Bodybuilding Content Added Today On My-Bodybuilding.com
December 24, 2009 by Bodybuilding and Weight Training Tips
Filed under Bodybuilding Updates
Today, I’ve got some awesome tips waiting for you. Click the links below to see what I’ve found.
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Matthew Boherty, Editor My-Bodybuilding.com
What is the best meal to have before a workout at 7 in the morning and afterwards for a bodybuilder?
July 29, 2009 by Bodybuilding and Weight Training Tips
Filed under More Bodybuilding Answers
i am just starting bodybuilding and want to know the best way to eat on a budget. should i have oats before my workouts and a protein shake afterwards?
Women Bodybuilding Posters
How do you know if you have good genes for bodybuilding?
July 28, 2009 by Bodybuilding and Weight Training Tips
Filed under More Bodybuilding Answers
Or what im trying to say is that, how do you know if you got good genes for muscle if that makes sense. BEcause me and my brother use to workout in the gym for maybe 4 times a week for like 3 months without really a schedule just lifting some weights here and there without any knowledge of bodybuilding. And right now we are in pretty good shape.
Best Bodybuilding Supplements
Is it good to dine on a protein shake when bodybuilding?
July 24, 2009 by Bodybuilding and Weight Training Tips
Filed under More Bodybuilding Answers
I like to work out in the evenings, before dinner, and I noticed that I am not hungry for several hours after that. Since eating is an important part of bodybuilding, I am wondering whether having a protein shake (60g+ of protein) is a good idea as a meal replacement for dinner, or if this will cause catabolism (undesirable loss of muscle mass)? Thanks
Weight Training Program For Women
Bodybuilding And The Olympics: An Ongoing Controversy
July 24, 2009 by Bodybuilding and Weight Training Tips
Filed under About Bodybuilding
Perhaps the more telling questions to ask are “Should bodybuilding be an Olympic sport?”, and “Would making bodybuilding an Olympic sport help the Olympics?”
Bodybuilding And The Olympics: Why It Is Not Already An Olympic Sport
The current Olympic program consists of 35 sports, 53 disciplines and more than 400 events, ranging from archery through to weightlifting and wrestling. The bodybuilding fan base, competitors, and sponsors are all ready and willing to take the step to Olympic level. The stumbling block is the International Olympic Committee and the OPC, who state simply that according to their criteria, bodybuilding is not a sport and there has no place in the Olympics.
This stand begs the question, “what determines a sport in the first place?”. A simple definition by the Australian Sports Foundation says that sport is “a human activity capable of achieving a result requiring physical exertion and/or physical skill, which, by its nature and organization, is competitive and is generally accepted as being a sport.”
Arguably, bodybuilding fits within this definition, and one would think this should be enough for the IOC. However, the primary problem the IOC has with allowing bodybuilding into the Olympics concerns drug abuse. They claim that the widespread use of performance enhancing drugs by bodybuilders would prevent bodybuilding from complying with Olympic drug policies. There are harsh and vigilant doping rules for Olympic competitors, which would certainly exclude many professional bodybuilders.
However, the natural bodybuilding fraternity does not use performance enhancing drugs. The Olympics could uphold their drug policies, allowing only natural bodybuilders to compete at the Olympics. This also aligns with the tradition of the Olympics being a competition for sporting amateurs, not professionals.
Another reason stated by the IOC for excluding bodybuilding from the Olympics was that the judging in competitive bodybuilding was far too subjective for an Olympic judge to critique. Given the controversy surrounding the subjective judging of sports such as ice skating, diving, and gymnastics this argument hardly seems to hold water. In fact, bodybuilding would seem to be a perfect fit!
How Bodybuilding Could Help The Olympics
As competitive bodybuilding has never been a mainstream sport, including it as an Olympic Sport would allow the sport to be better known and recognized. It would also make the sport more accessible, allowing people to learn more about bodybuilding, and possibly participate themselves.
Bodybuilding would also help the Olympics by widening the scope of sports on display. By showcasing bodybuilding, the Olympics would be encouraging people of all ages to eat good food, work out, become fit, and look after their health. These are important messages in a world where so many people are overweight.
A look back into history reveals that the Olympics were first introduced by the Greeks, who idolized and revered well toned, aesthetic bodies with healthy strong physiques.
Bodybuilding And The Olympics: The Main Argument Against
Besides the drug doping issue, perhaps the most prominent argument against including bodybuilding in the Olympics is the subjectivity of judges and the fact that there is often no clear winner. Even though other Olympic sports like ice skating are also in this category, the majority of Olympic sporting events feature clear winners, either by time, distance, height or lifting weight. No one can argue that judging mistakes have been made when a competitor clearly wins an event.
Although the jury is still out on bodybuilding and Olympics, it seems for the time being at least, that the Olympic Committee has no intention of including bodybuilding as an Olympic sport. Despite the fact that the bodybuilding fraternity is ready and willing to take the step to Olympic level, it looks like they will be waiting for some time yet.
Thanks to Jean Littman for contributing this article to our Bodybuilding blog:




