Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - How Big of an Advantage Do Steroid Users Have in the Gym? Science Answers
Episode Date: August 30, 2023We often hear claims from steroid users that performance-enhancing drugs only give them a slight advantage, emphasizing their dedication and hard work. But is this reality or just a smokescreen? Thi...s episode unpacks a study from The University of Sydney comparing 147 natural bodybuilders with 40 steroid users. We'll delve into training volumes, rest intervals, cardio habits, supplementation choices, and their actual results. If you've ever wondered about the tangible advantages of steroids and how natural bodybuilders' methods contrast with their "enhanced" counterparts, this episode offers clear insights. From volume and intensity to supplement choices that highlight the health concerns of steroid use, this podcast sheds light on what truly sets apart the natural from the enhanced. Timestamps: (0:00) - Please leave a review of the show wherever you listen to podcasts and make sure to subscribe! (1:08) - How do training and supplementation practices differ between steroid users and natural bodybuilders? (10:13) - What are the actual outcomes of using steroids versus pursuing natural bodybuilding? Mentioned on the Show: Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching for personalized fitness guidance: https://muscleforlife.show/vip
Transcript
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Hello, hello, I'm Mike Matthews and this is Muscle For Life.
Thank you for joining me today for a new episode on the topic of steroids.
I came across an interesting study in my travels that was published about a year ago and I
wanted to discuss it here on the podcast because it lends some insight into just how big of
a difference steroids make in terms of gaining muscle and gaining
strength. Because many steroid users will say that, yeah, steroids do make a difference, but you still
really have to know what you're doing in the kitchen and you have to really know what you're
doing in the gym or they're not going to make that much of a difference. Well, how true is that? That is the question that I will be answering in today's episode.
And specifically, I'm going to be discussing some research that looked at the training and
supplementation differences between enhanced and natural bodybuilders and sharing a few of the
key takeaways that we can glean from this research.
of the key takeaways that we can glean from this research. Okay, let's start with a paper called Self-Reported Training and Supplementation Practices Between Performance-Enhancing Drug
User Bodybuilders Compared with Natural Bodybuilders. And this was published in September
of 2022 in Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research. So if you've spent enough time in gyms
talking to enough people, usually guys, you're going to come across drug users who are honest
about using drugs. And a common refrain you will hear if you talk about drug use and bodybuilding
is that they still have to work just as hard as everybody else. They still have to be just as
intelligent with their diet and with their training. They just get better results. That
is what many drug users will say. Now, you might be skeptical because you're on social media and
you've seen many drug users who pay very little attention, if any attention, to what they eat and who also don't seem to have any
rhyme or reason to their training. It's just go hard, all out, two hours a day, six days a week,
seven days a week. And they look like superheroes and they perform like superheroes. They are big,
they are lean, they are strong, and they are always big, lean and strong for years on end.
And so in this study that I want to share with you today,
scientists at the University of Sydney surveyed 147 natural and 40 enhanced bodybuilders
to investigate how their training and how their supplementation protocols differed.
And what the responses showed is that the steroid users did significantly more volume
per major muscle group per week than the natty bodybuilders. So
in the enhanced bodybuilders, it was 24 to 40 sets per major muscle group per week versus 12 to 24
sets. And the enhanced bodybuilders also typically trained in higher rep ranges than the naturals. So
in the enhanced bodybuilders, it was 13 to 15 reps per set on average. In the 90s, it was one to six
reps per set on average. The researchers also found that enhanced bodybuilders were
slightly more likely to use advanced, I guess you could put that in scare quotes,
advanced or sophisticated training techniques. So there was more in the way of supersets and
partial reps and tempo training, pre-exhaustion and so forth. So about 98% of the enhanced
bodybuilders said that they use techniques like that versus about 90% of the naturals.
The enhanced bodybuilders were also less likely to periodize their training. So that's training
in different rep ranges based on goals and circumstances. So about 50% of the enhanced
bodybuilders were periodizing their training versus about 71% of the enhanced bodybuilders were periodizing their training
versus about 71% of the natural bodybuilders. There were significant differences in in-between
set rest times as well. Most of the bodybuilders surveyed rested about one to two minutes in
between sets, but a larger portion of the steroid users rested just 30 to 60 seconds between sets than the natural.
So about 23% of the enhanced bodybuilders said they rest just 30 to 60 seconds in between sets
versus about 4% of the natural weightlifters. And also a larger share of natural bodybuilders
rested more than two minutes in between sets than the steroid users. So about 45% of the natural
bodybuilders said that they rest more than
two minutes in between sets versus about 20% of the steroid users. And so then what we are seeing
here is that the enhanced bodybuilders were much more likely to follow just an old school
bodybuilding program, a lot of volume. So a lot of volume in terms of hard sets per major
muscle group per week. I mean, 40 hard sets. Imagine trying to program that 40, 40 hard sets,
even 20 hard sets for more than one major muscle group per week. Gets tricky to program if you're
not willing to be in the gym four or five days per week for at least an hour
and a half per session, but you try to do 30 or 40 sets for even one major muscle group, let alone
more than one, that is a lot of training. And one of the reasons why I would not recommend trying
that is as a natural weightlifter, you are almost certainly going to just get hurt if you try to do that. We also saw that the enhanced bodybuilders are more likely to do higher rep sets, which is also
something that I'm sure you have seen if you've spent enough time in the gym. You've seen guys
who are clearly on a lot of drugs and they have long workouts and they're doing like eight
exercises per workout and they're doing several sets per exercise and they're doing
sets of 15, 20, 25 reps per set. They're rarely doing below probably 10 or eight. And the enhanced
bodybuilders are also often doing supersets and giant sets and cluster sets and partials and
negatives and force reps and so
on. Also, the supplementation data was kind of interesting because both groups of bodybuilders
surveyed took supplements, no surprise, but significantly more steroid users took EAAs,
BCAAs, HMB, digestive enzymes, supplements that are of dubious value. EAAs, BCAAs, worthless, especially to an enhanced
bodybuilder who is almost certainly eating plenty of protein. Absolutely worthless. HMB, also almost
certainly worthless for an enhanced bodybuilder, even if they are doing fasted training. And that
would be the only scenario where I would recommend HMB for its anti-catabolic properties.
That's why it's in one of my products. It's in a product of mine called Forge,
a pre-workout fat burner that is explicitly designed for fasted training. If you want to
check it out, it's at bilegion.com slash forge, and it has HMB. But outside of that use case,
I wouldn't recommend HMB. It's not going to harm anything, but it's probably not
going to help much of anything either. So anyway, that supplementation data point is just in line
with the training data, what we saw there, that the average steroid user in this study was less
knowledgeable, was less, you could say, even skillful in their bodybuilding because of how effective steroids are. You can
make all kinds of mistakes in the kitchen and gym, but if you're on the right drugs,
you are going to get outstanding results. And let's talk about the results. In this study,
the bodybuilders were all of a similar height. They were about 5'9", but the steroid users weighed about 18 pounds more on
average than the natural bodybuilders. So the steroid users on average, about 210 pounds. The
natties about 192 pounds. Now, 18 pounds of muscle is a lot. In case that doesn't sound like a lot
to you, let me just give you a little bit of context. So the average guy will be able to gain
probably about 30 to 45 pounds of muscle over the course of his lifetime. There is a genetic hard limit to how much muscle you can gain. Now, you can quibble with that and say, well, actually, that is technically not true because you can always gain at least a little bit more muscle. Those gears never completely stop turning. Yeah, fine. But practically
speaking, your gains approach zero after five, six, seven years of training. After gaining the
30 to 45 pounds that you can gain in that period, any further muscle growth is going to be almost
negligible. I'm talking about a pound or two in a year, and that's a good year.
And every subsequent year, your potential muscle growth gets even smaller. So if in year eight,
you gain a couple of pounds, year nine, it's probably going to be about half of that and
half of that and so forth until you are trying to measure grams of muscle growth per year.
Now, every rule has exceptions, of course, and one could be a
specific muscle group that is very underdeveloped on your body. It's going to be a smaller one,
probably like calves, for example. Let's say you never really trained your calves, but you trained
everything else in your upper body and you trained your lower body generally intensely many years.
You've gotten big, you've gotten strong, but your calves are relatively underdeveloped.
All right, then maybe you can put a pound of muscle on each of your calves and you might be
able to do that in six, eight, 12 months, maybe even a little bit more than that. But that's only
because you had a muscle group that was underdeveloped. But if calf training was a
regular part of your regimen and you approached that just as vigorously as you approached everything else, then the rule would hold.
Now, I know I am on a little bit of a tangent here, so I'll just wrap it up.
If you want to learn more about natural muscle growth potential, how much muscle you can build naturally, head over to legionathletics.com, search for naturally and look for an article I wrote on the topic.
I also do have a podcast on it, but the article I think is a little bit better because there are some calculators
in there that you can play with. Anyway, so coming back to this steroid study, what can we take away
from this? Well, one point is that steroid users can clearly do and recover from a lot more training
than natural weightlifters. Remember in this study, the steroid users were doing about twice
as much training, and that is one of the reasons why steroid users can gain muscle and strength a
lot faster than natural weightlifters. They can just do a lot more work and recover from a lot
more work. A natural weightlifter might need twice as much time to do the same amount of work.
And this study also highlights an observation that many of us have made over the years because
we've seen it firsthand so many times, and that is steroids can help people gain a lot
of muscle, gain a lot of strength with very suboptimal training.
So much so that if you, as a natural weightlifter with a fair amount of experience under your
belt, you've gained a fair amount of muscle and strength, you've been doing it for at
least a few years, you've been following evidence-based programming,
which differs a lot from the steroid programming that I shared in this study. You're doing less
volume, so that's fewer hard sets per major muscle group per week. You're doing fewer reps on average
per set. You're resting longer in between sets. Your workouts are shorter, you're doing 10, 12, maybe 15 sets in a
workout period as opposed to 20, 30, or 40 sets over the course of, again, 5, 6, 7, 8 exercises
for multiple muscle groups. If you were to switch to the steroid users program, you might see a
little bit of progress in the beginning from the dramatic increase in
volume and the dramatic increase in mechanical tension that is now being generated in your
muscles. But that will be short lived because eventually you will not only stagnate, but you
may even regress because you will not be able to recover from all of that training. And you might even get hurt because you are not recovering
fully from your workouts and you are trying to push yourself as hard as you can. And so just
keep all of this in mind when you hear steroid users claim that steroids don't make that big
of a difference and you still have to be really smart with your diet and with your training. And
yeah, I mean, they're better
than supplements, but they're not that much better. Nonsense. If you like what I'm doing here on the
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