Max Workouts Review: Weeks 7 – 9 Amazing Results

9 weeks into the MaxWorkouts program and I could not be any happier with the results. The workout program has made me leaner, stronger, more flexible and I love what I see in the mirror. But, for me, the best gift the Shin Ohtake has given me with this exercise program is that I feel amazing. I have more energy than I have had in years, I have more stamina, I have fewer injuries, and I feel more athletic than I did in my teens.  (AND I’m doing it with less time in the gym. )

Max Workout Review is a review blog. To visit Shin Ohtakes Max Workouts official website click on the links below:

http://maxworkoutreview.com/maxformen  : For Men

http://maxworkoutreview.com/recommendsforwomen : For Women

Shin Ohtake preaches intensity in his Max Workouts program. His fundamental premise is that fitness is intensity dependent, not time dependent. After embracing the program for 9 weeks I am a believer.

So if  simply working out with intensity is the key, why doesn’t everybody do it? Because it is hard. But I’d rather workout hard with high intensity interval -like training and get out of the gym in 30 minutes than spend an hour bored to death sluggin it out on a treadmill and not getting results.

There are a lot of things you can do to step up the intensity of your workout. More weight, less rest, greater speed, etc. All of which Shin addresses in this workout plan.

Max Workouts emphasizes simple compound movements that recruit simple compound movements in the most functional manner possible. I think this is why I feel so limber and athletic now.  Burpees, back squats, deadlifts, are all core to this section of the program and I can’t tell you how amazing I feel after these last few weeks.

Summer is just around the corner. Hell, with the way the weather has been it feels like it is here already.  If you want to look great and feel great this summer this workout and exercise program, if you do the work, will have you ready for the best summer of your life.

 

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Max Workout Review: Weeks 4 – 6 – MaxWorkouts Delivers Results

MaxWorkouts is really delivering results for me. This really is a great, well thought out workout program. Weeks 4, 5, and 6 brought a whole new set of exercises and I got to tell you week 4 really kicked my ass. But the bottom line is that I dug deep and powered through those tough workout exercise days and I continue to get bigger, stronger, and leaner.

Max Workout Review is a review blog. To visit Shin Ohtakes Max Workouts official website click on the links below:

http://maxworkoutreview.com/maxformen  : For Men

http://maxworkoutreview.com/recommendsforwomen : For Women

 

So starting in week 4 we get new exercises. New sets for the three lifting days we have and new optional ab routines as well.  This workout program works because of its focus on the big muscle groups and hitting them with intensity while making each workout a exercise in testing your cardio as well. These three weeks sees deadlifts, pull-ups, pike push ups and a host of other big muscle exercises being added to the routines. As before, in Crossfit-like style, the last lifting workout of the week  encourages you to pound through as many sets of the 4 exercise workout as you can in 20 minutes. (6 was my best and I was totally trashed when I was done)

Have you ever tried one legged box squats? You will in this program and they are amazing. Shin Ohtake did a great job in the MaxWorkouts design by incorporating so many exercises where your balance as well as your muscles are challenged throughout the exercise routines. My first day of box squats was frankly pretty ugly, so I squeezed a few extra in on my cardio days just so I could really get them down. My glutes and quads were not very happy with me, but again the results of better definition and additional muscle growth are very evident.

The bottom line here is that I am enjoying the variety in the workouts, I am getting results with less time in the gym, and I am definitely feeling a lot more athletic that I have in a long time.  This MaxWorkouts is tough, but I am loving this program.

 

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Max Workout Review: Weeks 2 and 3

I got to tell you that I am really pumped with the results I am getting from this workout program. Weeks 2 and 3 have the same exercises and workouts as the first week and I can already see the greater muscle definition and growth.  What I want to talk about today is the cardio aspect of the workout.
Max Workout Review is a review blog. To visit Shin Ohtakes Max Workouts official website click on the links below:

http://maxworkoutreview.com/maxformen  : For Men

http://maxworkoutreview.com/recommendsforwomen : For Women

Intensity is the magic of this program and it is all over the cardio portion of the workout. Plodding on a treadmill for an hour ain’t gonna cut it here, Shin is going to make you tear it up.  Your cardio work is going to be 20 minutes…that’s all. But in those twenty minutes you are going to having your heart pounding out of your chest as you go through high intensity intervals.

The nice part of it is that Max Workouts does not mandate what kind of cardio you do, just how you do it. You can run sprints, you can row (my favorite), you can hit the bike, you can jump rope, whatever is your favorite cardio activity.  I love the variety.  But you must work at the pace Shin outlines which will be periods of 80%+ exertion followed by periods of 30% exertion.   (Don’t get too cranked about what 80% feels like vs 30%…just bust your ass and then let up)

What I am finding is that my cardio has improved a lot AND I’m not spending as much time on it.  Plus, I’m losing some of that “goo” around my waist that had been very resistant  and hard to get rid of.  I’m just looking more athletic.

I’ve recently re-injured an ankle so I’m not at full speed on some of the workouts that are requiring lunges, etc. but I am still seeing huge benefits from what I am able to do.

Loving this program.

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Max Workouts Week 1 Review: Wow!

Max Workout Review: Week 1

So, I now have week number one under my belt and I got to tell you I am floored by how I feel and the sublte changes I am already seeing in my body and my energy level. I was not in terrible shape as I started this program. I was in the gym 3-4 times a week, did some stationary bike for cardio, used the army of weight machines my gym has lined up for us to use. But at the end of the day while I was sort of fit, I really didn’t feel athletic. I missed the feeling of knowing I could participate at a reasonable level in any sport I played. Somewhere along the way I lost that feeling. That sense of being in control of a well tuned machine.  Max Workouts and its fitness workouts has impressed me in the first week.

Max Workout Review is a review blog. To visit Shin Ohtakes Max Workouts official website click on the links below:

http://maxworkoutreview.com/maxformen  : For Men

http://maxworkoutreview.com/recommendsforwomen : For Women

I must admit I was a bit skeptical as I began this week. I was used to spending 90 minutes plus when I was in the gym. I tried to cram as much “work” as I could into my precious gym time. And while I worked hard, I lacked pace and intensity. I was a classic 3 sets of ten reps with 1 -3 minutes rest between sets kind of guy.  Max Workouts is very Tabata like in its approach in that we are only doing three or four distinct exercises (after warm ups). The difference is we are doing them with focus, intensity, and with no rest in-between each super set and only one minute rest between rounds. In the last workout of the week, which included good old fashioned burpees, he challenges us to simply do as many rounds as we can in twenty minutes. I was totally gassed after each workout…and totally pumped.

What I think Shin Ohtake has done with Max Workouts is design a synergistic workout program that combines high intensity interval training, free weight and body weight exercises, and balance centric lifts, in an intelligent combination that will trigger your bodies’ natural ability to burn fat and build muscle. While I am just one week into the program I am excited by what I see and feel so far…AND I am doing it with a hell of a lot less time in the gym. I am all for that.  Stayed tuned for an upcoming post on the cardio component of week one.

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Max Workout Review of Tabata – The Magic of Intensity

Fitness is intensity dependent, not time dependent.  Shin Ohtake makes this an integral part of Max Workouts. Early on in the manual he talks about the importance and benefits of high intensity, short duration workouts. He introduces the Tabata protocol early in his program. Max Workout Review has just begun the program so look for an update soon!

In a 2009 article for Trail Runner magazine, author Rich Butkevic provides some good background on Tabata:

The Fabulous 4 (Minutes) -August 2009
The short-intense-workout that delivers
By Rich Butkevic
Many great things have come from Japan. The Lexus GS, sushi and ninjas are some of my favorites. But one invention outshines them all-Tabata training.You probably haven’t heard of Tabata training, a short, intense workout that yields inexplicable gains. The method may seem unusual, and like something meant only for extremists or mystical Japanese runners with scraggly three-foot beards that live in the high mountains and scurry up ancient trails without their feet touching the ground.Don’t worry; it’s not that complicated, and, remember, it wasn’t that long ago that only rebels ate sushi.

What is it?
Way back in the dark ages (1996), Izumi Tabata from the National Institute of Fitness and Sports in Tokyo, Japan, was searching for a better training protocol for the Japanese speed-skating team.

He eventually hit the jackpot with an unorthodox program, in which participants performed speed skating interval training for 20 seconds at a time alternated with 10-second rest intervals for eight sets-a total of four minutes of training. He compared the results with a more common training regimen of 60 minutes of traditional steady state endurance training.

Participants who used Tabata’s interval technique for six weeks improved their maximum aerobic capacity by 14 percent, compared to 10 percent for the participants training for an extra 56 minutes.

The real gem was that this training also improved anaerobic capacity simultaneously by 28 percent, while the 60-minute group experienced no increase at all!

What does all this mean in English? Tabata training can improve the results of your cardio training by almost 50 percent according to Tabata’s study.

If that isn’t enough, the kicker is that during those short four minutes, you can actually build muscle at the same time–despite burning calories!

The method is so effective that Alex Koch, Ph.D., an assistant professor of exercise science at Missouri’s Truman State University, says, “The ‘Tabata protocol’-which sounds like it could be a tantric sex act or a secret martial art-deserves its reputation.”

The Quick and Dirty

Tabata training is downright simple. As previously mentioned, you perform eight 20-second interval sets, with 10 seconds of rest in between each set.

What’s an interval? It a short burst of intense activity, in our case, a sprint. Warm up for five to 10 minutes at an easy pace. Then, hold on tight, because the next four minutes will be brutal.

Take off in a full-blown sprint, like someone is chasing you, for 20 seconds. Then rest for 10 seconds, then sprint again for 20 seconds. Do eight sets. Perform the routine over relatively flat terrain, or even a treadmill, because the key is speed.

The Rest of the Story
Start by doing a weekly Tabata session, and see how quickly you improve. If you’re really hard core, you can even do a Tabata session after your regular run.

The workout does not change. Over time, your speed will simply increase, so your sprints become more intense.

If you’re a beginner, start with a single Tabata workout a week. If you’re intermediate, try two at the end of your usual workouts. If you need to outrun the paparazzi, go for three sessions weekly.

Total Body Tabata Strength Training
For trail runners, strength training offers injury prevention, body-composition benefits and speed increases. Focus on multi-jointed exercises (e.g. in a dumbbell curl, the only action is at the elbow, while in a squat, you use your knees and hips), and use the power of Tabata training to squeeze more from every rep and cut your training time drastically. Then you will have more time for the trails.

Aim to strength train three days a week. Every time you work out you’re training your whole body-no need to train arms one, day, calves the next, and all that other nonsense that requires you to keep a cot at the gym.

In every workout perform an exercise that pushes and another that pulls horizontally and vertically, and also alternate between squat and dead-lift variations.

Just like your Tabata cardio routine, do as many reps as you can of each exercise for 20 seconds, rest 10 seconds, and repeat for a total of eight sets. Don’t count reps. Use about half the weight you would normally use for 10 to12 reps. Your rest periods are short, so no gabbing or drinking water.

• Vertical push exercises. Dumbbell or barbell presses (incline, flat or decline). Dips are also good push exercises.
• Horizontal push exercises. Barbell or dumbbell overhead presses.
• Vertical pull exercises. Pullups and chinups, or lat pull downs.
• Horizontal pull exercises. Dumbbell or barbell rows.
• Every workout should also include either a squat or dead-lift exercise, alternating between workouts.

Keep a journal of the exercises and weights you use, and remember your body adapts to exercise quickly. Every week or two, try to increase the weight slightly or do more reps in each 20-second period.

Switch up the exercises every week. For example, if you do dumbbell/barbell presses one week as your horizontal push movement, do barbell incline presses the next week. Also, change the order in which you perform the exercises.

Shin calls Tabata “The 4 minute Fat Incinerator” and incorporates this proven method into Max Workouts.

 

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Shin Ohtake – Max Workouts Guru: The Real Deal?

Thanks again for visiting Max Workout Review. So today I am taking a hard look at Shin Ohtake the author and creator of MaxWorkouts. If you have spent anytime at all on the internet looking at workout programs , coaches, and mentors you know there is a lot of crap out there.  ”5 minute” ab programs, “Easy” ways to fitness, programs that suggest that you can have an amazing body and get super fit without doing any hard work.  You and I know that it just BS.  The thing that intrigued me about Shin’s program is that he never says its going to be easy, but what he does promote is that your workouts can take less time and get better results if you follow his methods. I am all for that.

Shin Ohtake

Shin Ohtake is a well educated man and that education has been focused on biochemistry, physiology, and anatomy. He did his undergrad work in biochem at McMaster University in Hamilton Ontario Canada. He focused a lot of his studies on how the body’s energy systems work and how these processes result in more calorie burning. He went on to get his doctorate degree at Palmer Chiropractic  College West in Northern California. I think it is this base of a great clinical understanding of the physical and biochemical processes of the body mixed with the anatomical and physiology stressed at Chiro school that has helped him develop what appears to be a killer program to get super fit.

Along the way Shin has had mentors that have included Charles Polquin, a world renowned strength and conditioning coach. Polquin was key in getting the concept of quality over quantity ingrained in Shin’s mind as one of the key concepts for an efficient and effective fitness program. Early on Shin began to understand and expand on the link between the nervous system and weight loss and muscle building. I think he is unique in that he designs his workouts to stimulate the nervous system in such a way that in contributes more to your calorie burn and your ability to increase your strength and build lean mass faster.

In his chiropractic practice he sees soooo many soft tissue injures. He sees guys like me, athletes, stay at home moms, all who in an effort to get fit fast are probably working out too hard too fast.  So many of us are getting hurt by using poorly planned workouts (Guilty), outdated fitness methods (Guilty), and over training (Very Guilty).

Shin’s program focused on three goals in the resulting training methods:

1. Be short in duration to prevent overuse injuries

2. Optimize the body’s energy systems to maximize calorie burn

3. Stimulate the nervous system to increase overall strength and fitness

This Dude is in Shape!

The bottom-line for me is that Shin has over 20 years of experience in the space. He has a clinical knowledge base of research, university study, and, most importantly, hands on experience with athletes and just regular folks like you and me who want to get super fit.

He has fine tuned this program over his years as a fitness trainer working with people who are overweight, recovering from injuries, or have just reached a fitness plateau. My first read of the program has impressed me greatly and I am equally impressed by Shin Ohtake’s journey to develop and deliver this program.

He is the real deal.

 

 

 

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Max Workouts – The Quest for a Leaner Fitter Body Begins

Welcome to Max Workout Review. I hope you will find the information I share with you to be helpful as you try to determine if this program is for you.  Shin Ohtake has put together what appears to be a fabulous program that can help you achieve the body of your dreams. Ladies are you looking to be lean, fit, and sexy?  Guys, for us its about being fit, muscular, and athletic. I think Shin can get you there.

I have just purchased Max Workouts and will begin my review, analysis, and the workouts in the days ahead. I have to tell you I am really excited as I have heard a lot of great things about the high intensity interval training in Max Workouts.

Max Workouts Review will live with the program and give you our opinion on the workouts, the system, and more importantly the results. I’m no rookie to working out. For most of my life I have been a runner but the past three years I have been severely limited by a series of lower leg injuries from shin splints, tendonitis, and most recently a torn planters fascia (THAT one hurts like hell).  As my running was limited by injury I felt my fitness slipping away day by day.  I knew had to hit the gym and seriously get working out before I turned into a cream puff.

One day I ran into the P90X marketing machine via a late night infomercial. Tony Horton was contagious, I was getting fat, it was a match made in heaven. I bought it.  And guess what? It worked.  I quickly packed on ten pounds of muscle. I looked great. I felt good for a while.  But then program began to get a bit stale for me. I knew the routines by heart…even knew the witty dialogue Tony had scripted word for word. More importantly the relentless pull-ups and chin ups began to take the their toll on my shoulders to the point where I just had to lay off.  So my quest for an alternative began.

I believe that any of the programs you can buy can deliver results for you if you work them. Shin Ohtakes MaxWorkouts, P90x, Insanity, etc.  Do the workouts, eat right, get plenty of rest and you will get results. What I want is a program that gives me maximum results in a minimum amount of work out time. I don’t want to spend hours in the gym. I want to get in workout hard and get out. I think Max Workouts might be that program. Check back in often to see if I am right.

 

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