Dynamic Dialogue with Danny Matranga - 66 - Powerbuilding, Fantasy Football, and Fitness Sleepers
Episode Date: September 1, 2020In this episode, we begin by touching on some updates with the PowerBuild program as well as fantasy football! To get into the meat of this podcast, we talk about nutrition and how to make your eating... lifestyle easier! Also, we go in depth on what powerbuilding is and why it works!---Thanks For Listening!---RESOURCES/COACHING:I am all about education and that is not limited to this podcast! Feel free to grab a FREE guide (Nutrition, Training, Macros, Etc!) HERE!Interested in Working With Coach Danny and His One-On-One Coaching Team? Click HERE!Want To Have YOUR Question Answered On an Upcoming Episode of DYNAMIC DIALOGUE? You Can Submit It HERE!Want to Support The Podcast AND Get in Better Shape? Grab a Program HERE!----SOCIAL LINKS:Follow Coach Danny on INSTAGRAMFollow Coach Danny on TwitterFollow Coach Danny on FacebookGet More In-Depth Articles Written By Yours’ Truly HERE!-----TIMESTAMPS:Update on PowerBuild Program and Danny’s Tips on Handling Your Fantasy Football Draft 0:29FITNESS TALK BEGINS 6:54What is powerbuilding, and what are elements from powerlifting and bodybuilding that we should implement in our training ? 7:02How fantasy football and nutrition are similar! 14:21Keeping protein powder in the car? Why? The LOW HANGING FRUIT! 17:59“Nutrition hacks” on vacation or travel? 21:35Support the Show.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
hey guys welcome into another episode of the dynamic dialogue podcast as always i am your
host danny matranga it's about 5 a.m here in california i tend to record in the morning
it's not always this early but this is when i had time to record today things have been a little
crazy around here particularly uh as it's fantasy football season. And I'm about to release
the new power building program, Power Build, as well as some programming bundles on the website.
Let's talk about the programs first, because again, I want to make sure that my podcast family
gets the best treatment possible. So if you're someone who likes the podcast for the fitness,
health related information on it, same thing for my Instagram, you'll no doubt love my programs. Now, like I said, Power Build, my new power building program is releasing on September 4th. That's the Friday going into Memorial Day weekend or Labor Day weekend, I should say. So if you're listening to this on Tuesday, it's releasing in three days. Now, here's the cool thing. I'm giving
my podcast fam an additional discount bigger than the already discounted price at launch.
So the discounts already going to be present at launch. It's going to be discounted from $49.99
down to $37.99. And this is a 65 page 12-week resistance training program that uses just dumbbells, barbells, and bands.
So if you're getting back to the gym, it's a fantastic way to work on solidifying that oh-so-important foundational strength
to really, really hammer home some of those fundamental movement patterns.
And if you're somebody like myself who's working out from home, but you only have so much equipment, it's an amazing protocol for you to employ that will realistically fit in almost
any home gym that has a barbell, dumbbell, kettlebells, and bands, which is what a lot of
people have gotten a hold of, you know, six, seven months into this coronavirus craziness. So to save off the already discounted price for my podcast fam only, enter the promo
code dynamic when you check out on my website, www.coachedannymetranga.com, purchase the new
Power Build program, you'll save 15%. Additionally, I am launching two program bundles. Those will
both be on sale as well.
There's a For Him bundle, which includes Foundations and Power Build,
and there's a For Her bundle, which includes Female Physique and Power Build.
Both of those programming bundles will last you 24 weeks of consistent programming,
which means your next six months of training are locked and loaded.
And again, the bundles are discounted from their original price, and you can use the
code DYNAMIC to save an additional 15%.
Thank you all for listening.
And now we'll chat briefly about fantasy football before we talk about all things fitness.
So as many of you know, I love sports, specifically love football.
And there's no better time in my opinion of
the year than fantasy football draft season.
I love drafting my fantasy team.
I love making trades.
I love talking smack to my league mates.
It's a great time of the year, but it's also really stressful because fantasy football
is effectively opportunity cost gambling. And we'll talk more
about that in a second. But what it means is when you are selecting a player for your team,
you're selecting the opportunity cost against the field. Meaning if I pick this player here,
I'm not going to get some of the other players who are very good that are also available because by
the time I pick again, they will be gone. So you end up making a decision based on who you like,
but you also have to forego picking players who you might like almost as much, which makes it
quite tricky. And it makes it really painful if one of those players that you were choosing between
does better than the one you selected. That can really come back to bite you. But first and foremost, let's talk sleepers heading into your fantasy drafts. And
guys, this isn't going to take too long. If you want to fast forward through this to the fitness
stuff, go right ahead. But there are three players that I have been targeting in many of my drafts
that I really, really like. The first is Cam Akers, rookie running back for the Los Angeles Rams.
They traded Todd Gurley to the Falcons.
Actually, they cut him and then the Falcons signed him for $5 million.
So the big boss is out of the backfield for the Los Angeles Rams.
We have a dynamic offense that has consistently been able to support high levels of running
back production.
We have high draft capital in Cam Akers.
We have an injured
Darrell Henderson going into the season and Malcolm Brown, who's also sharing the backfield,
who's just simply not quite as dynamic. So we've got a young kid in a position to really explode.
I could see RB2 upside, maybe even RB1 upside if he gets the full workload, which is very possible.
And all he has to do is beat out Malcolm Brown and Darrell Henderson, who have done next to nothing in this offense. And they have the draft capital, and you can grab him in the sixth,
seventh round of your draft. Another player who I love who's going a lot higher in drafts
is Josh Jacobs, running back for the Raiders. If you can grab him with your second round pick,
I'm pretty confident that you'll be quite healthy.
He was an RB1 almost the entire season until his injury. He gets a tremendous amount of volume on the ground, and I do see him getting more integrated into the passing game given that the Raiders have
primarily rookie pass catching options right now in Brian Edwards and Henry Ruggs. So being able to
rely on veterans at this point like Darren Waller and Josh Jacobs,
on a really young offense is going to help the Raiders out a lot. Certainly they have other
pass-catching options out of the backfield, but I see Josh Jacobs getting close to his rushing
totals from last year and maybe adding another 20 to 25 receptions, which puts him firmly in the
RB2, RB1 territory. And he has elite talent on the ground. Only Nick Chubb and Christian
McCaffrey had higher pro football focus run grades. Now, my last player is Amari Cooper,
who I've been targeting in the fourth round of my drafts. He finished the season injured,
which really, really pulled away from how dominant he was early on. And he
got the bag. He got a huge, huge contract from the Cowboys, locked and loaded wide receiver one in a
dynamic offense with an improving quarterback that you can get in the fourth round. That's pretty
hard to beat. So those are my three big names. Another thing you might want to consider is
Leonard Fournette running back for the Jacksonvilleville jaguars was just cut so i do
recommend scooping up chris thompson later in drafts if you can if you haven't drafted yet or
just grabbing him off your waiver wire because i'm sure he's there so moving on to fitness right
about the seven minute mark isn't that wonderful so like i said power build is launching this week
it's a power building program and one of the things I wanted to talk about is what exactly is power building, but more importantly, what are the elements of power
lifting and bodybuilding that are valuable that we should look to implement into our own training.
So for anybody who's not familiar with power building, it's new and it's not new at the same time. So power building is essentially the goal or it's a program
that's designed to help you get strong and also help you gain muscle simultaneously while not
really trying to maximize the adaptation of either or. Meaning you're cool if you gain a little bit
of muscle, you're cool if you gain a little bit of strength, you're not all in on the strength train,
you're not all in on the muscle train, but you want to get a little bit of strength. You're not all in on the strength train. You're not all in on the muscle train,
but you want to get a little bit of both.
It's a really, really common goal for many novice lifters.
It's something that for quite some time
was the norm in the bodybuilding community.
If you look back a long time ago
into the quote-unquote golden era of bodybuilding,
we had guys like Franco Colombo
and even Arnold Schwarzenegger
who were incredibly strong and focused on lifting quite heavy. Franco Colombo even
maxed out very regularly and made powerlifting a tremendous piece of his bodybuilding programming.
It's not to say that you can't build muscle in any rep range, but it is to say that, hey,
there are some elements that are consistent with these styles of training that are specific to these styles of training that are uniquely beneficial.
And so we want to try to get the best of both worlds at the same time, understanding that
while we might not get as big as we want as fast as possible or as strong as we want as
fast as possible, we'll get pretty big and pretty strong at the same time.
And so power building has made a resurgence in recent years under that exact name. And it's been popularized by many, you know, males in the physique space
who are quite strong and quite muscular and have put the moniker of quote unquote power building
onto their training. And I actually quite like this approach because I do think for most people,
simply striving to get more weight on
the bar and get a little bit stronger should be step one in your muscle building goals,
particularly for naturals. Natural lifters seem to respond really well to just gaining strength
over time. It's going to give you a more resilient physique. It's going to help you push more volume.
Volume is correlated with hypertrophy to some extent. Being able to have more weight on the
bar and do more repetitions with it will help you gain size.
But having a foundation of strength
is really, really important.
So the first block of power building
is all about traditional linear progression,
basic strength training.
It's nuts and bolts stuff with some hypertrophy things
sprinkled into the back end.
Where things get really interesting,
and this is one of the elements of strength
and power training that I really like, is in the second block, we do a modified conjugate method, which is
borrowed from Louie Simmons at Westside Barbell. And what's really cool about the conjugate method
is it works within that force velocity curve, meaning we have different types of strength.
We have speed strength and strength speed. We have power. We have maximal strength, right? And so
basically what we're looking at when we talk about strength is to move the heaviest weight you can
move, you need to move that weight pretty slowly. It's going to be a grind. That would be more of
that maximal strength. To move a weight that you can control but with a high amount of velocity
and force, that's more power. And that's something that we see on the athletic field that's often lacking in a traditional weight training program. And Louie Simmons has always implemented what he
calls dynamic effort days, which involve higher velocity movements, or movements that are done
with the use of bands and change to enhance different portions of the range of motion,
perhaps that means adding to the concentric so that we can, you know, maybe enhance some of the explosiveness that we garner from training.
So that second block is actually conjugate. And that's why it's a true power building program.
It's not just a strength program and a hypertrophy program. There truly are elements of legitimate
power training built into it to help you enhance your explosiveness
and your power. And then it finishes with a hypertrophy block. And while you can get hypertrophy
in effectively any repetition range, I find that after two relatively high intensity lower rep range
blocks, like the first and second block of this program, I'm down for a little bit of a higher
volume, lower load block.
And that's exactly what this third block is. And it even gives you specialization opportunities
where you can select the muscle groups that you want to train and actively apply yourself to those
muscle groups on the fifth day. So the first two blocks are four days, the last day is four days,
last block is four days with an optional fifth block or fifth day, I should say,
that you can train any muscle group you want using one of six specialization sessions for arms,
shoulders, glutes, chest, back, glutes and hands and quads. So that's that. I don't want to beat
a dead horse. I don't want to oversell it to you. If you're looking for a program you can do with
minimal equipment, if you're looking for something to really jumpstart your return to the gym or just give you direction.
A lot of people have reached out and said, hey, man, I feel lost.
I don't have direction.
Like I was in a rhythm and I just can't get back into it after COVID.
Look, I'm there with you.
I've done the same thing.
I've struggled myself to find direction with my training.
That's actually how this program was born.
It was born out of me being in my garage with just some barbells, plates, dumbbells, and bands.
And I put a protocol just like this into place for a couple months,
and I was loving the results, getting leaner, getting stronger, building muscle.
I was thrilled.
And I said, you know, what makes sense to me is to bring these simple, effective protocols to the peeps, to my homies, to create a protocol program that uses these tools in an easy to follow way.
And also understanding that a lot of you guys were crushing, got a little bit derailed, fell off the rails, and you're just struggling to get back into a rhythm.
off the rails and you're just struggling to get back into a rhythm. And so I wanted to launch a program tastefully when I thought that a lot of gyms were open or after I felt like people were
getting the things that they needed, they gave them the opportunity to really get back on track
in an effective way. And this program does just that. And decision fatigue is real. So if you're
somebody who has been kind of going through the motions the last couple months,
you're trying to get back in a rhythm, you're just not quite there, yet you really want to make a change and get back to where you were before COVID, sometimes getting on a
program can do just that.
It gives you direction, eliminates decision fatigue.
You're not wondering what I do next.
You spend no energy doing that.
You just show up and execute.
And that can be really, really nice in a world
where decision fatigue is running rampant. And so the bundles are there too, guys. Remember,
use the code dynamic when you check out at the website. The link to the programs will be in the
podcast that drops after this. This is going to drop on Tuesday. So you guys will hear it on
Tuesday. And we'll have one more episode released Friday morning, which is when the programs launch at 5 a.m. Pacific Standard Time on Friday, the 4th of
September, which again is going to be a sale that runs all Labor Day weekend.
So no need to wake up at 5 a.m.
But if you're looking to really take your training to the next level, this is something
that I would do.
Hey, guys, just wanted to take a quick second to say thanks so much for listening to the next level, this is something that I would do. share it to Facebook. But be sure to tag me so I can say thanks and we can chat it up about what you liked and how I can continue to improve. Thanks so much for supporting the podcast and
enjoy the rest of the episode. I want to talk a little bit about how fantasy football and,
believe it or not, nutrition are somewhat similar. And it's going to revolve around a
simple facet of the fantasy football game known as picking your sleepers.
around a simple facet of the fantasy football game known as picking your sleepers. And so picking your sleepers refers to picking guys at the very end of your draft that nobody else has heard of
or nobody else knows about that can maybe blow up and be tremendous players for your team down the
road. And effectively what you're doing there is you're grabbing some really low-hanging fruit for
basically free. And I have a few sleepers that I like to deploy in the nutrition space.
They're very much habit-based that I really, really like
and I think are really, really effective.
And they're just cool things that for you coaches, hobbyists, enthusiasts out there,
you can really do this and just sprinkle these routines in,
these small little things,
and actually see some pretty cool responses
from your body. Perhaps you'll be more full. You'll hear the sleepers. They're all a little
bit different, but they're cool things you can implement and get a high degree of return off.
Let's just put it like that. Let's call it like it is. So the first is including things like
sliced Brussels sprouts and broccoli into your salad. So when we traditionally eat salad,
it's going to be leafy greens. Sometimes
people will slice tomatoes, maybe even peppers, maybe even onions, maybe even things like cucumbers
and tomatoes. But very rarely do we work in some of the most fibrous, most nutrient-dense vegetables
like broccoli and Brussels sprouts. However, you can actually buy shredded brussels sprouts and
broccoli slaw at almost every grocery store. Shredded brussels sprouts are exactly what they
sound like. They're brussels sprouts that have been shredded and sliced very, very thinly. And
broccoli slaw is essentially just coleslaw-esque, like little baby mini fries, french fry-looking strips of broccoli that you can toss right into your salad.
And it adds an amazing crunch.
It really ups the fiber.
It ups the nutrient density substantially.
And you can, again, mix it in with things like mixed greens, spinach, spring mix,
all kinds of stuff.
And it really doesn't modify the flavor.
It adds a crunch to it that I actually quite enjoy. A lot of people will put things like nuts
on a salad, which I like nuts. Pause. I think they're quite nutritious. The crunch is really
what we're going for when we add them to a salad, right? But you can replicate that with this
broccoli slaw and with sliced brussels.
And so it's an amazing way to sneak into vegetables that a lot of people won't eat any other way.
I've worked with people for quite some time,
and I still find that one of the most palatable ways to get them to eat their vegetables is to make a nice salad every day.
I am somebody who admittedly is not going to sit down and be like,
ooh, this is the best ratatouille of my life.
Like, I don't eat a bunch of vegetables.
I don't eat a bunch of vegetable dishes.
However, I understand that including vegetables into my diet is really important,
and I like to get a lot of variety.
And just eating a salad with spring mix all the time,
while you might get a lot of nitrate-high, leafy, fibrous greens
that have quite a bit of nutrition and antioxidants,
you might be missing out on some of the benefits of other vegetables. And one of the beautiful
things about Brussels sprouts and broccoli is if you buy them the way I just described,
you can add them to a salad and all of a sudden your salad went from maybe being just spinach
to being spinach, broccoli, and Brussels sprouts, which is a really, really amazingly nutritious
combo that you can, again,
deploy for almost nothing. Another silly one that I've been doing for years is keeping protein powder
in the car. Hear me out. It sounds crazy, but it really, really is a helpful tool. And if you never
use it, that's kind of the goal. So what I like to do is keep a little bit of protein. I keep about three scoops in a Ziploc
bag inside of a Tupperware in my car. And the reason I do that is for the off chance that I
might be on the road knowing that I need protein. Maybe my calories are limited. Maybe I don't want
fast food. Maybe I don't want to stop at a gas station and get a bunch of jerky. There's always
options, right? But if I'm on the road, my options are limited, or I know that I'm going to be hanging
out later with people who might want to eat quite heavily. Having a protein shake at your disposal
is a really valuable tool. What it gives you the opportunity to do is get quick protein into your
system. And oftentimes we never have it when we need it. So keeping it in our car, when we're from place to place kind of circumvents the likelihood that we'll be like, oh, shucks, I don't have it. No, it's always in the car. And what this really looks like in practice for me is quite simple. It's not like, oh, time to have my daily protein shake out of the car. It's never like that.
like that. It might be a situation where say I'm filming YouTube and it's very, very early in the morning and I haven't eaten anything and I'm getting hungry, but we're going to go to lunch
in an hour and I don't want to go to Starbucks and get something. I run out to the car, I grab it,
I can make a shake. Usually use one scoop that's in that bag. That's why I put a couple in there
just in case. Maybe I said, like I said, I'm going out to eat with friends. We're going out to a
restaurant. Everything's really, really high calorie. Maybe it's a situation where I just don't feel like eating something that high calorie and
want to order something lighter, but still be full. So I have a shake about an hour before we
leave. Maybe it's that crappy situation where you forget your lunch at home. I am the king of this.
If you're going to and from the studio or you're going to and from the gym or you're training or
you're going to and from the office and you just head out early in the morning, maybe you're going to and from the gym or you're training or you're going to and from the office and you just head out early in the morning maybe you're going to the gym all intensive all
your intentions are aligned but oh shit you forgot your lunch that can really throw you off having a
protein shake in the car at least gives you something to have after your workout and you
can figure the rest out later but it puts you in a position to be successful or at least minimize
damage simply by having something available.
The reason I recommend a powder is one of the things I did originally was put protein bars in my glove box.
But, you know, cars like mine that have black leather interior tend to get quite hot,
and then you end up with melted protein bar all over your car registration,
which is a really tough sell when you're being pulled over.
So I don't recommend protein bars.
I would instead, if you wanted to do a whole foods,
quote unquote, or a food-based protein snack,
do something like jerky or maybe even have some nuts,
but just keep something on hand.
I'm telling you, that low-hanging fruit,
these sleepers, these things that people
don't even think about man so easy i just wish more people would do this type of stuff because the easier things are to
execute the number of things that you can put in to kind of act as fail safes to act as escape
valves to help yourself out through this the better you'll do with your fitness i'm telling
you these types of things these sleepers you're to know what they are for you. We all have some that are unique to us, but if we can learn
some from other people, people like myself, people who've got experience with this stuff,
it's really, really valuable. And the more robust your fail-saves and escape valves are,
the better you will do, the more freedom that you have. So having these things in place is a really,
really valuable tool. Another sleeper that I have is actually pertaining specifically to travel.
And I talked about it on another podcast before. And it's the deployment of something called a
protein sparing modified fast. If you're going to be traveling and you're going to be in a situation
where you want to enjoy all of the foods, but maybe you do what most people do where you sleep in when you travel,
your days take a little bit longer
to get going when you travel.
Maybe you start your day with a protein shake
so that you get adequate amount of protein,
but then you just spend the rest of the day
doing a modified fast
and you eat a monstrous lunch and dinner
and enjoy the beauty of enjoying foods while on vacation and have a little bit less
guilt. One of the things I've noticed no matter where I go, nine times out of 10, if food is
something that if there is a food in that region, that is particularly popular, there's something
that I really want to try, there's something that I really want to enjoy. It's rarely breakfast,
it's almost always a lunch or dinner entree or those types of foods. And so one of the things that I've learned to do,
and I've done with tremendous success with my clients, is actually having them do a protein
sparing modified fast where they have a light protein breakfast, they don't eat again until
lunch, they have a late lunch, and they have a late dinner. But they don't even bother worrying
about what they eat for lunch and dinner, because again, they're on vacation, but they manage some of that by simply front-loading protein and not
eating a lot in the earlier hours of the day. So they get a little bit of protein for satiety,
for muscle repair, and of course, protein sparing effects, but also they just get the opportunity to
enjoy their day unencumbered by the guilt of
knowing I had a monster breakfast, I'm going to have a monster lunch, I'm going to have a monster
dinner. I notice a lot of people struggle with that on vacation. They can't enjoy themselves.
What's the point of being fit if you can't enjoy yourself? But doing this helps you maintain a
potentially more favorable caloric environment for some of the more neurotic people out there
and enjoy the shit at a lunch and dinner. And so those are three sleepers guys that I think work
really, really well that you can try anytime you're in a situation you can kind of safeguard yourself.
And then again, the broccoli sprouts and Brussels sprouts are things that you can do on a literal
daily basis. So that does it guys. Again, thank you so much for listening.
Very early here in California,
wanted to hop on and say hello,
but Power Build drops on Friday at 5 a.m. PST
on the website.
The For Her and For Him bundle drop as well.
They're going to be discounted,
and again, you guys get additional savings
by putting in the promo code DYNAMIC at checkout.
Thank you all so much for listening.
I appreciate every single one of you.
You guys are all awesome.
Have an amazing day.
Have an amazing week.
And I'll chat with you guys on Friday. you