вторник, 1 апреля 2014 г.

Strike Back Fitness Lessons

 

How Philip Winchester Keeps Fit, Philip Winchester, fitness, 5 Fitness Lessons From Philip Winchester, how to keep fit, build muscle, Strike Back, Sergeant Michael Stonebridge, action hero, fitness
Philip Winchester is at the front line of fitness while playing sergeant Michael Stonebridge in Strike Back. Use his workout to get special forces fit.
Lesson 1: Forget about vanity
“Most guys try to go too heavy and increase weight too quickly – it may impress your mates, but not your joints,” says Emil Makan, Winchester’s strength and conditioning coach. “If Phil had a heavy day on set, I would bring down the weights and focus on other techniques to stimulate his muscles,” explains Makan. “Just because you maxed out last week, doesn’t mean you’ll do so this week.” This way your body recovers better (which results in more muscle growth) and you’ll have less risk of being sidelined due to injury. Forget about doing single arm curls too. “Your body doesn’t use one muscle for a particular task, so why train that way?” says Makan. “Rather use multi-joint (or compound) movements with exercises that target the most muscles, and split your routine into either upper body and lower body splits or whole body splits.” Makan’s favourite move for Winchester is the dead lift. “It pretty much works the whole body, releases huge amounts of testosterone and bulletproofs the body to injury,” says Makan.
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Lesson 2: Shortcuts become crutches
“I’m not doing creatine or any hectic supplements – I’m just doing it all-natural this time, and it’s been a great lesson,” says Winchester. “When I was younger, I looked at cover models and I wanted to be like those guys. Now I’ve got the opportunity to talk to the younger guys and tell them that you don’t have to take any of these supplements or crazy diets to get into good shape.” Winchester sat down with Makan and the stunt guys (who do the same kind of training), and all agreed to skip the hectic chemicals, including dropping the pre-workout boosters – now all Winchester has before a workout is a cup of coffee.  “There’s such a problem these days with 16 and 17 year olds juicing and taking human growth hormone – the US has become really terrible with the amount of young guys using these illegal substances,” says Winchester. “So we decided to go all natural, or at least as much as we could, and Emil changed our workouts to increase our testosterone production without the supplements, so we did big compound moves in an upper and lower body split.” (Check out “Ripped to the Core”)  “My eating plan changed too,” says 
Winchester. “Last year I was on creatine, pre-workout boosters, drinking four protein shakes a day and everything was timed – this chicken breast at this time, this shake later – but I decided I didn’t want to train like that again.” What the action hero found that while he didn’t gain the same kind of size he has in previous years, his body changed drastically. “What Emil and I found is that I got much fitter and much stronger for my body weight – I can lift and push more now, my stamina has improved but most importantly I also feel much better.” No longer did he feel bloated or have any trouble 
digesting all the extra protein. “Last year after two weeks of training, all the chemicals and protein used to just come out of my pores and my wife would complain!” says Winchester. Going natural was an experiment, but it really paid off. “The stunt guys and other actors all said I was now the streamlined version of Stonebridge, and there’s been even more benefit that just feeling fitter and stronger, I’ve also been able to do more on the show and take less strain – and I think that’s partly because there’s less chemicals pumping around my body,” says Winchester. “I had to have a detox, both psychologically and mentally to get rid of my dependence on the stuff that I was linking my fitness too.  When it came to his meal plan, Winchester went back to the tried and tested basics – just like his weight training. “We went back to the old school way of bulking up – loads of kilojoules, but all in whole foods and proper meals – there was no dieting,” says Makan. Winchester had full cream milk in his coffee, real butter on his toast – all real, whole foods with no special requirements. “It’s like a farmer’s diet; I grew up on a farm, and used 
to do haymaking in the summer time, and 
I’d never eaten so much food in my life because you’re throwing hay all day, you’re out on the fields and on the tractor sweating all day,” he explains. “Then you’d come back in and have a proper meat and potatoes meal – that’s what’s what I tried to replicate. (Check out “Fighting Food Plan” for more nutrition tips.) The real lesson that Winchester learnt about going back to the basics was a profound one. “The culture these days is that you want everything yesterday, and that’s why there’s so much pressure to take these shortcuts which are bad for you in the long term,” explains Winchester.  “I’d fallen into that trap in the last few years, as we’d be given a very short time to get ready for roles (like a few weeks) and I would use supplements to put on weight as quickly as possible,” says Winchester. “I would put on a few kilograms, but then I’d lose them just as quickly – the added weight was from the chemicals, not from hard work in the gym. I may not be huge now, but I do know that this isn’t chemical trickery.” The strength and power that Winchester has now is practical and proven, and he uses it every day on set and in his life. “All the unnecessary supplements became a psychological crutch for me, and if I missed one, I felt I couldn’t work out or do any proper training,” says Winchester. “Winchester is now physically strong, but not at the expense of size or endurance,” says Makan. “The exercises we did allowed him to change direction quickly and handle loads way over his body weight. Coupled with his incredible mental toughness, means he really could be a Special Forces soldier.” This helps with the authenticity of the show, which is one big part of the success of Strike Back.
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Lesson 3: Hard work means nothing without proper rest
“I set an alarm at night to tell me when to get to bed so that I can get at least eight hours sleep,” says Winchester. “The most important things are to sleep, eating good food and being willing to get hurt.” There’s no more shortcuts for Winchester, even with all the pressure and last minute phone calls from agents and less than four days warning before having to be ready for a casting call. “I always keep myself in good shape, so that if the role needs me to put on muscle or get fitter, it’s not hard for me.” 
Winchester always maintains a good base. “Most of the other actors are jacked on something or stop drinking water, but I refuse to do that – it’s all about balance and the harder I work the more I can enjoy myself.” “I’m not a soldier, but this work does make you realise what they go through and the mental stress of acting is very real,” says Winchester. “I’m lucky to have an amazing wife and a great house in Montana.” After each job, he goes back to his house, wife and dog, and tells the agents to leave them alone for a month. “I get back to what’s important: I turn off the phones, disconnect from the world and just get back to nature.” The couple hike, ski, hang out with friends, take their dog for walks – it’s his stress valve. “In the winter I ski, my wife snowboards – we go to a little hidden gem called Bridger Bowl about 30 minutes away, and on the weekdays you have the 
whole mountain.”
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Lesson 4: Tailor your training
Forget about what the guy is doing on the bench next to you – create a plan that suits you and your particular lifestyle. “So often you see guys in the gym following a bodybuilder’s routine, but what they don’t realise is that most professional bodybuilders are sponsored athletes who get paid to train, don’t have to work eight hour days or get chewed out by their boss before coming to gym – their circumstances are way different,” says Makan. “So adjust your training to your lifestyle, make it practical and achievable, and that way you’ll stick to your workouts better.”
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Lesson 5: Define your motivation and make it measurable
“The real Special Forces experts that taught 
us are a really tight fraternity,” explains 
Winchester. “They all have a gallows sense 
of humour that seems to keep them going, 
I think once you realise that you can die at any moment, humour can take the edge off of a the situation and help you deal with it – it’s what we have tried to replicate in Strike Back too,” says Winchester. For research, he studied a documentary called Restrepo (R230, kalahari.com) – inspired by Sebastian Junger’s  book War (R201, kalahari.com) – and tried to 
recreate that feeling of realism, of what war does to the soldier. “It may not be changing them physically on the outside, but it is destroying them on the inside,” says Winchester. “These men are fallible, but that’s what also makes them interesting characters.” His 
goal as an actor is to accurately portray 
them, and that includes their attitude to 
every other part of their life. “I’ve learnt 
discipline, and all you need to motivate 
yourself is in your head,” says Winchester. 
He has a mantra that he uses, and it’s the motto of the SBS: “By strength or by guile.” But it’s not just for himself: he takes training and prep work very seriously, because he feels a duty to the real soldiers watching the show. “I don’t want to let them down – I have to do 
it right,” he says.
  •  
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How Philip Winchester Keeps Fit, Philip Winchester, fitness, how to keep fit, build muscle, Strike Back, Sergeant Michael Stonebridge, action hero, fitness
Philip Winchester has already sized me up and it’s only taken him a few seconds. The quiet calculations behind his green eyes tell me he’s already studied his surroundings – which include me. These observations have told him I’m not a threat, how many exits there are and the licence plates of the two cars that drove past as he entered the building.
He walks in with a measured energy, an easy-going efficiency that discreetly reveals a snapshot of his fitness. Even if his grace of movement, his gun-barrel straight posture and his stealthy powers of observation weren’t enough to confirm his military skills, 
his handshake gives it away. After gingerly retrieving my hand from his metallic grip, I try to hide the fact that my fingers don’t work anymore – unfortunately, it’s my writing hand. While I coax some life back into it for the interview, I do some observing of my own.
Winchester isn’t a tall man or one burdened by unnecessary bulk (like many infantry grunts); he’s crafted like a typical Special Forces soldier – light, average height, but packed with both explosive power and stamina. They’re stripped down until they’re nothing but muscle, sinew and bone – more of a medic’s scalpel than a cleaver. These soldiers run half-marathons with half their body weight on their back, and that’s before they even engage the enemy. Winchester may not be a Special Forces soldier in real life, but he’s trained his mind and body so he performs like one.
As part of his preparation for his role as Sgt. Michael Stonebridge in Strike Back, he spent countless hours with experts from the British Special Air Service (SAS), Special Boat Service (SBS), Delta Force and even our own local Special Forces. He’s jumped out of planes, undergone extensive weapons training, joined real-life army patrols and night operations, done room clearance training with M4 rifles and shot live ammo in “killhouses” (just like the infamous Hogan’s Alley that the FBI use), and worked closely with the military men so he could do all his own stunt work while remaining true to the flinty-eyed, stone-cold killers who taught him how to become a Special Forces 
soldier. However, you could argue that Winchester has trained for this role his whole life. Born into a farming family in the small town of Belgrade, Montana in the US, Winchester spent his youth outdoors lifting hay and driving tractors all day long. “I’ve always taken care of myself,” he says. “I hung out with athletes, baseball players, football players and I did the loner sports like skiing and golf, but it was always the acting that kept me going.”
Winchester’s father took part in community theatre, so he grew up backstage with his dad as his mother worked nights in a nursing home. “The actors taught me how to sword fight, read Shakespeare and how to use your voice,” says Winchester. At the same time, he was using all his free time to train and do weights, even during study time at school. “Along with my friends, I started lifting weights,” explains Winchester. “I used milk gallon jugs for arm curls, drilled a pull-up bar into my room, and trained hard to emulate the guys I saw on magazine covers.”
This hard work ethic has paid off in both physical results and with his acting career. 
“I was lucky to get a part in a film when I was 
14 years old near my hometown. Dean Semler directed it and he took me under his wing. He’s just been given a lifetime achievement award – he’s an amazing director and cinematographer,” says Winchester. “He showed me that I could do this, and he said: ‘You’ve got to put your head down and work your nuts off.’”
The milk bottle training and the pull-ups paid off too. “All this work never showed until one summer where suddenly the testosterone flowed and I grew into my body,” says Winchester. “I went from being a gangly, scrawny teenager until I hit 16, where I grew 15cm in 
just one summer. Ever since then I’ve enjoyed the training – it’s a release, and a great way of beating a crap day at work.”
Winchester moved to London to study drama and found that it was a very laddish culture filled with drinking and partying and no emphasis on training or being healthy. “I remember my drama teachers teasing me about my weight training, and they said it would ruin my movement capabilities,” says Winchester. One of the drama teacher’s even wrote a note saying: “Bruce Lee has muscles for a reason, why does Philip?” Winchester couldn’t understand why they were so angry that he looked after himself physically – he already knew he wanted to do action movies.
“I told them that I loved the stage and Shakespeare, but I thought that action movies suited me and it’s where I could do well,” says Winchester. “I was brought up on Die Hard and Jean-Claude Van Damme, and I felt no shame in saying that’s what I wanted to do.” While most of the drama teachers opposed Winchester’s way of thinking initially, some of them finally got on board and started supporting him. “It was all an important part of my career – it was good being around people who weren’t afraid 
of saying who they were,” says Winchester.
The benefit for us is that he’s honed his craft, and his body, into the perfect action movie blueprint and you can harness his secrets to turn your own physique into a lethal weapon.
Follow Winchester’s training plan to build proper military muscle.
day1

1 st Day

SUPERSET 1: Do two moves as a superset, with two minutes rest in between doing upper body stretching and mobility. Incline bench press x8 reps | Lat pull-downs x12 reps. SUPERSET 2: Do three supersets, 
with two minutes rest. One-arm row 
x8 reps each arm. | Cable crossover 
x12 reps. Followed by upper body stretches and mobility work. SUPERSET 3: Do three supersets, with two minutes rest. Wall slides x20 reps | External rotation x12 reps.
day1

2 nd Day

SUPERSET 1: Do three sets, with one minutes rest after doing all three moves. Hip swings x15 per side | Glute bridge hold for a minute | Knee taps (with your back against a wall) x20 reps each leg. SUPERSET 2: Do three sets, with one minutes rest after doing all three moves. Squats x15 reps | Single leg dead lifts (no added weight) x15 reps | Side lunges (no added weight) x10 reps. After you’ve done both supersets, finish with three minutes on the foam roller.
day1

3 rd Day

One minute of rest in-between sets except for the superset (one minute rest after doing one full superset). Dead lifts
 3 sets x8 reps | Cuban press
 3 sets x12 reps. SUPERSET:Dips and Reverse grip pull-ups | 3 sets until failure | Y-raises 3 sets x10 reps. Finish with three minutes on the foam roller.
day1

4 th Day

Step-ups 3 sets of 15 reps | Bulgarian split squats 3 sets x10 reps | Nordic hamstrings 3 sets x12 reps | Knee taps 3 sets x20 reps.
“Phil’s situation was very unique, in that he works 12 to 15 hours on set, so that’s why I used supersets – it saves time and causes a release of a slew of hormones,” says Makan. It’s an upper and lower body split, and because he trains every day, there’s only three sets per exercise. “Phil always trained with the heaviest weight but with good form first,” says Makan. One really smart element in Makan’s training plan is what he calls “prehab work” – which were exercises to improve Winchester’s thoracic mobility (most guys have a limited range of movement), stability and ankle mobility. “This benefitted his squats and he was able to increase his depth, but this can benefit anyone as most guys’ ankles are way too tight,” says Makan. “I also worked Phil’s rotator cuff as most people wait until a shoulder injury to address their cuff muscles, but we worked them as you would any muscle group.” Makan also incorporated a lot of foam roller work in the plan. “It’s a must for soft tissue work and recovery.” Winchester trained Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, with Wednesday being a rest day. 

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