|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
President’s Tan Talk – October 2025
Congratulations were extended to Grant Padula on achieving 200 Tan Time Trials, a significant achievement. See photo below.
The Melbourne Marathon was a major focus, with best wishes extended to Stephen Barker, running his 100th marathon, Jane Sturzaker, running her 354th marathon (OMG!), and to Merle Want, James Yatomi, Phil Urquhart, Karen Travill, Steve Miller and Grant Padula, and any others we may have missed. Forecast is for a cool, possibly wet morning. |
|
|
A very big thank you was extended to long-time VRR Life Member Stuart White for re-writing the computer program we use to record every member’s running history. Recently Microsoft updated their operating system from Windows 10 to 11 and it made the monthly recording of results very difficult. |
|
|
| Thanks also to Rod Opie, firstly for recording the results onto the data base each month and keeping track of the achievement awards and actually getting them engraved, and thanks too for Rod offering to take over the processing of the monthly results from Graham Edwards. VRR is a little bit like Hotel California, where you can check out, but never leave. Stewie and Rod have long-since ceased running the Tan, but are still contributing to the club, which is much appreciated. |
|
|
|
Thanks too to Graham Edwards for the many years of service that he has provided to the club in processing the monthly results (the job that Rod has taken on). Graham has 400 TTT in his sights – Go Graham!!! |
|
|
| Don’t miss the great article below on whether ‘fasted’ cardio helps lose weight. The debate continues…
We look forward to hearing all the marathon stories at the November TTT. See you there,
Michael Kennedy
VRR President |
|
|
|
Grant Padula reached the 200 TTT milestone in October.
Congratulations, Grant on a fantastic achievement and good luck with the Melbourne Marathon. |
|
| The photos below are just a few of the ones posted on facebook by the club photographer, Helen Myall (thanks heaps, Helen) |
|
|
| Start of the October 2025 TTT |
|
|
|
Grant Padula’s daughter, Lucy came along to the Tan to see her dad receive his 200TTT award.
Welcome, Lucy |
|
| Steve Harris wanted to set a PB at the October TTT so he wore his RED top. |
|
|
| VRR celebrity, Stephen Barker was featured in the Whittlesea Review, recently because this year’s Melbourne Marathon will mark his 100th Marathon. |
|
Stephen just ‘happened’ to have a few spare copies of the Whittlesea Review and was happy to sign them for fellow Melbourne Marathon Spartans, Jane Sturzaker and Merle Want.
Keep your eye on the on-line market places for sales of this valuable collector item. |
|
|
| VRR Life Member, Brian O’Dea made short work of the infamous ‘dog leg’ mountain. |
|
| Karen Travill is another VRR member who has completed a number of Marathons both here in Australia and Overseas. |
|
|
|
|
|
| Does ‘fasted’ cardio help you lose weight? Here’s the science |
|
|
Every few years, the concept of fasted exercise training pops up all over social media.
Fasted training refers to exercising in the morning, before eating breakfast.
Fans will claim it’s the most efficient way to lose body fat. Opponents say it’s a terrible idea and will cause you to gain weight.
Who’s right and what does the research evidence say?
Where did the idea come from?
Fasted exercise, proponents say, will cause better changes in body composition – the proportion of lean mass (muscle), bone and fat. In particular, they say fasted exercise leads to fat loss.
Positive changes in body composition can occur through losses of fat mass, while either maintaining or gaining lean mass. Or even through gaining lean mass in the absence of any loss of body fat. All of which may be considered positive.
The idea fasted exercises leads to such positive body composition changes stems from research that shows exercising after eating versus exercise before eating affects metabolism differently.
Aerobic exercise in a fasted state causes you to burn more fat as a fuel (what researchers would call “fat oxidation”) when measured at a single point in time.
So it wasn’t a big leap to assume this would translate to longer-term fat loss.
However, a 2017 systematic review from my team demonstrated that a fasted exercise training program doesn’t seem to translate into long-term differences in body fat loss.
This discrepancy between fat burned as a fuel during exercise, and changes in body fat in the long term has often been misunderstood.
This apparent contradiction may come down to the fact the body seems to find ways to compensate. Fat burning seems to reduce once you eat, and people who have exercised hard may end up expending less total energy over the course of the day.
In exercise science, it’s actually pretty common to find that short-term effects don’t always translate to longer-term impacts.
For example, intense short-term exercise can negatively affect your immune system in the moment, but doing regular exercise can actually affect it positively in the longer term. |
|
|
Eating after or before a workout
Eating a meal featuring carbohydrates and protein close to when you exercise is likely to help with performance during your next exercise session.
However, whether that meal is before or after your workout seems to have limited impact.
Interestingly, research has shown that increasing the proportion of the food you eat in the morning – and in particular, eating more protein – may help to improve body composition and enhance weight loss.
However, this timing is not in relation to exercise, rather in relation to when in the day you eat.
What about sports performance?
It’s fairly clear eating before exercising improves performance in activities lasting over 60 minutes but has little effect on performance of shorter duration activities.
This is also evidenced by the lack of elite athletes supporting fasted exercise. A survey completed by almost 2000 endurance athletes showed non-professional athletes are more likely to exercise fasted compared to professional athletes.
What about strength training?
So do you get differences in muscle strength, size, and body composition changes in response to doing resistance training (such as weightlifting) when you’ve fasted versus when you’ve eaten? Unfortunately, the research is limited and low quality.
This limited evidence so far suggests it makes no difference.
One recent randomised controlled trial also found no difference in strength, power, or lean body mass when resistance training was done twice a week for 12 weeks either after fasting or after eating.
Potential drawbacks
Fasted training can make you feel really hungry after exercise, which can lead you to make poorer food choices.
Some people may even get headaches and nausea when trying to exercise fasted. This isn’t universal experience, though; social media is full of people who say exercising while fasting makes them feel great.
In summary, there is no clear winner.
The evidence doesn’t support the superiority of fasted exercise for weight loss, or sports performance.
However, the evidence also doesn’t show it causes a problem in many scenarios (except perhaps elite sports performance).
So if you’re short on time and skipping breakfast is going to allow you to get out and get that run or workout in, then go for it. Don’t worry too much about the consequence.
But if the idea of exercising on an empty tummy makes you want to avoid the gym, then grab some breakfast before you go. Rest assured it won’t be working against your goals.
Exercise fads and wellness hacks come and go but the thing backed by solid and consistent evidence is exercise.
Simply doing it matters the most.
Not the time of day, not the exact exercise choice, not even the exact amount – and definitely, not if you have or haven’t eaten before you exercise.
Mandy Hagstrom, is senior lecturer in exercise physiology at the UNSW Sydney.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons licence. |
|
|
|
VRR LIFE MEMBERS
Stephen Barker, Kevin Browne*, Sally Browne, Tony Doran, Graham Edwards, Jenny Field, Peter Field, Vern Gerlach*, Peter Gunn*, Don Hampshire*, Eileen Helmers*, Frank Helmers*, Betty Horskins, Graeme Horskins, Mike Kennedy, Lynn Kisler, Greig McEwan, Ross Martin*, Vin Martin, John Morris, Helen Myall, Peter Nicoll*, Bill Noonan, Brian O’Dea, Rod Opie, Graham Prossor, Melissa Groves, Doug Stokes, Brian Toomey*, Stuart White, Robert Wilson, Judy Wines*, Tom Worrell* and Val Worrell.
(* dec) |
|
|
|
|
Can you ask your running friends if they are receiving their email copy of Stride Out.
If they aren’t, can you get them to send me an email (gprossor@bigpond.net.au) asking to be put on the distribution list. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|