Originally posted by Banderivets
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Most primates are composed of a 50/50 mix of fast and slow twitch muscles.
most activities use a combination of both.
the guy that can jump like crazy, likely trained his fast twitch and slow twitch muscles evenly through playing ball. speed of action and body weight put enough tension on the muscles to promote myofibril hypertrophy in both types of fibers, while at the same time not being so much weight that that it promotes unbalanced hypertrophy in just the fast twitch fibers.
for the guy that can jump, both his slow twitch and fast twitch muscles are trained optimally and evenly. also, he likely has very strong legs despite not being able to lift much with his arms.
in comparison the guy that cant jump does heavy lifts all day, he has very strong fast twitch motor units such that they are unbalanced in comparison to the slow twitch.
slow twitch muscle is responsible for general motor skills, fast twitch for fine motor skills. something like typing on a key board, that's fast twitch, something like jumping where the whole body works together, that's slow twitch.
it is my opinion that the unbalance causes inefficiency in the bodys ability to coordinate together to jump.
but even if that's not correct, you also you have the neglect of nearly half the muscle fibers in your body by not training for myofibril hypertrophy in the slow twitch muscles.
fast and slow twitch muscles tend to work best when they can work together in balance. strength is good, fast twitch fibers are good, when kept in balance.
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