Originally posted by fatboy51
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One of the guys at my gym is significantly bigger than me. I think he was 258+ and 5'8 or 5'9 for his first fight (i'm fairly certain that I'm taller than him at 5'10 or 5'11). The guy hung real well with a guy over 6 foot and a buff 240+.
At 6'4, 300 you can go real far as a heavyweight. Just don't try to do too much too fast. Big guys can't work out the same as little guys. These little guys like to double their own programs for big guys who have to work extra hard just to do the same amount; which is a little messed up. You really have to steadily & consistantly make changes; and that will ensure your success.
Cut out the smoking, or at least cut it back- no more than once a month.
Eat better- get your 6 servings of veggies, stay away from fried stuff & sugary stuff, try to cut out sodas if possible-or at least switch to diet, make sure you're eating as much chicken & tuna as possible, and complex carbs like oatmeal will give you the energy you need in your workout. Diet too strict and the second you get off of it, you'll pack on serious weight- plus it won't work as well if you try to do it in the future. Just be consistent.
Get some cardio. These little guys like to prescribe 6 days a week of insane cardio because cardio doesn't make them sore the next day, unlike for big guys. I would say at least 3 days a week of whatever cardio doesn't make you too sore the next day for 30 to 45 minutes a session. Trust me, the heavier you are, the more calories you'll burn. You're going to burn something like twice as many calories per minute as a 150lb guy doing the same exercise. Try to worry more about your heart rate & perceived effort than actual speed or distance, because the speed and distance will come as long as you're working hard. Do at least one of those days with sprint sessions of some sort.
Being a heavy guy, calisthenics are no joke. You'll get more muscle gains from calisthenics than most little guys will ever get hitting the weights at a gym & spending their allowance on supplements. You need to be doing pushups, bodyweight squats, squat thrusts, pullups, dips, and chinups whenever you can.
Your power will be sick if you learn leverage and proper mechanics. Pivot that back foot but keep it planted, twist those hips, and turn that shoulder over. Good mechanics is more important than throwing a overly-tensed "power" punch. True KO power doesn't feel like that much strain.
Take care of your joints- you need light warm ups & stretching so you're not laid up with injuries. Big guys get more injuries than little guys because regardless of the size of your tendons & ligaments, there's only so much force they can withstand so you want to make sure they're warmed up and working correctly.
As long as you stay consistant you'll lose the weight you need to lose in a time that's good for your body. If you try to go too outrageous with it, you'll burn out, get injured, and enter a revolving door of "gym comebacks".
Above all else, Consistancy is the Key.
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