Hi, guys. Before I start, I'm sorry if this is found in the wrong forum.
As of now I am roughly 180 lbs, 5'10 and a guy who just turned 16 years old. I was wondering if there is if ANY chance of me being able to cut 30 lbs by the end of the season? I don't care about how, I am just curious if it has ever been done before.
As far as dieting is concerned, I have currently lost a pound since last week, as I left junk food behind me and have replaced things for healthy alternatives such as white bread for whole wheat, crackers for bananas, etc.
Thank you in advance for reading this far.
Dropping heavyweight-is it possible?
- hjs
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Re: Dropping heavyweight-is it possible?
Depends on your build. What is your bodyfat %, that must be pretty high now to have room for the cut, this plus your age, your body will develope further. Its very unlikely you have that room.
If you are 25% plus you have a good change though. A young guy like you should always be lean, nomatter what weight
If you are 25% plus you have a good change though. A young guy like you should always be lean, nomatter what weight
Re: Dropping heavyweight-is it possible?
You don't say which "season" you are referring to.
Unless you are fat, dropping 30lbs at your age/height is going to be tough to do.
Unless you are fat, dropping 30lbs at your age/height is going to be tough to do.
- Carl Watts
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Re: Dropping heavyweight-is it possible?
Your pretty heavey for your age/height and I was a lightweight at 16 years old.
No chance of keeping it there though due to my body type and gaining muscle mass over the years, I could not make lightweight now even at zero percent body fat.
Your better off forgetting about the weight and just train hard, eat well and see where it takes you naturally. Trying to artificially stay below your natural state is just too much stress on your body. Loosing a few pounds to get there is okay but big losses affect your performance.
No chance of keeping it there though due to my body type and gaining muscle mass over the years, I could not make lightweight now even at zero percent body fat.
Your better off forgetting about the weight and just train hard, eat well and see where it takes you naturally. Trying to artificially stay below your natural state is just too much stress on your body. Loosing a few pounds to get there is okay but big losses affect your performance.
Carl Watts.
Age:56 Weight: 108kg Height:183cm
Concept 2 Monitor Service Technician & indoor rower.
http://log.concept2.com/profile/863525/log
Age:56 Weight: 108kg Height:183cm
Concept 2 Monitor Service Technician & indoor rower.
http://log.concept2.com/profile/863525/log
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Re: Dropping heavyweight-is it possible?
I don't think 30 lbs would be advisable or healthy.
Should you lose weight? Sounds like it. But you should lose in in a slow, steady, and healthy way. Trying to cut 30 lbs is absurd.
While the choices you've made are certainly good ones, the caloric difference in switching from white to wheat and crackers to bananas is insignificant. Definitely a good overall choice due to other health attributes, but strictly dealing with calories not an important change.
Exercise more, don't drink soda, don't sit on your butt all day. The weight should slowly but surely drop.
Should you lose weight? Sounds like it. But you should lose in in a slow, steady, and healthy way. Trying to cut 30 lbs is absurd.
While the choices you've made are certainly good ones, the caloric difference in switching from white to wheat and crackers to bananas is insignificant. Definitely a good overall choice due to other health attributes, but strictly dealing with calories not an important change.
Exercise more, don't drink soda, don't sit on your butt all day. The weight should slowly but surely drop.
PBs: 2k 6:09.0 (2020), 6k 19:38.9 (2020), 10k 33:55.5 (2019), 60' 17,014m (2018), HM 1:13:27.5 (2019)
Old PBs: LP 1:09.9 (~2010), 100m 16.1 (~2010), 500m 1:26.7 (~2010), 1k 3:07.0 (~2010)
Old PBs: LP 1:09.9 (~2010), 100m 16.1 (~2010), 500m 1:26.7 (~2010), 1k 3:07.0 (~2010)
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Re: Dropping heavyweight-is it possible?
A loss of one pound in a week is statistically meaningless. When people diet often they reduce carbs. A reduction in carbs tends to be a bit, to highly diuretic (very low carb diets are very diuretic). People on very low carb diets will literally pee out 4-6lbs of water over a week--stop the very low carb diet and the diuretic effect stops and the 4-6lbs come back. Virtually all diets tend to lose a few water pounds at the start.
Switching white bread for whole wheat or crackers for bananas is a wise move from a nutrition point-of-view but you are simply exchanging sugar with vitamins + minerals for sugar without. Switching carbs for carbs will do nothing for weight.
A rule of thumb is to lose no more than 2lbs/week. You have a BMI of 25.8. For your age this put you a bit overweight. To be in the bottom 10% (leanest) of your peer group (18 y/o males) (note: do not use adult BMI charts! see: http://www.calculator.net/pdf/chart-2015.pdf) you could aim for 20% BMI. 20% BMI is right about 154lbs. Therefore if you lose 26lbs you would be in the leanest 10% of your age/gender group. You would not be "ripped" but if you had a "6 pack" it'd be visible.
One would think therefore that if you lost 2lbs/week it would take 13 weeks, and it would except it is extremely unlikely you would/could do it by dieting and you should not try. If you want fast weight loss I'd suggest that you attempt to lose 1lb/week at most, and attempt to exercise 1lb/week. Since 1lb of fat loss requires ~3300C (kilocalories) this will equate to about 6 hours of rowing/week. (Caveat: check with medical practitioner first and if sedentary, it may take 8 or more weeks to work safely up to this level. If you have been aerobically active you could lose 13lbs over 13/weeks "but" you won't. Here's why: If you row you'll build muscles, shoulders, quads, many areas... so over 13 weeks you might gain 4lbs of muscle.
See: http://www.calculator.net/bmi-calculator.html (for YOUR chart look near the bottom of that page--you do not fit on the adult chart just yet!)
Now for the other 13lbs. Diet. Simple calorie restriction of any kind will work. Using this: http://www.calculator.net/calorie-calculator.html
We see:
you need 2534 Calories/day to maintain your weight
you need 2034 Calories/day to lose 1 lb per week
you need 1534 Calories/day to lose 2 lb per week
So a 500 calorie reduction/day will meet your goal if you can do 6 hours/week of moderate aerobic exercise, basketball, rowing, cycling, etc.
If you gain 4lbs of muscle to aim for the leanest 10% you'd adjust your goal upwards from 154 to perhaps 158.
Can you do this in 13 weeks. Sure if you are highly motivated.
As for dieting, try fitday.com they have a free tracker which is great. The biggest problem I see is that dieters lie to themselves all the time, by using weighed portions you can track nearly exact calories and also keep an eye on nutrition.
Switching white bread for whole wheat or crackers for bananas is a wise move from a nutrition point-of-view but you are simply exchanging sugar with vitamins + minerals for sugar without. Switching carbs for carbs will do nothing for weight.
A rule of thumb is to lose no more than 2lbs/week. You have a BMI of 25.8. For your age this put you a bit overweight. To be in the bottom 10% (leanest) of your peer group (18 y/o males) (note: do not use adult BMI charts! see: http://www.calculator.net/pdf/chart-2015.pdf) you could aim for 20% BMI. 20% BMI is right about 154lbs. Therefore if you lose 26lbs you would be in the leanest 10% of your age/gender group. You would not be "ripped" but if you had a "6 pack" it'd be visible.
One would think therefore that if you lost 2lbs/week it would take 13 weeks, and it would except it is extremely unlikely you would/could do it by dieting and you should not try. If you want fast weight loss I'd suggest that you attempt to lose 1lb/week at most, and attempt to exercise 1lb/week. Since 1lb of fat loss requires ~3300C (kilocalories) this will equate to about 6 hours of rowing/week. (Caveat: check with medical practitioner first and if sedentary, it may take 8 or more weeks to work safely up to this level. If you have been aerobically active you could lose 13lbs over 13/weeks "but" you won't. Here's why: If you row you'll build muscles, shoulders, quads, many areas... so over 13 weeks you might gain 4lbs of muscle.
See: http://www.calculator.net/bmi-calculator.html (for YOUR chart look near the bottom of that page--you do not fit on the adult chart just yet!)
Now for the other 13lbs. Diet. Simple calorie restriction of any kind will work. Using this: http://www.calculator.net/calorie-calculator.html
We see:
you need 2534 Calories/day to maintain your weight
you need 2034 Calories/day to lose 1 lb per week
you need 1534 Calories/day to lose 2 lb per week
So a 500 calorie reduction/day will meet your goal if you can do 6 hours/week of moderate aerobic exercise, basketball, rowing, cycling, etc.
If you gain 4lbs of muscle to aim for the leanest 10% you'd adjust your goal upwards from 154 to perhaps 158.
Can you do this in 13 weeks. Sure if you are highly motivated.
As for dieting, try fitday.com they have a free tracker which is great. The biggest problem I see is that dieters lie to themselves all the time, by using weighed portions you can track nearly exact calories and also keep an eye on nutrition.