The Insane Ways Track and Field Transforms Your Body

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  • Опубликовано: 31 июл 2024
  • Discover the jaw-dropping changes that happen to you when you're an elite track and field athlete!
    Athletics isn't just a sport; it's a catalyst for unbelievable body transformations. In this video, we dive deep into what happens to athletes when they push their limits in various track and field events.
    00:00 INTRO
    00:55 SHOT PUT HAND
    02:05 (ALMOST) UNBREAKABLE BONES
    03:11 RUNNER'S BLOOD & PAIN
    05:00 FASTER & SMARTER
    07:07 LIVING LONGER
    Find out how how sprinting increases your cognitive abilities and how the triple jump can make your leg bones almost unbreakable. Learn about the remarkable adaptations that come with shot putting, middle to long-distance running, and more. From extreme muscle development to incredible cardiovascular enhancements, see how track and field shapes the human body in ways you never imagined and uncover the science behind the astonishing transformations from one of the most demanding sports on the planet!
    #TrackAndField #Athletics #Sprint #Endurance #sportsscience
    References:
    Triple Jump bone density: europepmc.org/article/med/115...
    Cardiac output in untrained, trained runners and elite runners: www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.11...
    Pain study comparing non athletes, soccer players and endurance athletes: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
    Sprinting study comparing muscle size and strength of untrained, sub-elite and elite sprinters pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33009...
    Increased BDNF in sprint runners: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
    8124 former US olympians lifespan study: bjsm.bmj.com/content/55/4/206
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Комментарии • 175

  • @MysteryClover
    @MysteryClover 22 дня назад +137

    This is one of the most informational videos of track I've ever seen. Its super detailed! I learned so much information from watching this.

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  22 дня назад +7

      That is great to hear! Really appreciate that, thank you.

  • @JerryDream-tb3ex
    @JerryDream-tb3ex 22 дня назад +421

    Now this is the type of information they need to include in the Netflix sprinting series and promo spots for olympics. Amazing! Track and field is so underrated, partly because people have no idea what goes on behind the scenes and what athletes have to do to perform at these levels. Also, I threw shot put in high school and college and had no idea that happens to the hand, guess I didn't have enough power to do that. Keep these videos coming, need more of this!

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  22 дня назад +11

      Thank you, completely agree! More track videos on the way 👍

    • @Marathon5151
      @Marathon5151 21 день назад +7

      Not many people can understand the obsession needed for track & field and endurance sports. I would like to think I’m a decent marathon runner. Latest marathon being 2:40:30 at the age of 40. I have run 34 marathons and have no intention on stopping. I wake up at 4-5 am most mornings and just grind away to get my 80-100 miles in a week with 3-4 strength sessions and 3-4 flexibility/stretching along with some biking sprinkled in. People think I’m crazy and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

    • @TirnanHealy
      @TirnanHealy 21 день назад +1

      @@Marathon5151damn that’s solid mileage! Do you include tempos / short intervals? Avoid alcohol?

    • @Marathon5151
      @Marathon5151 21 день назад +2

      @@TirnanHealyYes, I include tempo, fartlek, intervals, strides and hill sprints. I don’t remember when’s the last time I drank alcohol and I became vegan July 2023 to increase recovery.

    • @RobertMcGimpsey
      @RobertMcGimpsey 20 дней назад +3

      That is a solid marathon at ANY age!! Wow!! Keep doing the thang, man!! That is why I am getting back into competition and training at age 66. I miss it and it helps me feel better, and my athletes can see that you are never to old to have fun and compete!!

  • @jenngreen7043
    @jenngreen7043 22 дня назад +302

    40% more blood and unbreakable bones - T&F athletes are basically superheroes.

  • @seattlegrrlie
    @seattlegrrlie 18 дней назад +26

    I'm not elite level, but I've done endurance sports for 30yrs. My doctor regularly has to ask me to move around so that my resting heart rate and blood pressure will register on his machine as I'm lower than it's designed for.

  • @bkosa21
    @bkosa21 22 дня назад +61

    Being a 45 year old sprinter who can reach a top speed of 18-20 mph and ran 100m in 13sec. That is some good stuff in the video. And I definitely need to focus on stride length.

    • @jackdaniels2905
      @jackdaniels2905 20 дней назад

      That's cap.

    • @ml09394
      @ml09394 20 дней назад +12

      @@jackdaniels2905 13 sec at 45 is do-able. very athletic but if you train yeah

    • @billybussey
      @billybussey 16 дней назад +1

      @@jackdaniels2905 13 is not crazy

    • @bkosa21
      @bkosa21 14 дней назад +2

      #Jackdaniels2905 it's not crap. 13 seconds for a 45 year old sprinter with no spikes or blocks is almost world class speed at the Master/senior levels. Go so some research on official 100m track times in my age group before you type.

    • @bkosa21
      @bkosa21 14 дней назад +1

      ​@billybussey 13 is crazy. I'm world class fast and I'm faster than 98% of the world population in my age group. Do some research before you reply incorrectness.

  • @epsilonjay4123
    @epsilonjay4123 22 дня назад +111

    As a community college level Distance runner, this is why we need to get more attention to track and field as a sport in the US. When the US hosted the track and Field World Championships, I was watching in the stadium, and there were empty seats (imagine if there were empty seats at the Super Bowl, NBA Finals, World Series, World Cup, etc.). Training in these events makes you live longer, and more people should be able to see it. All of this is not to mention how many people do track in high school as a sport.

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  21 день назад +8

      Great points, track & field is the #1 sport in high school in the US, we need to figure out how to keep people excited about it.

    • @jmgonzales7701
      @jmgonzales7701 2 дня назад +1

      as much as i like track and field and it has the potential to be one if not the accessible sport other than running i doubt it would be "popular" idk if its due to the viewership, or the sports within itself however it doesn't seem to attract much fans to play it or even watch it, it doesn't help that there is barely any leagues and most of these athletes are only popular during the Olympics. anyways what do you think?

    • @jmgonzales7701
      @jmgonzales7701 2 дня назад

      @@OutperformOfficial Making a league for it would be a start.

  • @evannatland5151
    @evannatland5151 22 дня назад +40

    Been following the science of sprints for over 15 years and had no freaking clue it made you a little smarter too. Happier I knew, but smarter? Awesome.

  • @bolinchen448
    @bolinchen448 22 дня назад +28

    This is gold. As a track athlete losng motivation because of summer break, this really pumped me with motivation to workout! Really enjoyed this type of video, please keep this up.😍

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  21 день назад

      Heck yeah, that is great to hear! Keep after it 👊

    • @johnny9
      @johnny9 20 дней назад +2

      Lock in! Go get em💪

  • @bjf5027
    @bjf5027 22 дня назад +61

    As a track coach I have never seen this topic addressed in such an entertaining way. Very well done

  • @ProductivityRunner
    @ProductivityRunner 12 дней назад +5

    I remember that workouts were so painful and agonizing that after they ended, it felt like normal life was on Easy Mode + Runners High.
    Like oh, I got to do an essay now, that's not as painful as the workout I just did :)

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  11 дней назад +1

      That is a fantastic insight! Great example of how athletics carry over into other parts of life.

  • @alberttheartist5661
    @alberttheartist5661 20 дней назад +8

    The most excellent yet the most underrated sport on the planet.

  • @hyp3r618
    @hyp3r618 22 дня назад +20

    Saying that elite sprinters dont have greater stride frequency than normal runners is misleading. Maybe this is true towards the top end, but the ability that sprinters have to rapidly exchange their legs in the first ~30 meters cant ever be replicated by normal runners.

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  20 дней назад +2

      Interesting hypothesis, would be very interested to see the data on that.

  • @LGTVQHD
    @LGTVQHD 22 дня назад +5

    and that's the reason me being an endurance runner, i strength train with some compound lifts where i can lift double my BW and whenever i do hill training, I SPRINT, my max at hill was 24.1kmph for 3 sec out of 15 sec of uphill.

  • @jai992
    @jai992 19 дней назад +5

    this is called content. underrated content. but that's the best part because it takes time to spread the word. good going guys.

  • @shendovankerckhoven2044
    @shendovankerckhoven2044 22 дня назад +18

    It was a really great idea to show scientific litterature in the video
    It could be even more fantastique if you could put them in the bio

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  22 дня назад +4

      Thanks, absolutely, just added links to all scientific literature in the description.

    • @shendovankerckhoven2044
      @shendovankerckhoven2044 22 дня назад +1

      @@OutperformOfficial Thank you very much, you do an amazing job to promote and explain track and field!

  • @lukahmartinez2120
    @lukahmartinez2120 22 дня назад +4

    These are insane how fast the body adapts🔥😮

  • @quaylan2074
    @quaylan2074 16 дней назад +5

    I really wish I stuck with track & field growing up. I was an excellent short distance sprinter. Always wondered why certain muscles were bigger than others, but it all makes sense.

    • @jmgonzales7701
      @jmgonzales7701 2 дня назад

      as much as i like track and field and it has the potential to be one if not the accessible sport other than running i doubt it would be "popular" idk if its due to the viewership, or the sports within itself however it doesn't seem to attract much fans to play it or even watch it, it doesn't help that there is barely any leagues and most of these athletes are only popular during the Olympics.

  • @Johnrap
    @Johnrap 22 дня назад +4

    Great motivations to keep training into the Masters ages.

  • @KX5Kat
    @KX5Kat 6 дней назад +2

    I took up sprinting in my early 30s and even though I’m not super fast, my body is on another level (jacked and maintaining 8-10% BF for years).

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  5 дней назад +1

      Nice! Same here, getting back into sprinting many years after college and it is an incredible workout. Fantastic for growth hormone energy and fills in the gaps of traditional weight lifting. Also, it's a lot more fun than squats and deadlifts.

  • @OGdienomyte850
    @OGdienomyte850 22 дня назад +4

    Great break down

  • @invisibl3.
    @invisibl3. 17 дней назад +2

    Gave me motivation to try all these sports. Nice vid

  • @katalinyoungburg9583
    @katalinyoungburg9583 21 день назад +3

    Love this video! I did track for 4 years (in high school) and I learned quite a bit from this video. This needs to be more well known information because then more people would probably be interested in the sport.

  • @HSpartaL
    @HSpartaL 22 дня назад +1

    Great video, happy I found it in my recommended 👍

  • @theneoathlete
    @theneoathlete 22 дня назад +12

    If you feel goosebumps watching this, we should be friends.

  • @JayFriedrichs
    @JayFriedrichs 22 дня назад +5

    Damn this is dope! I just made a similar video about how running changes your body and brain - but so cooo to see event specific adaptations

  • @clone_wick_f
    @clone_wick_f 22 дня назад +3

    Should also mention how the psoas is much much larger in faster sprinters like asafa powell than even 10.2 runners. Love the video!

  • @Clongg
    @Clongg 20 дней назад +2

    Thank you for posting high quality content like this

  • @renebotana7263
    @renebotana7263 22 дня назад +5

    Best RUclips Chanel 🙌

  • @jayure1346
    @jayure1346 22 дня назад +2

    Helping this vid on the algorithm :)

  • @FPL_Sassy
    @FPL_Sassy 18 дней назад +1

    Okay. This is one of the coolest videos I have watched on RUclips. Period.

  • @RobertMcGimpsey
    @RobertMcGimpsey 20 дней назад +2

    This is such a great, informative video that gives info without being preachy. I've always told my tracksters that track is for smart athletes; I didn't know it helped them get smart!! LOL!!😊 Excellent video, keep them coming. The influence of systematic training on the human body is AMAZING. 😊

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  20 дней назад

      Thank you, really appreciate that! That is a great thing to tell your athletes, completely agree.

  • @neeckks
    @neeckks 21 день назад +2

    This is awesome!!!💛

  • @marshallgray645
    @marshallgray645 17 дней назад +1

    Great video thank you

  • @Leukick
    @Leukick 16 дней назад +1

    My gosh this video is so cool ..... it makes me excited to start watching and appreciating all this different sports. Well done.

  • @Drew_001
    @Drew_001 20 дней назад +2

    This had some seriously good information, might have even convinced me to do more long distance running

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  20 дней назад

      Heck yeah, endurance training is definitely a life changer!

  • @robws007
    @robws007 22 дня назад +2

    This is an excellent piece... almost it's own genre: the short-format documentary!

  • @eo9165
    @eo9165 20 дней назад +1

    Having tried everything from HS X-C to the LJ, TJ and the 400m hurdles in college, I can honestly say that T&F has had a profound impact on my life and my career. I’m a white collar professional, but T&F taught me how to deal with stress and also how to get back up off the ground after losing. It has given me earned confidence. Something you cannot fake. At the most basic level, being able to run fast or far and jump-and knowing that you can do this-is like a security blanket as you walk through the world. Someday when I’m retired, I’d like to augment this by training in BJJ. I think that’s the missing piece of the puzzle for me. I rolled briefly with some SOF dudes and realized quickly that MMA is the challenge I’ve been missing!

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  18 дней назад

      Great write up. I'm right there with you on BJJ, it's something I've had on my list to take up for a few years now, continue to hear great things about it from friends that have started. I also feel like it's the missing piece to my training.

  • @Aj-jj6pl
    @Aj-jj6pl 21 день назад +2

    Amazing video. Very detailed

  • @lecorny007
    @lecorny007 22 дня назад +1

    As a climber who has been very consistent for a couple years, my shoulders and fingers are atleast "above average" in term of strenght, power and durability, ive done some crazy "dynos" to really nasty holds, one handed with literally no fear of shoulder dislocation.

  • @stefanoviviani6064
    @stefanoviviani6064 19 дней назад +1

    Very interesting, thank you! And as a mid-long distance (amateur) runner, I subscribe to the pain 🤣

  • @Mikaelasotelo
    @Mikaelasotelo 17 дней назад +1

    loved this video keep it up🔥🔥🔥

  • @erickminor
    @erickminor 21 день назад +2

    Great video. A Larger muscle can produce more force, so they are stronger.

  • @johnny9
    @johnny9 20 дней назад +1

    This is INCREDIBLE. Really appreciate this as a former mid-D runner

  • @hannigfitness
    @hannigfitness 11 дней назад +1

    Nice vid!

  • @cesarflorez8136
    @cesarflorez8136 20 дней назад +1

    Wow wow, that's a VIDEO!!!

  • @mrroysir
    @mrroysir 20 дней назад +1

    Now I now why I felt good when I did sprinting till college. I did just for fun.

  • @JohannesGjendem
    @JohannesGjendem 14 дней назад +1

    Thank you for this very interesting video! Would like a more detailed and longer version as well.

  • @GetFaster39-lr7im
    @GetFaster39-lr7im 22 дня назад +2

    They need to make it team oriented to bring in more popularity

  • @spencerphillips2658
    @spencerphillips2658 22 дня назад +1

    I didn’t do any sports as a kid and just got into sprinting 100-200m alongside doing Olympic lifts and plyos to supplement. It has been awesome! I absolutely love it, although I’ve been out for a couple weeks due to an eversion ankle sprain playing flag football.

  • @vinnythep00h
    @vinnythep00h 20 дней назад +1

    Super interesting video!

  • @Boff000
    @Boff000 19 дней назад +1

    W video

  • @Fontanat
    @Fontanat 14 дней назад +1

    Found my new favorite channel. Track & Field needs a Netflix series like F1.

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  13 дней назад

      Heck yeah, completely agree!

    • @jmgonzales7701
      @jmgonzales7701 2 дня назад

      as much as i like track and field and it has the potential to be one if not the accessible sport other than running i doubt it would be "popular" idk if its due to the viewership, or the sports within itself however it doesn't seem to attract much fans to play it or even watch it, it doesn't help that there is barely any leagues and most of these athletes are only popular during the Olympics.

  • @sprinttv88
    @sprinttv88 9 дней назад +1

    Another brilliant video! I just have a question regarding sprinting technique. Does actively driving your legs straight down into the track make you faster? would love to know. :)

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  8 дней назад +1

      Thanks for the positive feedback! Regarding your question, actively driving your legs straight down into the track does contribute to speed when done properly. It’s essential to combine this with proper rhythm, posture and arm action for the best results. Keep practicing and refining your form to see significant improvements!

  • @randychampion184
    @randychampion184 9 дней назад +1

    What are the impacts of track and field training/competition at the elite level on testosterone levels in males?

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  8 дней назад

      Elite track and field training can significantly impact testosterone levels and growth hormone levels. Intense workouts cause a spike in testosterone as the body responds to physical stress, promoting muscle recovery and adaptation. However to maximize the hormonal response you have to get great sleep. During slow wave or deep sleep is where the body does its magic and releases the most testosterone and GH. You also need to get enough protein. 30+ grams per meal x 4 meals a day (at least 120 grams per day) is a good starting point. Studies suggest that it takes ~30 gram dose to get the body to maximize protein synthesis. We're planning on doing a video on this in the future with a lot more detail so stay tuned!

  • @wolfofaspen
    @wolfofaspen 11 дней назад +1

    Strange… i feel this urge to run

  • @Clemsnman
    @Clemsnman 21 день назад +1

    Pole vaulters and Decathletes are the only all-around athletes in T&F.
    Pole vaulting is the most fun event, too.

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  20 дней назад +1

      We're working on a Decathlon video right now. It's unbelievably underrated and even though people don't watch videos on it we're spending the time and doing it anyway. Keep an eye out for it in 2 weeks.

  • @parappa9056
    @parappa9056 19 дней назад +1

    Can you do a video on high jumpers?

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  18 дней назад

      Yes, we've got a lot more track and field 'mini documentaries' on the way, stay tuned!

  • @bobbullethalf
    @bobbullethalf 22 дня назад +7

    Track and field athletes are just better than NBA, NFL, Hockey and Baseball athletes. I just love the way they train and all the events are exciting to watch. I especially love the women hammer, discus and shot-put and can’t wait until til the Olympics!

    • @jmgonzales7701
      @jmgonzales7701 2 дня назад

      hmm it depends, if you put them together i would agree but they don't have maxed out attributes, like some are specialized in running, some in power, some in endurance. but not all of the above at the same time. so in general yes but i think the NFL are just normally the better athlete. unless ur a kicker.

  • @NateCreed07
    @NateCreed07 21 день назад +1

    This is a sub

  • @didi_cy0528
    @didi_cy0528 20 дней назад +1

    how about pole vault

  • @freddiebensonstan7037
    @freddiebensonstan7037 22 дня назад

    Funny video dude. I currently have a stress reaction in my tibia from high jump, when do I get unbreakable bones!

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  20 дней назад

      Bummer man, not sure about high jump adaptations. Best of luck with your recovery.

  • @ivoryas1696
    @ivoryas1696 13 дней назад +1

    Heh. Based!
    My favorite sport(s?)!

  • @NikhilNarmeta
    @NikhilNarmeta День назад +1

    Decathlon athelete does all 😮

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  День назад

      You're absolutely right! We are actually working on a decathlon video right now highlighting how incredibly difficult it is so stay tuned.

  • @SE45CX
    @SE45CX 22 дня назад +2

    It would be great when sport commentators would bring up some of these factoids during a race.

  • @thunderred5263
    @thunderred5263 7 дней назад

    Now i feel guilty of skipping my runs

  • @lobsterstrange
    @lobsterstrange 4 дня назад

    As a former track athlete I can say I'm in pain every single day so it didn't make me any stronger I'll tell you that

  • @Deepak28262
    @Deepak28262 22 дня назад

    Hello sir
    I am 20 years old
    I usually practice short events 100 m to 400 m
    Current i am going to semi elite or advance level ( before elite level )
    My glute muscle and size is good in underweight type body
    But i do intense walking in offseason for my recovery and healing injury due to long time of sprint session
    My walk speed ( 9 to 11 km /h pace ) is 80 to 85 percent to like as race walker , but not techniques as race walking
    I have no training in 800 m and 1500 m , i gave jog time 2 min 50 in 800 m
    And without no training 6 min 10 second in 1609 metres one mile and 5 min 45 second in 1500 m with relax and jogging mode with full of bad air quality pm 2.5 250
    Even i was not good in middle distance or long distance i usually easily tired in my teens
    Even my sprint time is better within one years
    100 m - 17 sec to 12 sec
    200 m -40 sec to 25 sec
    400m - 100 sec to 56 sec
    Tell me , which type of muscles fibres i have and what should do , i am focus on sprint events
    Because i have not coach , i am doing without coach
    My body looks like underweight

  • @Clemsnman
    @Clemsnman 21 день назад

    I always hated distance running bc its just pain tolerance.

  • @nivlac_dj6327
    @nivlac_dj6327 11 дней назад +1

    Even looking at the variety between athletes in the same event in crazy. Look at the difference in build and running technique betweeen sha'carri Richardson and Usain Bolt 2 dominate atheletes with completely different builds

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  10 дней назад +1

      That's true. Or look at Usain Bolt vs Christian Coleman. However, we are currently working on a video about the decathlon and looked at the average height and weight of medal winners from the last 5 Olympics in same 10 individual events. We were surprised to find how similar athletes are. Especially in the throwing and jumping events.

  • @oolamigoke
    @oolamigoke 19 дней назад +1

    Incredibly well done. Keep this coming 👏🏿👏🏿
    (also shout out to my almost unbreakable bones from 20 years of triple jump 🫡)

  • @NRClips3414
    @NRClips3414 22 дня назад

    POV Swimming: Hold my beer

  • @ciw8688
    @ciw8688 18 дней назад

    Does training for 3k race have the same blood and pain tolerance benefits mentioned in the video?

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  17 дней назад

      Absolutely!

    • @ciw8688
      @ciw8688 17 дней назад

      @@OutperformOfficial i wnt to combine weight lifting and running, at what running distance does it affect muscle mass?

    • @RR42636
      @RR42636 5 дней назад

      @@ciw868811km

  • @posthrdcore
    @posthrdcore 18 дней назад

    The good thing about solo sport is, you don't need to carry your mates. In team sports, if your mates are useless, ALL YOUR TRAINING CAN GO DOWN THE DRAIN

  • @TheDaddyNick
    @TheDaddyNick 21 день назад +1

    Wolff's Law

  • @trevtronix9338
    @trevtronix9338 21 день назад

    Great vid, but very hard to take longevity study at face value-too many confounding variables, a large one being socioeconomic status.

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  20 дней назад +1

      Thanks, fair point. Here is a really interesting study that touches on socioeconomic status that shows that silver medalists live longer than gold. "Contrary to conventional wisdom, winners die over one year earlier than losers. I find strong evidence of differences in earnings and occupational choices as a mechanism" www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0167629618303370#:~:text=In%20roughly%20half%20of%20cases,year%20earlier%20than%20Silver%20medalists.

    • @trevtronix9338
      @trevtronix9338 20 дней назад

      Very interesting!

  • @broncokonco
    @broncokonco 21 день назад +1

    Mostly it transforms me into a bundle of small lingering injuries.

  • @fuvet
    @fuvet 13 дней назад

    Not professional soccer players having the same pain tolerance as a normal person

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  11 дней назад

      I thought that was very interesting/surprising as well.

  • @morgan28200
    @morgan28200 17 дней назад

    Pourquoi le titre est en français et l'audio en anglais enfait...

  • @baboimnida
    @baboimnida 8 дней назад

    왜 제목이 한국어지?

  • @emonymph6911
    @emonymph6911 11 дней назад

    printers are cool

  • @marcodimaggio6
    @marcodimaggio6 19 дней назад

    😖

  • @maxumkornilov2335
    @maxumkornilov2335 6 дней назад +1

    And people wanna tell me it isn’t the best sport in the world, haha okay 🙄🤣🤣

  • @alvarojneto
    @alvarojneto 22 дня назад +1

    That last bit was misleading. Certainly elite athletes live longer than gen pop, but if the claim to refute is that it doesn't shorten the life, it should be compared with other health-conscious groups. Afaik, the consensus is that peak athletic performance does curtail longevity.

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  20 дней назад

      Looked at a lot of research on this, it's difficult as there are many confounding variables. The data on endurance athletes is pretty clear cut, VO2 max is one of the best predictors of longevity and although there are diminishing returns towards the very top it doesn't plateau. Strength and power athletes are another story, difficult to parse out athletes that used PED's, if they continued to exercise into later years of life etc.
      Some studies show high jumpers have longest life expectancy (with a relatively small sample size) bmcsportsscimedrehabil.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13102-017-0067-z
      Would be curious to see the data you found that supports the consensus is that peak athletic performance does curtail longevity.

    • @alvarojneto
      @alvarojneto 20 дней назад

      @@OutperformOfficial Thanks for this enlightening reply. I will comply with your request, even if not right away. I'm very open to being wrong.
      But, off the top of my head, I think my understanding comes from listening to podcasts from longevity researchers. I have names in mind, but I don't want to attribute to others possible falsehoods out of carelessness.

    • @alvarojneto
      @alvarojneto 16 дней назад

      @@OutperformOfficial pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27540872/
      This is one study (only one) substantiating what I said. It does, however align well with what Prof. David Sinclair says about longevity being a function of low energy expenditure and low body mass.

    • @alvarojneto
      @alvarojneto 15 дней назад

      @@OutperformOfficial Here's one study on the matter
      pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27540872/
      It aligns well with what Prof David Sinclair stipulates on longevity, that it is a function of low energy expenditure and low body mass.

  • @HuckleberryHim
    @HuckleberryHim День назад

    I don't know about that last part on longevity. I didn't see the study and I know controlling for covariates is the norm, but the way they phrase it seems like they are just comparing the longevities directly. It should be obvious why this is super flawed. Olympic athletes are extremely disproportionately likely to be from privileged backgrounds, and they often (but not always) just get more of that privilege after a successful career. This is really just a correlate of wealth in disguise (though not a very good disguise...)
    Also, just because endurance events might confer longevity benefits doesn't mean all of "track and field" does. I think this is a general problem with the video, kind of referring to this all as one sport but also not one sport. Really, though they are associated by history and stuff, they're absolutely not one sport. You realize this, obviously, but you still lump them together many times. The throwing sports really emphasize big physiques, no doubt with the help of, uh, pharmaceutical substances. That can't be good for longevity. In general, actually, probably all of these athletes are juicing, so that has to be taken into account too (though some are on less dangerous cycles than others)

    • @OutperformOfficial
      @OutperformOfficial  22 часа назад

      Thanks for the comment! Would be very interested to see your data behind the statement that "Olympic athletes are extremely disproportionately likely to be from privileged backgrounds." Also, the idea that longevity differences are merely a correlate of wealth is tenuous and dismisses the impact of physical fitness and healthy lifestyles (not to mention the fact that very few track and field athletes gain significant wealth after they are in the olympics).
      The assertion that "probably all of these athletes are juicing" is a sweeping and unfounded generalization, without data difficult to really comment on it.
      Absolutely agree that track and field is many different sports with different changes to the body. It's the primary theme of the video 🙂.

    • @HuckleberryHim
      @HuckleberryHim 18 часов назад

      @@OutperformOfficial I genuinely think it is extremely self-evident that Olympic athletes would be from disproportionately privileged backgrounds, for a litany of reasons, and that any understanding of how the world operates socioeconomically just makes it trivially obvious that this is the case. It's like saying "I'm not sure if doctors and lawyers are likelier to be from privileged backgrounds". People who make a career of competing in equestrian or sailing aren't usually Joe from the corner.
      But if this needed to be substantiated empirically (it really doesn't), it has been, thoroughly. For one study, look up "Sociodemographic profile of an Olympic team". Far, far likelier to be white and privately-educated than the general public. There are other studies as well. It's no secret, and even less of a surprise.
      It may be sweeping, but to call it unfounded just shows a lack of familiarity with the subject (unless you're saying I specifically didn't back it up in my comment, which is fair). This stuff isn't discussed very openly for obvious reasons, but as it happens, Insider released an amazing interview with Victor Conte just days ago, called "How Olympic Sports Doping Actually Works"; he is most famous for having been convicted in an Olympic doping scheme.
      Seeing what he has to say just makes it very obvious that this still goes on, as a matter of course. In general, though, the arguments are (necessarily) circumstantial. Like seeing world experts on PEDs consistently being part of athlete teams, or seeing people be busted for drug use while supposedly "natural" competitors outperform them (ridiculously unlikely). This goes beyond just the Olympics; people have no idea what people are naturally capable of anymore and to what extent these extreme feats and constant new records are being enabled by pharmaceuticals (not to dismiss everything else, but the records would be nowhere close to what they are now otherwise).

  • @slimfit767
    @slimfit767 22 дня назад

    7:11 extreme exercise often leads to lifelong injuries so yea