Home :: Craig
Ballantyne
Uncensored Q&A with Craig Ballantyne
Craig Ballantyne is the author of Turbulence
Training, a fat-loss system designed specifically
to help busy men and women get better, faster results in the least
amount of time.
If you need help getting in shape for the summer
and you don't want to give up your summer
nights and be a slave to the gym, Craig has some great ideas you
can use to burn fat and build muscle.
Christian Finn: For those readers who don't know much about you,
who are you and what do you do?
Craig Ballantyne: I'm a strength and conditioning coach and fat
loss expert living in Toronto, Canada. I write for Men's Health
(I have two pieces in the North American
June 2007 issue if you're interested), Women's Health, and Oxygen
magazines. I have a Master's Degree in Exercise Physiology from
McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
In the past, I've worked with many busy men and women and young
athletes (including a stint helping the Canadian National Rugby
Team prepare for the 2007 world cup). Most of my current time is
spent helping my online clients through www.TurbulenceTraining.com
and www.TTmembers.com.
With Turbulence
Training I've put together short, quality fat-loss workouts
for men and women to do at home with minimal equipment. The programs
use a lot of bodyweight exercises and dumbbell exercises, and
the workouts change every 4 weeks because I truly believe variety
is one of the main principles for success when you are trying to
change your body in any way.
I still spend a lot of time with my head in the research and spend
a fair bit of time in the gym training and consulting.
Christian Finn: What's the best piece of training advice you've
heard or read lately?
Craig Ballantyne: I recommend quality of training over quantity
of training when it comes to fat loss, but only in the last 7 months
have I really applied the lessons to my own training, and I have
to thank Jason Ferruggia and Jim Wendler for getting my head on
straight.
Like many of my clients, I find that when I have extra time to
workout, I want to do "more, more, and more" because
I think that will give me better results.
However, I find my workouts go best when I stick to 3 times per
week. Keep it simple. Don't try and do any fancy schemes or do
more than my body can handle. Heck, I often break personal records
when I can only lift twice per week due to travel.
So no matter what your goal, focus on quality of training, not
how often and how much you can train.
Christian Finn: What about the worst?
Craig Ballantyne: Most of the worst I advice I read is in the
nutrition field. From "negative calorie foods" — which
is impossible, by the way — to fancy, expensive, post-
workout drinks, the nutrition recommendations I come across everyday
make me
shake my head.
Like training, it’s the simple things that work, when applied
consistently.
Adding one magical amino acid to your post-workout drink is not
going to do what the "guru" claims it will. That's the
bottom line.
Instead, you need to build practical and possible habits that
you can follow to help you eat whole, natural foods while avoiding
junk 90% of the time.
Christian Finn: Describe the sort of training you do now.
Craig Ballantyne: I go Monday, Wednesday, Friday, doing
mostly full-body workouts. On Monday I bench heavy and squat moderate
and do lots of upper body pulling. On Wednesday, I do Olympic lifts,
kettlebell snatches, and bodyweight exercises. On Friday, I deadlift
heavy, and do accessory work for my bench press. I do a lot of
light activity on my off days.
Christian Finn: What do you think about the so-called "functional
training" and "core stability" workouts that seem
so popular right now?
Craig Ballantyne: I don't really like those terms, that's for
sure, since they can't really be narrowed down to a single definition.
They don't really mean anything, because people use them to describe
everything.
I think people should focus on getting strong in basic exercises,
becoming more mobile and athletic, and train with proper form at
all times.
In the gym, nothing irritates me more than watching trainers have
a client do some type of squat on a balance implement when the
client can't even perform a proper squat standing on the floor.
But then again, many times the trainer can't squat properly either.
I think the only reason "core" training got as popular
as it is, is simply because "core training equals ab training" in
most people's minds. And any excuse to do more ab training is welcomed
by the majority of people in the gym.
But in reality, every exercise, when done properly, is an ab exercise.
You and I both know how much the abs should work when squatting,
rowing, and even bench pressing and when doing dumbbell curls.
If you are training hard, you can't avoid working your abs hard
in these movements.
Christian Finn: Do you train men and women any differently?
Craig Ballantyne: I used to say "no," but now I think
I do, mostly to work around a woman's pre-conceived notion of strength
training, but also because I think we can
get all the metabolic boost from strength training with only a
small volume of lifting.
So women do less volume, unless they need more. I find that we
don't lose any results by letting a woman do one hard set of free
weight exercises rather than three hard sets. We still train with
low reps though.
I also use bodyweight exercises as much as possible with women
because they don't have the same "fear" of bulking up
when we do this. Therefore, we can do more volume with less hassle.
In the end though, what I say goes with the client, but I've found
I've been able to make some adjustments and everyone stays happy.
Christian Finn: Turbulence Training is probably the training program
that you're most famous for. How did you develop Turbulence Training
and how has it evolved over time?
Craig Ballantyne: It all started back in 1999 when I was finishing
up my Master's degree in Exercise Physiology here in Canada. One
of my research studies was on
Androstenedione, the hormone used by Mark McGwire in his infamous
home run
chase season of 1998.
It was during the analysis of this study, while I was spending
12+ hours in the lab each day, that I came up with the Turbulence
Training workouts — by necessity — since I had no time for my traditional
long workouts. So I put my training and coaching experience together
with the research studies I had conducted and read from 1994-1999,
and came up with the high-intensity, short workout approach to
building muscle and burning fat.
Since the first TT workout in 2000, I've been refining the program
to include more dumbbell exercises, more bodyweight movements,
and a wide variety of interval methods. And still now, eight years
later, I'm coming up with new workout strategies to keep things
fresh for my readers.
Christian Finn: Any new projects on the horizon?
Craig Ballantyne: TurbulenceTraining.com is
my main focus. Because I'm a big believer in the power of Internet
Social Support for weight loss programs, I spend a lot of time
each day on the Turbulence Training discussion forums. People with
common goals can really support each other and make a difference
in the results of a total stranger halfway around the world, even
if you aren't an expert. It's just that support of checking in,
giving a valuable tip here and there, and showing people that someone,
somewhere cares about their success is all that we need to succeed.
And we're doing some cool video stuff on that site and YouTube
as well. People really appreciate the video because I can show
them more details about an exercise or technique that pictures
just don't do justice.
Christian Finn: If you had to give someone a single piece of training
advice about building muscle and burning fat, what's the most important
thing you could tell them?
Craig Ballantyne: Focus on intense, quality training and
let your nutrition do the rest — no matter if you want to
build muscle or burn fat. Remember — training is simply applying
a stimulus to your body... and in response, your body adapts. And
intense workouts are the most time efficient way to get that message
to your body's muscle!
All you need is about 2% of your week to be engaged in hard exercise.
Get a little additional low-intensity activity on everyday of the
week, and learn how to eat right for fat loss. To do that, you
need to set up nutrition routines you can stick to... each day,
try to improve your nutrition habits.
Aim for consistency in exercise and nutrition and you'll improve
everyday, without being a slave to the gym.
Christian Finn: Imagine you're working with a major film star
who has eight weeks to lose 30 pounds of fat and build some muscle
in preparation for the lead role in the latest Hollywood blockbuster.
What do you do with them?
Craig Ballantyne: I would have control over every single thing
that they eat. That's the
biggest ticket to success here. No booze, no excess sugar, and
just giving them enough reward to stick with the program.
If this guy is a typical overweight, sedentary individual, we'll
have no problem achieving getting rid of 20 pounds of fat through
nutrition.
As for exercise, we need to be consistent, and stick with our
intensity principles. We would do three hard workouts per week
using strength training followed by interval training. I've outlined
my basic philosophy above, with the program being centered on basic
movement patterns done with free weights.
Everything is done in supersets in the workout to get more done
in less time. For example, we might do a squat and superset it
with a pressing exercise. I also like to pair free weight exercises
and bodyweight exercises in supersets, for example, a dumbbell
split squat paired with a decline pushup.
We'll do 3 superset pairs, each for 1-3 sets, and stick to 8 repetitions
per set. Then we'll finish the workout with 6 hard intervals of
30-60 seconds (with 60-120 seconds rest between each). This way,
we are in and out of the gym in 45 minutes.
On "off" days, we'd still get at least 30 minutes,
if not 60 minutes, of low-intensity exercise. But it wouldn't just
be slow cardio. Instead, we'd focus on low-intensity bodyweight
training. For example, if the actor can do a maximum of 25 bodyweight
squats, 15 pushups, and 5 chin-ups, we would use easier versions
of those exercises in circuits.
Here's a sample 6 exercise bodyweight circuit that we'd do at
least 3 times, doing 10 reps per exercise.
Wall Squat
Kneeling Pushup
Beginner Inverted Bodyweight Row
Step-up
Stability Ball Leg Curl
Mountain Climber
After that, we might cross train with a variety of cardio exercises
to avoid overuse injuries that occur when you repeatedly do the
same activity and nothing else.
So that's pretty much it. If he (or she) sticks to their nutrition,
we're as good as gold and the actor will be ready just in time.
Christian Finn: Thanks for the interview Craig!
Turbulence
Training
Do you want to have a great body to show
off at the beach or at a wedding this summer? Do you want to achieve
your goals in less time than ever before? And do you want
to exercise at home with as little equipment as possible?
If you want to reveal your abs using simple workouts
that can easily be done
in the comfort of your own home, Turbulence
Training will help you get in shape in less than 3 hours
per week... without endless hours of cardio, fancy equipment
or expensive supplements.
|