Posts Tagged ‘MMA Conditioning Workouts’

MMA Workouts with Odd Shaped Objects

MMA Workouts with Odd Shaped Objects

Although mma workouts weren’t the first to include odd shaped objects with various strength and conditioning exercises, the sport is certainly helping it grow in popularity.

Outside of being an exciting way to add spice to your mma workouts rather then the same old push and pull exercises with barbells and dumbbells, their should be a method to the madness.

Just because your flipping tires and throwing medicine balls and carrying around a sandbag doesn’t necessarily mean your optimizing your mma workouts if there’s no formula for progression to it.

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Mirko Cro Crop’s Excellent Point on MMA Conditioning

In the post fight interviews after the explosive and wild UFC 115 card, Mirko Cro Crop confirmed a great point regarding mma conditioning that I wrote about a few months back.

When asked about his training coming up to the fight, the Croatian native talked about how in the past he would be able to do 5 -10 minutes of high intensity rounds on the punching bag. But then, 3 – 5 minutes into a fight, he would still find himself gassed out.

This is when he stated a very important point when it comes to mma conditioning that I think few mma fighters realize when he said…

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How 60 Seconds or Less Change Your MMA Conditioning Workouts Forever

When conditioning for MMA, every second of exercises AND rest count

If you’ve been training with mma conditioning workouts for a while but you still find yourself gassing out in your training or competition, you may be making a mistake in your training  that can be fixed in 60 seconds or less.

One of the biggest but perhaps unnoticed mistakes that I’ve seen mma fighters or combat athletes make in their training is not enough attention to the time they “rest” in between sets, reps, intervals, or rounds in their mma conditioning workouts.

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MMA Conditioning Workouts: New Age of Circuit Training

Bear crawls is a great mma conditioning exercise

Circuit training has been around for a long time. It is a staple in exercise routines for developing cardiovascular endurance and muscular conditioning.

As the sport of mma becomes more and more popular and the standards for mma fighters strength and conditioning continues to increase, mma conditioning workouts need to be more refined and sport specific then ever.

Traditional circuit training had trainee’s doing typical “old school” exercises such as push-ups, pull-ups and sit-ups.

Although these will continue to be staple exercises for any athlete, fighters and combat athletes need more sport specific mma conditioning workouts and exercises.

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Why MMA Conditioning Workouts Need to be Done Right

Randy Couture has some of the best conditioning in MMA

Today I realized a very important lesson, and that is why it’s so important that your mma conditioning workouts need to be bad ass. I have been training in MMA for quite some time now, and tonight’s training was one of the most grueling workouts I’ve ever been through.

More importantly, I experienced the importance of the proper development of strength and conditioning if you are going to be able to last several rounds in a tough fight.

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MMA Conditioning Workouts and Work Capacity


In the bodybuilding world, a big challenge with beginner bodybuilders is overtraining.

For the best and fastest results, bodybuilders must spend a maximum of 60 to 90 minutes in the gym per day developing the appropriate muscles, anywhere from 3 to 6 days a week depending on the volume of their training and their specific body type.

Everything else they do before and after these gym sessions must be very low energy tasks, since getting enough rest and allowing your muscles to rebuild themselves with minimal recreational activity in between is absolutely necessary.

With this concept in mind, outside of actually training in the gym, I’ve seen many bodybuilders (including myself) get lazy, which is actually preferred especially if you are really looking to gain muscle mass.

This mentality simply does not apply when it comes to mma and how you should approach your mma conditioning workouts.

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MMA Conditioning Workouts: How to Save Time While Developing Strength And Cardio Simultaniously

One obstacle even the most motivated fighter in world will often face is the inability to realistically sacrifice the time it takes to elite levels of mma strength and conditioning.
I mean, the average person has a job, a family, school, or some other major obligation that simply cannot be comprised for putting the time it takes to become a mma fighter.
If you aspire to become a fighter with a chance to compete with some of the best, you have to develop a certain level of mastery in three different categories:
Martial Arts Skill
Plain and simple, if you want to be a good fighter, you’re going to have to put in the man hours it takes to learn how to fight.
This includes striking, kicking, the clinch, throws and take-downs, grappling, and everything else in between; not to mention putting these altogether so that you can harmoniously transition from each of these distinctive techniques and their respective styles.
This alone can take YEARS to develop and requires a minimum three to five days a week of consistently improving your technique and skill.
There is no short-cut in regards to time when it comes to developing the skill it takes to become a mma fighter.
Strength and Power
Fortunately, because of the nature of the human body, developing strength and power doesn’t take several hours a day to develop. On the contrary, it shouldn’t take more than  4 hours a week to constantly improve your strength and power, and in many cases much less.
This is something most people can fit into their schedule without making any major sacrifices of time in their daily life.
Cardiovascular Conditioning
Developing your cardiovascular conditioning, like strength and power, doesn’t have to take too much time out of your day, but still requires consistent effort.
No more then 20 – 60 minutes of cardio 4 to 5 days a week is needed to develop maximum levels of cardio conditioning.
Again, developing your cardio doesn’t take too much time in your day by itself, but once you begin putting all three of these together, it can add up to several hours A DAY that many people simply don’t have.
Saving Time with Circuit Training in your MMA Conditioning Workouts
Once you factor in your strength, power, cardio and overall conditioning in, the hours start to really pile up.
Like I stated above, the average busy person just doesn’t have an extra 2 or more hours a day to dedicate to strength and conditioning, especially if they are heavily engaged in attending a mma school to develop their skill daily.
There is a way, however, to save time by combining your strength training with your cardio in your mma conditioning workouts. This is through circuit training, also known as complexes.
A circuit is moving from one exercise to another with little to no rest periods in between each exercise, not stopping to rest until one “circuit” is complete.
With each workout, you can either increase the weight you do for each exercise, or decrease the time it takes to complete a circuit.
The great thing about circuit training is that compresses the time it takes to develop strength, power, AND cardiovascular conditioning into one mma conditioning workout; and the best part is that circuit training normally doesn’t take longer than 25 minutes a day to complete.
Don’t assume that with circuit training you’ll work any less hard or get any less of a result.  In fact, this type of training is one of the most physically demanding things you can do if you really push yourself, and is a staple in every fighter’s mma training workouts.
To learn more about circuit training and complexes for mma fighters, or to get started on proven mma conditioning workouts developed specifically for aspiring fighters who have little time but still want the results, the top two programs I would recommend are

circuit-training-room

One obstacle even the most motivated fighter in world will often face is the inability to realistically sacrifice the time it takes to develop elite levels of mma strength and conditioning.

The average person has a job, a family, school, or some other major obligation that simply cannot be comprised for putting the time it takes to become a mma fighter.

If you aspire to become a fighter with a chance to compete with some of the best, you have to develop a certain level of mastery in three different categories:

(more…)

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