rainmaker
Hall of Famer
As a former strength and conditioning coach, in regards to what Hammer said about nutrition, I agree somewhat. No reason to cut out healthy fats. In fact, they speed up the metabolism because the have a higher metabolic rate, and they are good for joints and inflamation. However, I disagree with anyone who says Cousins needs to go on a diet.
Now some here might have a different idea of what a diet is compared to the fitness world. Most people think a diet is basically heavily restricting calories, and therefor always being hungry. There are also low carb diets, which would be horrible for a pro athlete to go on, especially someone like Cousins who is working out 4 times a day.
The trick is to strip the fat, without losing muscle/power. Thats why "weight" can be misleading. Sure Cousins could drop down to 270 on a very rstrictive diet, but if done the wrong way, he will be much weaker, and his body composition wouldn't have changed. This is all stuff Shapiro is aware of. Cutting down Cousins bodyfat% in much more important than simply losing weight. Really, if Cousins hits the weights hard, does high intensity weight lifting, which most pro's do, mixed with sprint/intervals/basketball/boxing, he'll lose the weight, and lose it the right way.
Cousins needs to eat healthy, not go on a diet per se. Fruit, vegetables, oatmeal, whole grains for carbs. Lots of lean meat, fish, eggs, protein shakes for protein. And nuts,avacado, fish oil, for healthy fats. Thats a pretty elementary discription, but I'm sure most of you get the point. Shapiro, and any athletes personal chef, will know all this. The timing of what kinds of food you eat is important. Carbs in the morning and pre-workout, healthy fats and protein post workout. Eat, in Cousins case, probably 8-10 small meals per day,which keep s the matabolism as fast as possible.
I highly doubt his weight will be a problem going into next season. Really, the only way his body doesn't improve, while working with Shapiro and playing ball everyday, is if eats like absolute crap, which I dont see happening. He seems more than comitted to me, and wants to prove people wrong.
Now some here might have a different idea of what a diet is compared to the fitness world. Most people think a diet is basically heavily restricting calories, and therefor always being hungry. There are also low carb diets, which would be horrible for a pro athlete to go on, especially someone like Cousins who is working out 4 times a day.
The trick is to strip the fat, without losing muscle/power. Thats why "weight" can be misleading. Sure Cousins could drop down to 270 on a very rstrictive diet, but if done the wrong way, he will be much weaker, and his body composition wouldn't have changed. This is all stuff Shapiro is aware of. Cutting down Cousins bodyfat% in much more important than simply losing weight. Really, if Cousins hits the weights hard, does high intensity weight lifting, which most pro's do, mixed with sprint/intervals/basketball/boxing, he'll lose the weight, and lose it the right way.
Cousins needs to eat healthy, not go on a diet per se. Fruit, vegetables, oatmeal, whole grains for carbs. Lots of lean meat, fish, eggs, protein shakes for protein. And nuts,avacado, fish oil, for healthy fats. Thats a pretty elementary discription, but I'm sure most of you get the point. Shapiro, and any athletes personal chef, will know all this. The timing of what kinds of food you eat is important. Carbs in the morning and pre-workout, healthy fats and protein post workout. Eat, in Cousins case, probably 8-10 small meals per day,which keep s the matabolism as fast as possible.
I highly doubt his weight will be a problem going into next season. Really, the only way his body doesn't improve, while working with Shapiro and playing ball everyday, is if eats like absolute crap, which I dont see happening. He seems more than comitted to me, and wants to prove people wrong.