Depending on your outlook, 2016 was either a or the . The good news (we guess?) is that if the latter is true, we all have the opportunity to die really, really fit.
This was a hell of year for fitness, one in which we realized that fat is good, age doesnt matter, and the mind is the final frontier. Indeed, theres never been more people, approaches, and ideas pushing the limits of human performance. Here are our nine biggest takeaways from the year in fitness.
1. Eat Fat, Run Far
Weve all been there: out on a long race or training session whenbonk. You hit a wall that makes each step or pedal stroke feel like the final leg of a death march. The good news from 2016 is that if youre willing to eat a lot of fat, you may never bonk again.
The science behind this high-fat ketogenic diet, as its called, is fascinating. In short: when you shun carbs, minimize protein, and eat a whole lot of fat, your body adapts to that fat and produces ketones, or molecules produced in your liver from fatty acids, which can be used for energy. The idea for endurance athletes is that by adapting your body to burn more fat instead of carbohydrates, you unlock a virtually endless fuel source.
Being fat adapted may take bonking out of the equation, says Trevor Kashey, owner of in Vero Beach, Florida. Even the leanest athletes have enough stored fat to fuel most events. Ultrarunners and are two notable athletes who swear by a high-fat diet.
But its not easy to enter ketosis. Sixty-five percent of your calories must come from fat and the other 25 percent from protein. This means almost entirely eliminating carbs from your diet. (Think lots of cheese, yogurt, eggs, heavy cream, fatty fish, and a few green vegetables.) To really reap the mental and physical performance effects of a ketogenic diet, you have to eat that way without fail for the better part of a month. The diet has been around for decadesdoctors it in 1921 as a way to but 2016 saw peak keto for the average person, with Google trends reporting an eightfold spike in searches and biohacking juggernauts like and touting its benefits.
2. FKT Is the New Podium
The truth is often stranger than fiction: Utah man drinks copious amounts of Red Bull, eats ungodly amounts of candy, stuffs pockets with bacon, and runs the Appalachian Trail faster than anyone ever. Thats precisely what Karl Meltzer did this summer, breaking Scott Jureks 2015 fastest known time (FKT) of the AT by ten hours.
Then, in early October, ultrarunner Jim Walmsley smashed the Grand Canyon Rim-to-Rim-to-Rim FKT by more than 25 minutes when he finished the 42-mile round-trip run in 5 hours, 55 minutes, and 20 seconds. According to his , Walmsley averaged an 8:31 per mile pace and logged 24,566 feet in elevation change. He burned an estimated 7,721 calories.
And in late October, ultrarunner Pete Kostelnick broke perhaps the most notorious FKT of all time: the run across America. The Lincoln, Nebraskabased 29-year-old covered 3,000 miles, from San Francisco to New York City, in 42 days, 6 hours, and 30 minutes. In doing so, he broke a record that had stood for 36 years.
These accomplishments are just the latest, loudest in the of world-class ultrarunners prioritizing racking up new FKTs in place of a podium.
3. Your Body Is a Spreadsheet
Lets say you have an off day on the mountain or your performance stalls on the road. What do you do? Most likely, a bunch of guesswork. Maybe your nutrition is off; maybe youre under-recovered; maybe youre just not training hard enough. Once you come to a conclusion, you tweak your program, then wait to see if anything improves.
But your body contains information, and by testing and analyzing your blood, reaction to certain foods, , and other indicators, biohacking companies like , , and have recently started using to provide blood, diet, and training analysis and guidance. While some docs believe biohacking may not be a save-all, that overtesting can bring about its own set of health problems, these new companies are often staffed by high-level PhDs and MDs and are currently utilized by the Oakland Raiders, UCF fighter Demetrious Johnson, and mega-companies like Google and UPS, for example.
There are few things that you will see in bloodwork that arent super obvious when you review lifestyle habits, says Kashey. For example, if you sleep too little and train too much for too long, your blood counts will reflect that. Theres no reason to make guesses when you can take a measurement. Testing shows that certain lifestyle habits can do real damage rather than might be doing damage.
4. Mind Your Mind
Zen master Phil Jackson : mindfulness training can . The practice of meditation seems to work by reducing general stress, thus helping athletes better adapt to competitive pressure. As a stress fighter, meditation will also lower your chances of getting injuredpeople who are under high life stress are twice as likely to incur an athletic injury, at the University of Missouri.
This year, the practice took off among high-level athletes, Olympians in Rio, but mindfulness was also brought into more mundane activities like , , , and . It has also been adopted by ultra-endurance athletesrunner Timothy Olson recently launched a multiday retreat that combines running with meditation. Google searches for the term have been , and the have begun, inadvertently solidifying mindfulness as a trend.
Another crucial part of mindfulness and meditation is deep, controlled breathing into the belly, which also benefits athletes in tangible ways. When done right, certain breathing techniques are effective at altering joint range of motion very quickly, says Greg Spatz of in New York City. Most people take shallow breaths, using their neck and upper back muscles to power their breath. These shallow breaths trigger a fight-or-flight response, and, in turn, your body dials up the tightness of your muscles, says Spatz.
This year, professional sports teams like the , , and all incorporated breathing exercises into their performance training.
5. Strength Athletes Were Wrong About Cardio
Strength athletes and coaches have had it in for cardio over the past couple of decades, believing that endurance exerciseparticularly runningis, at best, because it drops your testosterone levels, makes you weak, and injures you. At worst, they said, a long run or ride was a and .
But recently, more enlightened strength coaches began to the flaws in that old logic and cherry-picking of data and see the value in low-intensity aerobic exercise. The rash of strength athletes passing away from cardiovascular illness, the general unhealthiness of many of the top athletes in strength sports, and the inability of these individuals to truly engage in high-intensity exercise was one major impetus for the resurgence in low-intensity cardio, says Alex Viada, owner of the online fitness consulting company .
Low-intensity aerobic exercise may allow you to work harder at higher intensities, which is important in sports like CrossFit and strongman. It can also help you recover from those nightmarishly difficult workouts by improving blood flow and your nervous system, says Viada. And it becomes exceedingly hard to argue that running kills your strength when you have guys like Viada, who once , and powerlifter Andrey Malanichev, who squats more than 1,000 pounds and .
Most important for the average person: steady-state aerobic exerciselike jogging, cycling, or swimmingleads to specific adaptations in your heart that optimize heart health, potentially fending off the , says Viada.
This year, cardio-hating meatheads and alike .
6. Age Is Only a Number
In May, a 100-year-old retired school teacher set a new 100-meter dash world record for her age group with a time of 46.791 seconds. Ella Mae Colbert crushed the previous mark by a staggering 30 seconds. Her sprint was just one notable feat in a year when we collectively shunned the idea of ones prime and realized that with a bit of hard work, age cant stop you.
In October, Ed Whitlock, an 85-year-old Canadian, set a world record in the 85-to-90 age group with a marathon time ofwait for it3:56. Yes, a man who started receiving AARP 35 years ago ran a sub-four-hour marathon. A month later, he broke his age groups world record in the 15K . (The man is actually a record-smashing OGat 72, Whitlock became the oldest person to ever run a sub-three-hour marathon.)
Over in the strength world, a 71-year-old, 181-pound Hungarian named Janos Fabri spotted up to the bar and pulled a record , which is more than three times his body weight.
7. Old-School Cardio Machines Rule
Once relegated to rowing clubs, demoralizing physical therapy practices, and the saddest corner of big-box gyms, rowing machines, fan bikes, and other fan-based cardio machines are making a massive comeback.
Weve definitely seen phenomenal growth over the last few years, says Greg Hammond, director of sales at , a company thats been making rowing ergometers since 1981 and in 2009 introduced a ski ergometer. Meanwhile, with fan bikes on the rise, Schwinn its , and in the last handful of years, LifeCORE and StairMaster developed their own takes on the fan bike.
Thank CrossFit for bringing the machines back in the fold. The Concept2 rower appeared in a of the CrossFit Journal, where founder Greg Glassman named it CrossFits favorite piece of cardio equipment. Ever since, CrossFit boxes have been dominated by fan-based machines. This year, the CrossFit Games even featured that included the rower, ski erg, and fan bike.
Should you be using a fan bike? Probably. Theyre ideal for hard intervals because the resistance is set by how much effort you give. That is, the harder you pedal, ski, or row, the harder pedaling, skiing, or rowing becomes. That accommodating, exponential effect is unmatched by motor-powered cardio machines.
8. Calisthenics Can Make You Better at Everything
No longer do people care what you can bench. Instead, they want to know if you can do a human flag or a pistol squat.
In its annual poll, the American College of Sports Medicine found that body-weight training as a top fitness trend and not just a passing fad. The study authors point to the methods effectiveness, cost, and practicality.
People are starting to recognize the incredible value in being able to control their own body and how that can transfer to any other sport or activity, says Dave Durante, an Olympic gymnast and the owner of , a gymnastics and calisthenics-centric training program. Gymnastics is a combination of so many different components: strength, flexibility, body and spatial awareness, and more.
9. Fitness Gurus Have Become Instafamous
In the fitness space, social media influencersa precious term for someone who has a lot of Instagram followersmade serious dough in 2016. They , , and .
Of course, they also brought in by sneaking products into their photo feeds. In a completely unscientific analysis, we found that for products commonly shilled by Instagram influencers, like FitTea, shot up more than threefold across 2016.
As it becomes for the average Joe to amass a huge social following, this form of word-of-mouth advertising.