“Hey, man, you don’t look so hot. You ok?” I asked Marty after we had just finished a gazillion suicide drills on the basketball court. Our coach, this was in college and now a long time ago (sigh), thought the best way to build a team was to tear it apart with suicide drills after a full practice.
Marty was a junior; seasoned. Used to this. I was a rookie.
Marty looked at me, hands on his knees, nodded his head then stood up and sort of stumbled over to the bleachers where promptly threw up.
On his way back, wiping his mouth with his forearm, he said,”Shouldn’t have eaten before practice. When I will learn? I’ve done that way too many times.”
I, the freshman, managed to miss dinner before practice not because of any inherent wisdom. Oh no. I got lost on the way to the dining hall. But at least I didn’t throw up.
This issue of when to eat before your train and what to eat is batted around the internet like badminton birdie on a windy day. Before, after, not at all, high carb, low carb, protein, no protein, small cats (no – just kidding).
So what gives?
Here’s the thing. It depends on what you’re going to do and why you’re doing it.
If your goal is fat loss, it looks like when you eat matters.
First up, the science.
Researchers published in late 2010 a new study that compared three groups of healthy men1
All three groups increased their calories by 30% over their usual intake and increased their fat intake by 50%. One group did not exercise and two groups did exercise. One of the exercising groups trained before breakfast and drank water during their sessions while another group ate breakfast and consumed some type of carbohydrate during their sessions (like a sports drink).
At the end of six weeks, the group who ate more calories and did not exercise not only gained weight but had become more insulin resistant (insulin is a hormone that helps move energy into the muscle) – their muscles were less able to use the energy. The group who exercised but did so after a big breakfast also gained weight, although about half as much as the sedentary group, but were still more insulin resistant.
Only the group who exercised before in a fasted state gained little to no weight even though they were eating alot more calories and they did not become insulin resistant. One of the study’s authors explained, “Our current data, indicate that exercise training in the fasted state is more effective than exercise in the carbohydrate-fed state to stimulate glucose tolerance despite a hypercaloric high-fat diet.”
Now, the exercise was strenuous. Four sessions per week. Two sessions of an hour and two of ninety minutes. So, this may not be true if you were, for example, walking around the block barely getting out of breath.
But what if your goal is not fat loss but you want to gain some muscle mass? Then what?
Well, there aren’t as many studies on gaining muscle mass as there are on losing body fat. But there are a few that provide some direction.
To add weight, whether it’s muscle or not, you have to eat more in general which also adds the risk of gaining fat if you eat too much. But, it appears that what you eat is important: protein.
Now, the question is, how much protein do you need and from what source?
Researchers from California State University analyzed three groups of men to determine if just extra calories or extra calories in the form of protein would increase muscle mass2
One group added a protein supplement to their normal diet while the other group added a carbohydrate supplement. Both groups then exercised using weights, four days per week between sixty and ninety minutes per session.
At the end of eight weeks, the group that consumed the carbohydrate supplement increased their lean mass slightly more than the protein supplement group but the protein group increased their strength by 23% compared to 14% in the carbohydrate group.
So, if you want to add mass and strength, you need protein – about 1 to 1.25 grams per pound of lean body mass.
That means if you weigh 200 lbs with 30% fat, your lean mass is 140 lbs (Body weight – fat mass = lean body mass). So, in that case about 140 grams of protein a day.
But, what in what form? I think you’ll agree that when you consider that a chicken breast the size of your palm is about 20 grams, eating seven chicken breasts a days is at the very least a lofty goal.
Most people use a supplement – a protein drink or smoothie. And once again, science shows us which type of protein supplement gives you the most bang for your buck.
Some researchers from Canada compared the effects of whey or soy supplementation on a group of men and women. In turns out that whey protein supplements delivered better results in increasing lean mass and strength than a soy protein supplement3
So, to summarize:
- If your goal is to lower body fat, use a strenuous form of exercise before breakfast and then consume a protein heavy meal.
- If your goal is to increase your lean body mass, add a whey protein supplement up to three times per day with one of those occurring after a training session.
- Aim for 1 to 1.25 gram sof protein per pound of lean body mass.
Oh, and what about the timing of your meals relative to training? Well, again it depends on what you eat and how much. A full meal can take several hours to completely exit the stomach. But, for most people, a small snack about an hour before exercise will be partially digested by the time your start your session and give you an energy boost.
So, to avoid a “Marty situation”, plan to eat at a small snack (e.g. smoothie, banana, energy bar), least sixty minutes before you train.
- 1. Van Proeyen, K., K. Szlufcik, et al. “Training in the fasted state improves glucose tolerance during fat-rich diet.” J Physiol 588(Pt 21): 4289-302. [↩]
- Rozenek, R., P. Ward, et al. (2002). “Effects of high-calorie supplements on body composition and muscular strength following resistance training.” J Sports Med Phys Fitness 42(3): 340-7. [↩]
- Candow, D. G., N. C. Burke, et al. (2006). “Effect of whey and soy protein supplementation combined with resistance training in young adults.” Int J Sport Nutr Exerc Metab 16(3): 233-44 [↩]






I'm the creator of Fusion. My core health philosophy is simple: life is movement. When you can’t move freely or in a way you need or want to, suddenly your life seems a lot smaller. So, I promote movement through...