Research Shorts
Three months of hard training. Squats, leg press, knee extensions. Strength went up 18%. Muscle size increased 10%. Then the athletes stopped everything for three months. Strength returned to baseline. Muscle mass disappeared. And then something nobody expected — unloaded movement speed jumped 14% and power increased 44%. Not despite the detraining. Because of it. The mechanism is a molecular one. Heavy resistance training suppresses the fastest muscle fiber type — MHC IIX — almost completely. When training stops, those fibers overshoot back, exceeding even pre-training levels. The muscle becomes structurally faster at the molecular level. Electrically evoked twitch rate of force development increased 23%. The force-velocity curve shifted in a direction that only detraining could produce. This episode breaks down exactly what the Andersen et al. data shows, why the overshoot phenomenon matters for speed and power athletes, and what it means for how periodization should actually be designed around intentional detraining blocks.
27 Folgen
Kommentare
0Sei die erste Person, die kommentiert
Melde dich jetzt an und werde Teil der Research Shorts-Community!