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Making every muscle count

POWERFUL arms are not weightlifters’ most important attributes. It’s their
ability to coordinate a range of muscles around the body that makes the
difference between failure and success.

“In weightlifting, the critical phases—the power positions—can
last only 200 milliseconds or so,” says Keijo Hakkinen, who studies the biology
of physical activity at the University of Jyväskylä in Finland. “You
need to recruit as many muscle fibres as possible and get them to activate
rapidly all at the same time. The arms don’t actually do too much of the
lifting, they just act to direct the barbell—to stabilise it.”

As with sprinters, record-busting weightlifters need legs capable of
generating extraordinary amounts of power. “Weightlifting is all about the
efficiency at which you can transfer power from the legs into moving the
weight,” says Matt Jevon, a sports and exercise consultant accredited by the
British Association of Sports and Exercise Sciences. And like sprinters, power
is generated by fast twitch fibres. Because these fibres don’t have to wait for
oxygen to arrive, they are ideal for fast, strong movements.

Topics: Sport