you: what is acidosis?

    • @James-xv8xv
      @James-xv8xv 5 лет назад +47

      To build explosive power you need to generate maximum force output. Resting 60 seconds is going to accumulate lactic acid and severely limit force production.

  • @rockymckay1705
    @rockymckay1705 4 года назад +2842

    “Pretty much you got a bigger heart. And das gud”

    • @THIS---GUY
      @THIS---GUY 4 года назад +79

      Rocky Mckay das reeeaaaal good

    • @redhotsizzle2121
      @redhotsizzle2121 4 года назад +13

      @Saxon Only if you take steroids and don't do steady state cardio.

    • @dave93x
      @dave93x 4 года назад +8

      @Saxon aye, but those people who abuse steroids have a bag of sugar in their chest, same with the liver but even heavier.

    • @blackguythompson
      @blackguythompson 4 года назад +7

      Something about reading it as I hear it

    • @ubayyd
      @ubayyd 4 года назад +1

      @@blackguythompson haha exactly

  • @wrestlingscience
    @wrestlingscience 3 года назад +92

    100 years of research condensed into 10 mins.. amazing

  • @tiktokgirl007
    @tiktokgirl007 5 лет назад +3250

    Joe Rogan heart grew 3 sizes that day

    • @zac3392
      @zac3392 5 лет назад +11

      👏🏿

    • @morganevans570
      @morganevans570 5 лет назад +79

      Then he died because that's a serious medical condition

    • @tiktokgirl007
      @tiktokgirl007 5 лет назад +11

      Wow I didn't think this would be liked so much

    • @hanslanda8303
      @hanslanda8303 5 лет назад +2

      Morgan Evans not for Joe brogan

    • @DigitalNomadInvestor
      @DigitalNomadInvestor 5 лет назад +1

      I"m surprised Joe allowed him to speak without interrupting him like Joe does other guests.

  • @logisticnation3232
    @logisticnation3232 4 года назад +5384

    Simple. Joe rogan sees himself talking so he didn't interrupt.

  • @jopo7996
    @jopo7996 5 лет назад +1997

    Of course this guy has endurance. Skynet built him.

    • @clownshoesmma6249
      @clownshoesmma6249 5 лет назад +12

      That’s funny! I was just thinking this guy is a machine/robot

    • @randomlyfly
      @randomlyfly 5 лет назад +6

      😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣

    • @supersly3211
      @supersly3211 5 лет назад +1

      Best comment so far! Lol!😂😂😂

    • @SIEDMIOGRODZKI
      @SIEDMIOGRODZKI 5 лет назад +1

      Gold

    • @jamesmcnary4939
      @jamesmcnary4939 5 лет назад +2

      Jo Po early model. Like the full steel cars of the 60’s, built to last.

  • @vincemanley9001
    @vincemanley9001 2 года назад +241

    Pavel is honestly more of a thorough scientist than just a trainer. This is so insightful

  • @bruceleroy6551
    @bruceleroy6551 5 лет назад +4864

    His forehead actually looks like there's an imprint of a kettlebell handle in it.

    • @sebastianshaw210
      @sebastianshaw210 5 лет назад +44

      Hahaha wtf

    • @cazjosh
      @cazjosh 5 лет назад +115

      I was thinking more like the predator helmet plate....

    • @jhgfjjghjf4297
      @jhgfjjghjf4297 5 лет назад +37

      Underrated comment lmao

    • @ra843000
      @ra843000 5 лет назад +14

      Lmfaoooooo its does tho

    • @JetskiDex
      @JetskiDex 5 лет назад +4

      🤣😂😂😭

  • @rawspeaking
    @rawspeaking 9 месяцев назад +11

    2 types of endurance
    Cardio -
    Steady state Training - below 90% heart rate
    Ex: Running at a particular speed that's not too fast. Below Being able to run and talk to your buddy.
    Interval training - 85-90%, then switch to walking, this stretches the heart.
    High heart rate under heavy loads. Dynamic in nature. 80-90%. Can still say a couple words. Walk around, then do it again. Ex: 10 swings with a kettlebell.
    Stretching heart is a small part of endurance. You need mitochondria in the muscle cell.
    How does your muscle use energy?
    ATP -
    creatine phosphate system
    Areobic system
    Glycolitic system
    Develop in sliw fibers and fast fibers.
    Train in a way that produces less acid.
    Before the competition, do a couple smokers to prepare a couple weeks before.
    Slow fibers: moving just under anaerobic threshold. That intensity where the acid stays at a steady state for a while. Where you don't crash.
    Running right below the anaerobic threshold. Just failing the talk test. (How to train mitochondria in slow fibers.)
    For fast fibers: sprint to just light muscle fatigue, then walk, repeat for 40 minutes. Kettlebell swings, working on a heavy bag.
    Muscular endurance -

    • @gabriel_6865
      @gabriel_6865 8 месяцев назад

      Hey, this helps so much a few questions tho,
      1. For interval training, is there a rule where u should walk for s certain amount of time, or until a certain heart rate?
      2. For the slow twitch method, does this mean running at a steady rate until you fail talk test, or a steady rate of failing talk test or how does this work in a run in terms of heart rate and time.
      3. For the fast twitch method, does “light muscle fatigue” mean you’re only just starting to feel your legs start to wear, but your not feeling it in your breathing since it’s just a 10-20 second or so sprint or how is that? Is it typically such short amount of time of sprinting? As well, is the walk mean your walking until your heart rate is back it your feeling fresh or what?

  • @patd4914
    @patd4914 4 года назад +490

    5:20 -5:30 "The mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell"
    -Smart man

    • @notricky1680
      @notricky1680 4 года назад +3

      @The Unbeatable yeah, but that's how the meme is written. Part purposefully wrote it wrong

    • @bentravels390
      @bentravels390 4 года назад

      Yet, can't run a marathon. Action speaks louder than words

    • @Hallowed_Ground
      @Hallowed_Ground 4 года назад +12

      @really sore knee That's definitely not true, man. It may be true for the most specialized of specialized runners, but what you gotta realize is humans are natural runners.
      Running long distances is incredibly easy for the human body, and in fact humans can outrun any species on the planet. We're literally evolved to maintain a decent jog, for a long time.
      Even as someone who doesn't run a lot, I've hit that mode before. Your muscles and neurochemistry just lock in on the run, efficiency skyrockets and suddenly I'm able to maintain a steady pace for a long time with little effort.

    • @rjbusiness5351
      @rjbusiness5351 4 года назад

      Watch Cam Hanes.

    • @alysondavy2485
      @alysondavy2485 4 года назад

      @John wayne en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitochondrion

  • @anima099
    @anima099 3 года назад +270

    I've been following Pavel since 2013. He always talked about types of fibres, but this is one of those rare occasions where he actually takes the time to introduce the idea of muscle mitochondria without it being a paid seminar.

    • @donsimons9810
      @donsimons9810 2 года назад +16

      the idea of mitochondria? Go read a book, that stuff isn’t a trade secret. It’s vocational high school biology

    • @terrencegibbons3351
      @terrencegibbons3351 2 года назад +4

      Imagine paying for this info when our local library has books on it

    • @karolkonieczny9130
      @karolkonieczny9130 2 года назад +15

      Local bookstores wont teach you how to create more mitochondria in your fast twitch muscles exactly step by step

    • @anima099
      @anima099 2 года назад +4

      @@terrencegibbons3351 You're right. Imagine going to school or paying for college when your library has all the information for free. Heck, even Google lets you access all the information you need.
      School's a waste of time and people should just skip that part and read/watch/listen to whatever's on the internet for free.

    • @Herghun
      @Herghun Год назад +4

      @@anima099 I think what's most valuable about school is the discipline you can get from it plus the friendships

  • @InTuGuru
    @InTuGuru 3 года назад +821

    I have found for me once I reach the point of my heart rate is at 90% I slow down to a fast walk for 1 to 2 minutes and when I start running again I feel like I have more stamina. I do that Once every mile and a half and I have built my cardio in less than two months. Whenever I first started training I could barely last one minute. I smoke cigarettes for 14 years and did not treat my body well at all, I had almost no cardio. Now I can run for 30 minutes nonstop.

    • @AllHailNumo
      @AllHailNumo 3 года назад +60

      Gives me hope. I want to quit nicotine and get back into the routine.

    • @westbrook0853
      @westbrook0853 3 года назад +29

      @@AllHailNumo Yeah me too I got addicted young but after I finally forced myself to get rid of all nicotine in my life I got back on track and now run for my college 👍

    • @joshforeman1723
      @joshforeman1723 2 года назад +3

      You go to 90% you slow down 1-2 min and you go back to 90%? How long, how many set /times u do this?

    • @Nathan-Higgers_13
      @Nathan-Higgers_13 2 года назад +12

      @@joshforeman1723 dont listen to this guy he thinks running for 30 minites is something special

    • @AbouFitness
      @AbouFitness 2 года назад +53

      @Toes and hoes for the average person it is, a lot people r just lazy and don’t like to run

  • @SuperAwesomeReasons
    @SuperAwesomeReasons Год назад +222

    I can vouch for the approx 130 bpm rule of thumb. Lost a hundred pounds and that bpm measure stayed with me for my whole weight loss journey. It was a standard for pacing my cardio from beginning to end. I would stare at the heartrate monitor for twenty, then thirty, then forty minutes, then an hour, then two hours. If I didn't have it in me to do a full workout, I always felt I could at least just get on the elliptical and keep my bpm at 120-130 for a short while and walk a little faster than normal. Eventually, my 130 BPM looked more and more like jogging instead of walking. And when I sprinted, I had just those precious extra seconds and minutes where I wasn't dying. And when I was in a place where it wasn't so easy to instantly fail the talking test by doing something like failing to take a single pushup or trying and failing to deadhang, I wanted to see myself perform more feats of strength. My BPM was the keystone of my mind's eye when I was challenging myself. When I couldn't speak, could barely think because everything was burning and I was out of breath, I would ask myself: "What number is my limit this specific second?". the changing number on the heartrate monitor was my guiding light and shepherd. Eventually, I reached a point where I could actually start running around the town. I didn't gas out after running a rectangle around a street block or two. I wouldnt gas out after ten minutes. I could just... jog... When it started happening, I felt like I suddenly discovered how to use a pair of limbs I never knew I had - and that the world was in my hands. I'll be honest, I started crying in the street.

    • @lucasb409
      @lucasb409 Год назад +22

      Your story was very touching. Thanks for sharing man. Proud of you.

    • @mikael-xr6cv
      @mikael-xr6cv Год назад +4

      Just started my journey, doing same thing in cycling, 3 weeks ago i couldnt ride because the minute i stepped on my bike my first few strokes of pedals would get me to zone 3 immediately, been training in zone 2 for 3 weeks (15 hours a week) and now i can already ride 2 hours at low pace without exceeding zone 2, at start i could ride z2 for max 30 mins at 10 km/h now 2 hours at 19km/h, furthermore with wind at my back and small hills I am so happy i can ride 30+ km/h at z2

    • @ArielsonSoares
      @ArielsonSoares Год назад +1

      More power to you ! ❤

    • @willh69
      @willh69 Год назад +3

      Very awesome story, thanks for sharing
      To everyone else that sees this - good luck on your journey also, many unseen faces and people you haven't met yet, all around the world wish you so well.
      More than you could imagine!!

    • @ralphmartinez8616
      @ralphmartinez8616 24 дня назад

      Powerful brother. Thanks for sharing. Zone 2 hr while training is important

  • @chesstictacs3107
    @chesstictacs3107 5 лет назад +634

    For those who don’t know the guy. He is the Chairman of StrongFirst, Inc., a fitness instructor who has introduced SPETSNAZ training techniques from the former Soviet Union to US Navy SEALs , Marines and Army Special Forces, and shortly thereafter to the American public.

    • @Asymmetric.edge.
      @Asymmetric.edge. 4 года назад +57

      Therefore American public are badass when included in the same sentence as Spetsnaz and Navy Seals

    • @austinoldfield5246
      @austinoldfield5246 4 года назад +17

      So dude is a communist is wat ur saying

    • @zombkiin
      @zombkiin 4 года назад +4

      Where can I read about what he is talking about?

    • @adampaape6894
      @adampaape6894 4 года назад +47

      Finally.... someone who really knows who this guy is...smh. He's a fuckin badass ex Spetsnaz strength and conditioning specialist. Met him through my line of work as an ATC back in 2003.

    • @DavidElendu
      @DavidElendu 4 года назад +8

      Straight from Wikipedia 👍

  • @Ifocycoyochvho
    @Ifocycoyochvho 2 года назад +33

    I feel like joe is one of the only podcasters that understands the role of a host, to make the guest feel comfortable and allow them to talk about what we want to hear about

  • @thecreatorandfriends4188
    @thecreatorandfriends4188 4 года назад +29

    This is easily the best video I have seen on cardio. Breaks it down in a way that's easy to understand. Thanks for having him on the show.

  • @shawnyblaze
    @shawnyblaze 5 лет назад +90

    That was the highest quality explanation of muscular endurance that I have ever heard.

  • @ChadHogan180
    @ChadHogan180 5 лет назад +850

    There’s no better place on the Internet than Rogan comment section.

    • @marccas10
      @marccas10 4 года назад +1

      And he never sees it?

    • @angelestrella35
      @angelestrella35 4 года назад

      @@marccas10 sure knows, he profits from it.

    • @spaceisalie5451
      @spaceisalie5451 4 года назад +2

      Hands down the funniest comments ive ever seen are on "to catch a predator" videos, but ill check out live PD ones

    • @bullmeatt
      @bullmeatt 4 года назад +3

      if you love to read the letters "DMT" over and over then yes its the best comment section

    • @tristancarter6630
      @tristancarter6630 4 года назад +1

      Dave Brah fantanos comment section

  • @michael2305
    @michael2305 3 года назад +82

    Basically everything I did when I started training ... endurance first then intervall training and then dynamic exercises.
    Makes me kinda proud now hearing the science behind it.

    • @bullfighter42
      @bullfighter42 3 года назад +2

      What did u do for dynamic exercises? Box jumps and plyo pushup etc?

    • @filthymcnastyazz
      @filthymcnastyazz Год назад

      Why. Unless you understood this exactly and trained that way for this reason.

  • @seekndestroy6678
    @seekndestroy6678 4 года назад +18

    I felt my heart stretching while sitting on the couch just from listening to this

  • @ritid69
    @ritid69 5 лет назад +1615

    I am now waiting for joe to wrongly paraphrase this info when he is stoned in a future episode 🥴

  • @R005T4R
    @R005T4R 3 года назад +80

    To keep it simple. To increase your ability to handle intense workload for an extended period of time. Repeatedly expose yourself to a slightly easier workload for long periods of time and then do small bursts of intense workload afterwards.

    • @abhishekpujara7739
      @abhishekpujara7739 3 года назад

      Thank you

    • @sergioflores9246
      @sergioflores9246 3 года назад

      Like right after the other or wait while? How much time if you should wait?

    • @JesusRamirez-kt5zq
      @JesusRamirez-kt5zq 3 года назад

      @@sergioflores9246 I will suggest work on it in a different day

    • @barrylarryharry7183
      @barrylarryharry7183 24 дня назад

      Thanks for this!
      I have 2x24kg and 2x32kgs and I'm training clean and jerk; should I do something like using the 2x24s with 2-3mins rest for a few sets and then afterwards, pick up the 2x32kgs and do say 3 sets with 2min rest. If I want to be able to eventually do 2x32kg long cycle?

    • @R005T4R
      @R005T4R 24 дня назад

      @@barrylarryharry7183 so if you want to increase reps with your 32kg, grab your 24kg and do slow controlled for your set of 10 then after a short rest grab your 32kg and do as many as fast as possible. You will be getting your slow twitch used to longer duration holds and your fast twitch used to more weight. This compounds and helps you transition up to your 32kg for a full set. Adjust what your lower and upper limits are each time you can reach a full set of 10.

  • @sapper931
    @sapper931 3 года назад +78

    This guy has so much knowledge! I could literally sit like a school kid and listen to him talk about this subject all day haha

    • @TheBigGetEven
      @TheBigGetEven 3 года назад +6

      I suspect in his school you don't get to sit around much. And it may be that much better for it.

    • @dannamadura2035
      @dannamadura2035 Год назад +1

      Watch Enter the Kettlebell. You're welcome,comrade.

  • @canadiannavigator3346
    @canadiannavigator3346 4 года назад +19

    Pavel changed my entire way of training years ago. I heard him first on Tim Ferris. Check out that podcast. I never tire of listening to him.

  • @Pokemology
    @Pokemology 5 лет назад +635

    Nobody stretches my heart more than you, Joe Rogan ❤

  • @blakewalters6855
    @blakewalters6855 5 лет назад +2379

    No wonder joe likes him so much, he's a russian version of himself.

    • @thelovacluka
      @thelovacluka 5 лет назад +66

      Pavel is god in physical training, Joe's a comedian. wtf

    • @alexdeschenes243
      @alexdeschenes243 5 лет назад +25

      Joe is an American Pavel

    • @yyy5569
      @yyy5569 5 лет назад +45

      Luka Mesaric yeah joe is so fucking unathletic and knows nothing about training and nutrition

    • @gabrielminville738
      @gabrielminville738 5 лет назад +7

      yyy I am not saying you are wrong but you should look into it

    • @katiie7
      @katiie7 5 лет назад +13

      yyy you could never kick like him. Look it up

  • @isaakvandaalen3899
    @isaakvandaalen3899 3 года назад +29

    I'm studying biology atm and it's really interesting seeing how the things I'm learning at a desk actually help me understand how we can improve our performance as athletes.

  • @reubenwilliams4167
    @reubenwilliams4167 4 года назад +116

    I grew up my whole life doing push-ups/sit-ups/pull-ups sometimes you the extent of over 10 sets each. But after each set I’d always naturally take a moment and walk around my house (pet my dog, get a glass of water, etc.) I found this calisthenic program to somehow work better for me even than weight training in terms of transforming my body and how “in-shape” I am. Glad to see it all explained now and why it helped so much when all this time I thought it just worked for my body type.

    • @Ravenousyouth
      @Ravenousyouth 2 года назад +10

      Yep time under tension adds up . The volume can make up for lack of intensity . + you recover better doing little often

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 2 года назад +6

      ???
      The video doesn't even address hypertrophy.

    • @user-nq5wb1cz5e
      @user-nq5wb1cz5e 2 года назад +2

      This is a different topic.

    • @xaviermacias7988
      @xaviermacias7988 Год назад

      ​@MrCmon113 this video not about hypertrophy its about endurance and cardio

  • @garyschneider2063
    @garyschneider2063 5 лет назад +16

    I've been following and training the Pavel way for years. Pavel is the real deal. Everything he says is true. And the only way to know it is to try it. Opinions do not count.

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 2 года назад

      Hence your opinion doesn't count and you wasted your time writing the comment.

  • @Yarrb53
    @Yarrb53 2 года назад +39

    This guy is a legend. He used to train Russian Special Forces. He also brought the Kettle bell into everyday life. When he was younger, he used to blow up hot water heating bags to explosion. His English has improved dramaticall, from when he first came here.

  • @anshanshtiwari8898
    @anshanshtiwari8898 3 года назад +221

    Summary:
    1. Best way to train heart endurance is running steadily at a pace at which it's not difficult to talk.
    2. To train slow twitch muscle endurance run steadily at a pace at which it is difficult to talk.
    3. To train fast twitch muscle endurance do repeat training of sprint. Sprint a few seconds and walk until you can sprint again. Repeat training means you can do it again and again without much change in performance in each repetition.

    • @nadirzenith1298
      @nadirzenith1298 3 года назад +8

      @Krz Low
      Yes, but the main problems are running out of breath and tired legs. Over time, you will get better at both. However, your fat percentage is another factor to consider. Too much body fat and you will struggle, or worst you might get injured. Too little body fat percentage and you will feel weak too.

    • @Siberian_valenok
      @Siberian_valenok 2 года назад +1

      With #3 how many repeats are you supposed to do? Did anyone catch that?

    • @Sloanjr507
      @Sloanjr507 2 года назад +4

      @@Siberian_valenok 40 mins worth

    • @kosovarsadiki2624
      @kosovarsadiki2624 2 года назад +1

      @@Sloanjr507 what about for slow twitch? Until I can’t anymore?

    • @D.-NeverGoBack-
      @D.-NeverGoBack- 2 года назад +1

      @@Sloanjr507 wtf no way its 40 mins jogging for 40 min is taxing enough you cant do that much if you are not a runner

  • @dimetsopay7996
    @dimetsopay7996 4 года назад +265

    this mate looks like endurance.

  • @tritone11
    @tritone11 5 лет назад +212

    Joe knows when not to interrupt. Tsatsoulin is top tier.

  • @johnnyboy6429
    @johnnyboy6429 4 года назад +2099

    Guy: the best way to develop cardio is...
    Joe: right.. right... DMT

  • @anonymousanonymous3707
    @anonymousanonymous3707 2 года назад +11

    If only every person on the internet involved with fitness was this clear concise and informative , no bullshit just absolute facts and he didn't charge a penny or sell you a supplement 👍

  • @alexv6118
    @alexv6118 4 года назад +17

    one of the best Rogan podcasts I've ever heard. Pavel is so informative an knowledgeable on all aspects of health and fitness.

  • @maxxxgsd
    @maxxxgsd 4 года назад +4

    May God bless these guys ! Devoting knowledge and time to benefit others ! 🇺🇸 💪

  • @SseriousGgamer3
    @SseriousGgamer3 4 года назад +252

    Basically : 1. you don’t want to do anything above 90% effort because your body will burn out too quickly. (max effort makes acid accumulate way too fast and burn you out.)
    2. Obviously you don’t want to train too softly because even though you can train soft for a long time, your slope of improvement is way too low. There needs to be intensity. Otherwise you won’t ever build endurance with soft training.
    3. If you want to build endurance you have to train with as much intensity that you can handle for a long period of time.

    • @rajsaini3716
      @rajsaini3716 4 года назад +1

      Luis Leal Well said

    • @mikealgracias4784
      @mikealgracias4784 4 года назад +3

      So you're saying running slow pace is useless?

    • @Masiyooo
      @Masiyooo 4 года назад +8

      @@mikealgracias4784 If you consider running at a pace where you can maintain simple conversation to be a slow pace, then no. But you can't only do that kind of exercise.

    • @mikealgracias4784
      @mikealgracias4784 4 года назад

      @@Masiyooo so what's a good pace you think?

    • @aaronb2779
      @aaronb2779 4 года назад +3

      to improve your CP system you need to train above 90% intensity, so no.1 doesnt seem right to me. I could be missing something though

  • @Namdaq
    @Namdaq 6 месяцев назад +3

    1. Steady-State Cardio:
    Steady-state exercise, like running at a comfortable pace, is a healthy way to develop cardiovascular endurance.
    When the heart rate is increased to a certain point but not too high, the heart stretches, increasing stroke volume and leading to a larger heart.
    Optimal training for steady-state cardio is at a metabolic intensity where conversation is still possible.
    2. Interval Training:
    Developed by Germans, interval training involves bringing the heart rate to 85-90% and then dropping to walking or jogging, allowing the heart to beat hard while maintaining movement. This stretches the heart effectively.
    Interval training is best used after a period of steady-state training as it is demanding on the body.
    Interval training with high heart rates under heavy loads is not recommended, as it interferes with blood flow and leads to a thicker heart instead of stretching it. Dynamic exercises are preferred.
    3. Mitochondria Development:
    For endurance, the focus should also be on developing mitochondria in the muscle cells, which convert energy aerobically and efficiently.
    Three energy systems: creatine phosphate (powerful, short duration), aerobic system (less powerful, longer-lasting), and glycolytic system (in-between, produces fatigue metabolites).
    Training the mitochondria in slow fibers involves moving right below the anaerobic threshold, which is the intensity where acid accumulates but stays in a steady state.
    For fast fibers, the approach is to push just to the edge of acidosis repeatedly, using something called repeat training versus interval training.
    Examples of exercises to develop mitochondria in fast fibers include short sprints with rest periods in between, allowing for sustained performance over time, such as 40 minutes.

  • @ryanvanderlugt5752
    @ryanvanderlugt5752 5 лет назад +819

    Joe “this is the only interview I don’t interrupt” Rogan

    • @datbtrue
      @datbtrue 5 лет назад +4

      Pretty Much lol

    • @RicardoIv
      @RicardoIv 5 лет назад +7

      Not really. There is much more... For example with Jordan Peterson.

    • @Wise101
      @Wise101 5 лет назад +5

      I love that Joe Rogan is actually afraid to interrupt

    • @paulnowayhosay1883
      @paulnowayhosay1883 5 лет назад +4

      He's probably trying really hard to follow this. Being slightly stoned myself, I'm constantly getting lost, trying to follow everything.

    • @allankaul8331
      @allankaul8331 5 лет назад +1

      Ryan Vanderlugt cuz this dude is speaking straight facts

  • @ericsteppe9482
    @ericsteppe9482 5 лет назад +21

    Pavel's an brilliant machine! Used to follow him years ago, he's the reason I love kettlebell train! Thank you comrade.

  • @coltonmims8561
    @coltonmims8561 Год назад +14

    In basic training we did very few long runs. But we did about a miles worth of 30-60s every single day. I went from over a 15 minute two mile to 12 minutes flat in 9 weeks. Interval training worked well for me

    • @jayleefarley6912
      @jayleefarley6912 11 месяцев назад

      I loved interval training rounding around that damn parking lot was fun and then you get tired and that jog brought me so much comfort and joy

  • @kevcoolkev25
    @kevcoolkev25 3 года назад +9

    This was the most informative episode Rogan has done

  • @blagonua1290
    @blagonua1290 5 лет назад +121

    Gonna tell my kids Pavel Tsatsouline was Joe Rogan after continuously running on the treadmill for 30 days.

  • @JohnDoe-mv3jz
    @JohnDoe-mv3jz 5 лет назад +203

    Thought this was one of those 'Joe Interviews Joe' videos

  • @Docinaplane
    @Docinaplane 5 лет назад +66

    That's the way I did it. I knew nothing about running when I started. I just ran, and ran and ran. Most every day. Gave me great endurance and perhaps more importantly, very fast recovery time. I got into it because my blood pressure was high although I was involved in the martial arts. I was a little fat and did not eat well yet. It worked, so far. 110/70 with a resting heart rate less than 50. Just channel Forrest Gump and you'll be fine, lol.

    • @samimotag
      @samimotag 5 лет назад +2

      Good job!!😊

    • @ScouserLegend
      @ScouserLegend 4 года назад +4

      I’m looking to get back into exercising but just have to finish getting rid of my shin splints first. My resting heart beat used to be 42 and now it’s pushing 57 after years of eating crap with no exercise so hopefully I can fix it.

    • @Docinaplane
      @Docinaplane 4 года назад +3

      @@ScouserLegend Shin splints are a bad problem. I had them when I ran track in college. Rest was the only way I could get through that. Never had them since. The important thing is prevention. You need to know how you got them in the first place so you can prevent it. Make sure you run on softer surfaces with proper form and wear well cushioned shoes that do not have a large rise. Also mid or forefoot strike, never heel strike. Best!

    • @anmol3457
      @anmol3457 4 года назад +1

      Good for you dude!

  • @alertbri
    @alertbri 2 года назад +1

    This gets better every time I review it. Superb value. Thank you 🙏

  • @stankolodin5586
    @stankolodin5586 4 года назад +118

    "You get a bigger heart. Daz gud."

  • @qdesnik
    @qdesnik 3 года назад +4

    This guy, with this voice and timing. I'm convinced that I need to enlarge me heart and work on that metachondria.
    BRB off to sign up for a gym membership...

  • @paulrhodes6598
    @paulrhodes6598 4 года назад +6

    I love listening to this bloke, so informative and interesting. He's totally what I would call a guru.

  • @Thesupperals
    @Thesupperals 2 года назад +3

    I'm not too sure about what Pavel Tsatsouline has claimed, but I'm getting amazing results by starting at 220, subtract my age, mark that as my maximum heart rate (for the reduction of heart injury risk concerns) and work out at an intensity of 65% for cardio. For me, the calculation targets a heart rate of 154 as my healthy maximum target and and 116 as my lowest target rate.
    Now I don't know about you guys, but I am able to achieve this heart rate just by lifting weights and simple, fast paced walks. If you are out to do more, then I applaud you. Do more. But don't forget to remember that your target is finding what you enjoy doing most so you can constantly get back in there and do it again, and again, and again... especially if you have taken a long time away from both your muscles and the gym. I personally take 3 minuet rests between each set and I feel wonderful each passing day while making tremendous progress.

  • @emune1111
    @emune1111 4 года назад +9

    i haven't done cardio for about 3yrs.. i started running about 2 weeks ago and noticed what his talking about works. i would run and sprint redlining and would be drained, i would do it thinking if i push my self i would get better, but would wake up super sore and my endurance would not increase.. so i took my time, listen to music and focus on my breath.. i would only last about 7min 1st lol, now i can last about 18min non stop without getting winded or feeling uncomfortable.. my endurance keeps getting better and better. note im not the fittest. i completely agree with this dude.

    • @bobuttari8183
      @bobuttari8183 2 года назад

      so you increased your endurance by taking your time and when your heart got to about 90% you would stop and walk for how long? and then start running again to 90% and then repeat? and eventually it got better and better? i’m trying to understand this process so i can do it myself and you seem to started where i am at right now.

    • @sirgrifoog6461
      @sirgrifoog6461 Год назад

      @@bobuttari8183if you going for endurance running up hills is good

  • @JohnyB1989
    @JohnyB1989 4 года назад +12

    The Dude 100% correct. I am from Germany and I had my Trainer Licensce with one of the Sport Researchers Pavel is mentioning.

    • @trixualz219
      @trixualz219 4 года назад +1

      Did he miss anything or would u give any extra tips?

    • @JohnyB1989
      @JohnyB1989 4 года назад

      @@trixualz219 Hello there,
      yes of course. So just to round up. Most of the people are training in too high heart beat level. If you really want to get indurance effectively you have to start at low heart beat rate ca. 120s. Then if you have this basement you can swap to 150 heart beats per second then the final step is the 180-200s.

    • @trixualz219
      @trixualz219 4 года назад +2

      @@JohnyB1989 so if ur relatively unfit u should start low heart bpm? And then when u get fitter just increase it??

    • @JohnyB1989
      @JohnyB1989 4 года назад

      @@trixualz219 yes please this very important to stay healthy for sure. Best thing you can do is and where you see the fastest results is a jogging sprint exercise. Total distance should be 5-8 km. In this distance you put in sprints. For example every 900 m a sprint of 5 breath cycles (so every 3-4 steps you breath in and 2 steps out). So you learn breathing while sprinting as well. Many people forget to breath while sprinting. Then week after week you increase the sprinting distance. Check before you sprint you heart rate. And after as well. it is enough if you check it with your finger on the neck to get a feeling for your heart beat. You can check also after sprinting how fast your heart beat drops while jogging. Do this 6 months 3x-4x times a week and you are healthy fit. Most important is: dont wreck yourself in the exercise. You want to train as often as possible. If you are wrecked for 2 days this is a NoNo.
      After 6 months you should get a second sport to counter the running.

  • @dd71000
    @dd71000 4 года назад +114

    There are 3 ways to become a millionaire if you don't inherit the wealth:
    1. High-paying profession
    2. Clever entrepreneurship coupled with luck
    3. Kettle-bells

    • @robdavies4058
      @robdavies4058 4 года назад +3

      Or just luck

    • @julianfrederick9082
      @julianfrederick9082 3 года назад +3

      The fourth one that is actually true is savings and wise investments.

    • @tonyh1345
      @tonyh1345 3 года назад +1

      Everyone will eventually be a millionaire from the inevitable, impeding hyperinflation of debt-based fiat currency. Venezuela is how we’ll all end up. This is what’s meant by “The Great Reset”.

  • @Thekettlebelldude
    @Thekettlebelldude Месяц назад +1

    It Pavel’s book The Quick and the Dead that pushed me to become SFG instructor certified. Bravo to Joe Rogan for have Pavel on his show 👏🏼

  • @izzyh.3581
    @izzyh.3581 3 года назад +22

    I'd love to follow on his last endurance example of sprinting then walking. My approach to it would firstly get my warm up out the way. Then go for a burst, once my maximum energy feels like it's taken a hit, I'll immediately start my walk for as long as possible to recover the muscles and stabilize my heart rate. Obviously my energy will be depleting over the course of sets but that's the point to an understandable extent.

    • @4min-cs565
      @4min-cs565 Год назад +7

      I am 77 years old. This is similar to my basic method of workout. I will do 5 or 6 all out sprints after a warm up for between 30 and 50 yards each, flying start. A few months ago, I ran 110 yards on pavement in 19.6 seconds, which is about a 19.5 second 100 meter dash. It has taken me a long time to work up to this because I will start to get injured if I push it too hard. For a man beginning to approach 80 years of age all too quickly, I am pleased with this. My health is excellent, no medications at all. I do watch my diet carefully, too. Sprinting exercises super fast twitch muscles, which releases all kinds of good hormones. I would recommend this kind of workout for anyone able to do it.

    • @sipretro7053
      @sipretro7053 Год назад

      ​@4min-cs565 you're an inspiration man keep up the good work!

  • @senburgundy3632
    @senburgundy3632 5 лет назад +21

    The combined light intensity off their foreheads makes this one a good listen.

    • @krane15
      @krane15 4 года назад

      You jelly at his superior brain power?

  • @vaughncassidy5242
    @vaughncassidy5242 2 года назад +151

    I blundered into a nearly perfect example of this on my own a few years ago. I wanted to improve my cardio AND my speed at least a bit but did not have time to do both. So, I would walk maybe a mile and then BOOM just sprint for a count of 2. Walk for one minute. Then blast off as hard as I could for then 4 seconds. Walk for one minute. Sprint hard for 6 seconds...continue the sets of sprinting and walking until I could reach sprinting for 20 seconds. After a while, I could go all the way up to 20 seconds and then down to 2 seconds. Great workout.

    • @iknowyoureright8564
      @iknowyoureright8564 2 года назад +118

      Tried this and the other people in the supermarket got scared so I had to stop.

    • @gavaudan2131
      @gavaudan2131 2 года назад +35

      @@iknowyoureright8564 Just keep going bro they'll get used to it eventually

    • @manz7860
      @manz7860 2 года назад +8

      probably looked like a madman doing it too lol

    • @jmard3101
      @jmard3101 Год назад +2

      @@iknowyoureright8564 Imagine if you are a kid doing this people would assume you have the initial signs of ADHD

    • @iknowyoureright8564
      @iknowyoureright8564 Год назад +5

      @@jmard3101 I got so good at it that they had to build a bigger supermarket………I was doing the entire frozen food aisle in 4 seconds, and don’t even get me started on the fruit and veg aisle.

  • @cfvasconcellos
    @cfvasconcellos 2 года назад

    THANK YOU JRE TEAM... when I heard this iview a few years ago... life changer... I need to swing the bells ... aka rock the bells... it is time.. cheers..

  • @Milltao3
    @Milltao3 4 года назад +13

    This guy really knows what he’s talking about. I have heart murmur, this’s basically your heart beating faster than normal humans. WHEN I WAS 16 I used to run 5 miles everyday except the weekends for soccer I also used to run track for school 7 miles. My heart was catching up and I could last for 90 mins running back and forth. I stopped it thou because I needed to gain weight

  • @mattpapa03
    @mattpapa03 5 лет назад +152

    So he summarized my Exercise Physiology class in 10 minutes. 😂

    • @Wickedtingzz
      @Wickedtingzz 5 лет назад +3

      Matthew Papa I dont think so Mr papa . you've been a bad papa .. now go be a good papa. ok papa papa ?
      peace papa
      allegedly

    • @jinmenken6999
      @jinmenken6999 5 лет назад

      ttryyipp Eh allegedly be careful

    • @krane15
      @krane15 4 года назад +1

      He probably could have done it in 5 min. but he talks slow.

    • @cakesnatcher4541
      @cakesnatcher4541 4 года назад

      @@Wickedtingzz eat poop

    • @Johansen1000
      @Johansen1000 4 года назад

      That's how an efficient schools are, unless you have to work specifically in that field, what took years in school could have been summarized in 10 minutes by a professional.

  • @joeyripswell
    @joeyripswell 4 года назад +50

    jiujitsu class makes a lot of sense now
    -6min warmup(intensity increases over time)
    -learn technique(cooldown)
    -drill technique(low to moderate intensity)
    -6 min a round spar/roll with teammates often until your lungs are ready to fall out(we do 6 rounds)
    -then stretch/cooldown
    all done in 2 hours
    3-4 times a week(monday wednesday friday sometimes saturday mornings)
    BJJ is the shit and imo ALL the cardio an average casual person needs. plus the mrder simulation bonus of course
    ✌️

    • @roejogan4540
      @roejogan4540 2 года назад

      Yessir

    • @ggh_-ts6pn
      @ggh_-ts6pn 2 года назад +4

      lol ask BJJ fighters to run marathon they would gassed quickly. Muay thai fighters, boxers, and wretslers still do steady state running every morning for an hour or so. BJJ fighters lack cardio training, all those 2 hours drill is not enough for stretching your heart.

    • @joeyripswell
      @joeyripswell 2 года назад

      @@ggh_-ts6pn
      it is definitely enough. go train

    • @ggh_-ts6pn
      @ggh_-ts6pn 2 года назад +2

      @@joeyripswell its literally not for building high endurance and aerobic base. Thats why I said wrestlers and boxers do separate cardio low intensity steady state workout besides their padwork/sparring/drill. If sparring , drills, and padwork are enough why would they run for miles in the morning?

  • @jb50-w3k
    @jb50-w3k 4 месяца назад

    I know this subject, and I have to say this is simply and brilliantly explained.

  • @snatchednefkin
    @snatchednefkin 5 лет назад +70

    Imagine getting the opportunity to train with this guy!

    • @relyenterprisestx
      @relyenterprisestx 5 лет назад +3

      Kyle Freeman Only thing I’m wondering is if any of this would work if your not juicing roids like Gatorade as every Russian athlete for the last 60 years this was built and tested on.

    • @josephwong6239
      @josephwong6239 5 лет назад +3

      The Rhyhan it will work, just not as efficient for someone whose on anabolics or even any drug for that matter. It’s the basics he mentioning for everyone.

  • @thedude1316
    @thedude1316 5 лет назад +58

    I had a heart transplant and now i play ice hockey. I need a pro like him to help me train effectively.

    • @ivanbulanov5754
      @ivanbulanov5754 5 лет назад +18

      I feel like you need to play hockey only on your Xbox and hike instead.

    • @Enrique-peralta
      @Enrique-peralta 5 лет назад +23

      Do coke and blow. Hookers

    • @NODAK9
      @NODAK9 5 лет назад +2

      Hockey’s one helluva a workout... regardless of whose heart.

    • @47thChromosome
      @47thChromosome 5 лет назад +17

      @John Doe Yeah bro i got a heart transplant about 6 months ago and my dick got bigger! My dick got stretch marks and shit now. Must have been a black dudes heart.

    • @thedude1316
      @thedude1316 5 лет назад

      @@ivanbulanov5754 my surgeon is an Asian hockey player. he plays goalie. i have yet to challenge him.

  • @Diggy22
    @Diggy22 5 лет назад +16

    Pavel's book on stretching is one of the best books out there. It's right up there with Thomas Kurz's Stretching Scientifically. He knows his stuff.

    • @bikietube
      @bikietube 5 лет назад

      Diggy22 what’s it called?

    • @milanm9907
      @milanm9907 5 лет назад

      Name of the book ?

    • @PeeledSkin
      @PeeledSkin 5 лет назад +5

      Relax into Stretch: Instant Flexibility Through Mastering Muscle Tension ISBN 0-938045-28-8

  • @jota55581
    @jota55581 6 месяцев назад +2

    I went from couch to half marathon in 6 months at th age of 50 ..one thing also needed for runnees who want to build indurance is strength training with weights ..it's great way to protect from injury.

  • @22Alex47
    @22Alex47 5 лет назад +49

    I’ve heard about interval training. But this is some knowledge 🤯

    • @ojeda5577
      @ojeda5577 5 лет назад +4

      Yeah he's next level . So much good info at once.. I watched this video more than once

    • @VacaflorVids07av
      @VacaflorVids07av 5 лет назад +4

      Pavel has written several books and has a depth of knowledge in exercise physiology and Kettlebell training (of course as he is the pioneer to bring it to the USA)

    • @nicholasgojekian8915
      @nicholasgojekian8915 5 лет назад +3

      Alex Kieu it’s straight out of the NASM book, it’s level 1 basic understanding

  • @FISHANE84
    @FISHANE84 5 лет назад +9

    my heart so big from running to clear my mind

  • @chomes8048
    @chomes8048 3 года назад +15

    Is speaking English perfectly clearly.
    8:43 profreasor verkhaeshanski

  • @BerserkersBattle-816
    @BerserkersBattle-816 2 года назад

    I been looking for this information for the last two months on RUclips, very thankful thank you!

  • @JonGarrood
    @JonGarrood 3 года назад +8

    Intensely accurate, you know it’s time to listen when Joe doesn’t ask a question for 6 mins

  • @sheyshah2848
    @sheyshah2848 5 лет назад +9

    Awesome advice. Needed to hear this.

  • @TheCriminalViolin
    @TheCriminalViolin 4 года назад +28

    So basically he is indirectly backing up the arguments that I've always made AGAINST the "no pain no gain" and "feel the burn" mentalities of workouts. And I'd say that's definitely true. Especially if you are not willing/trying to push your body too far to the point where it's stressed and fatigued enough consistently that it begins to deteriorate and eventually you begin experiencing increased frequency of serious injuries, like tearing of ligaments and muscles. Adequate to great quality and length of rest periods are severely underrated and over spurned in the athletic and general exercise for health communities. The slow and steady, step by step mentality works FAR better than that of the whole "no pain no gain" ideology, even if it is slower overall.

    • @gmoney5947
      @gmoney5947 4 года назад +2

      TheCriminalViolin Rome wasn’t built in a day! Lol X

    • @scarred10
      @scarred10 4 года назад

      the issue here is ability to cope with the stresses of training,that ability varies greatly due to genetics and training age,nutrition,rest,sleep etc.A beginner can cope with very little while a pro athlete of 10 yrs on drugs needs a huge amount of training stress to improve.

    • @TheCriminalViolin
      @TheCriminalViolin 4 года назад

      @@scarred10 If you watch most pro sports, and listen to various longtime sports medicine docs, they'll echo what I said above, actually. It's exactly why so many players in each league, especially the NBA sustain repeated and often bad-severe injuries. They overwork their bodies, and they become numb to the pain and stiffness in their bodies the more they push.
      Pain is a natural indicator from our body's that something is wrong, overworked or injured. It's a cue for us to take a break and check ourselves out for a few minutes before easing ourselves back into it again. When you ignore it consistently, each pain level is ignored, thus leading to your body producing adrenaline to compensate and numb the pain, so you believe you're no longer in pain anymore. That's obviously a risky, and bad thing to do. And that's exactly what no pain no gain, push past your body's limits exercise regimes do to you and your body, thus why you have pro athletes often find nagging injuries, repeated problems and even experience severe injuries quite regularly these days. Think of most players in the NBA. Now think of players that were always regarded as "Ironmen" because they never got injured... well throughout history almost all ironmen players ended up with a very severe or even borderline career ending injury. Wes Matthews is a perfect example of this ironman gone down player. And generally, I think of Kevin Durant, Kobe Bryant, Dwight Howard, Larry Bird, Derrick Rose, Klay Thompson and many more in the NBA for injuries that wound up present because of stress and overload.
      It's simply not intelligent to ignore one's body and persistently strain and over-exert it persistently with the cliche no pain, no gain/feel the burn way of doing things.

    • @UsyksmashedFurytwice
      @UsyksmashedFurytwice 2 года назад +3

      @@TheCriminalViolin Rugby Union/League is also a prime example of this. The two games are the most attritional Sports out there added to the fact that they train like absolute beasts. No wonder their bodies break down so much and they retire by 30. Concussion levels are also at astronomical levels nowadays.

    • @secretagent4610
      @secretagent4610 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@gmoney5947Slow and steady wins the race.

  • @cannonball7984
    @cannonball7984 3 года назад +1

    I knew these things existed but didn’t totally understand how to implement it. He has just explained it so logically I now know what to research to gain the most benefit.

  • @mememaker9146
    @mememaker9146 5 лет назад +66

    Master: Ok treat yourself like a Ferrari.
    Make sure your blood is well. Not to thick or thin.
    Creatine before workout gives you a dose of ATP properties for energy use
    Caffeine removes fatigue signal.
    Breath through nose.
    Have one constant continuous workout in your rotation. Running, cycling, boxing. At least 30 min 4 times a week. Measure improvements and add minutes or remove break times.

    • @nemanacemu2024
      @nemanacemu2024 5 лет назад +4

      Hoosier Daddy Everything but caffeine is right. Why add a nitrous to the Ferrari when u don’t need it

    • @mememaker9146
      @mememaker9146 5 лет назад +4

      @@nemanacemu2024 It depends on how much results you want. You can increase your output with caffeine. If two people do the same workout but one uses timed caffeine before workout. The one that uses caffeine will eventually outpace the other in personal best milestones and results. Good for you if you are extraordinary without caffeine.

    • @fast6232
      @fast6232 4 года назад +1

      Hoosier Daddy yea let’s get real. Caffeine is too good not to use

  • @tonynieves7206
    @tonynieves7206 5 лет назад +13

    This can be summarized as the mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell

  • @kingpinjunky0219
    @kingpinjunky0219 5 лет назад +1068

    When I think about endurance all i think about is how long i can plow the wife for.

    • @TheAcrispi
      @TheAcrispi 4 года назад +58

      kingpinjunky02 preach brother

    • @cryptomon86
      @cryptomon86 4 года назад +26

      Jamal got u my dude

    • @randyb637
      @randyb637 4 года назад +96

      3 minutes max

    • @kingpinjunky0219
      @kingpinjunky0219 4 года назад +120

      @@randyb637 3 min! Legend brother

    • @kingpinjunky0219
      @kingpinjunky0219 4 года назад +106

      @George Washington that fancy shit dont work when your rocking 3 inches lol 😂😂

  • @dynamichunter843
    @dynamichunter843 Год назад +2

    I love guests like these. More please! Super interesting and informative

  • @franklopez2702
    @franklopez2702 5 лет назад +1805

    He looks like a steroid free drug free Joe Rogan

  • @ryedergrenier3561
    @ryedergrenier3561 5 лет назад +21

    0:59 is perfect

  • @neilkale8568
    @neilkale8568 5 лет назад +36

    so this is how Anakin scored so high on his test

  • @glry2dagrind
    @glry2dagrind 2 года назад

    This video has been recommended to me like 50 times and I watch it every time. I don’t know why

  • @amochswohntet99
    @amochswohntet99 Год назад +4

    This is how coaches should be talking to their athletes. Actually explaining exactly how far to push. Coaches I've had don't say anything like that. They just say 'GO!'

  • @ohgizzle2084
    @ohgizzle2084 5 лет назад +5

    I really needed to watch this, thanks joe.

  • @andykidd4430
    @andykidd4430 2 года назад +12

    Pavel. "let's discuss endurance" = let me lecture you on endurance and don't interrupt me"😁
    And I have no problem with it at all. Really informative.

  • @VanadiuM140291
    @VanadiuM140291 3 года назад

    Thank you so much PAVEL TSATSOULINE