Luke Tulloch Podcast Podcast

Luke Tulloch Podcast

Luke Tulloch
Fitness industry myth busting, physiology lessons and tips for personal trainers and fitness enthusiasts.
Customize Your Training Frequency
How often should you train a muscle group? It's a question that leads into the most important aspect of program design. Thanks for listening. When you're ready, here are some ways I can help you: 1. You can DM me on IG. ⁠Here's the link.⁠2. Work with me 1-on-1. ⁠Fill out this questionnaire⁠ to see if we're a good fit.
Dec 11, 2023
16 min
How rest between sets affects muscle growth
Thanks for listening. When you're ready, here are three ways I can help you:   1. You can DM me on IG. Here's the link. 2. Get free access to my Training Program Secrets Mini Course. 3. Work with me 1-on-1. Fill out this questionnaire to see if we're a good fit.
Nov 27, 2023
14 min
Build muscle in half the time
Nov 13, 2023
18 min
How to understand research
In today’s world, we have more accumulated knowledge available to us as individuals than entire generations did not so long ago. It’s great to have the world of knowledge at your fingertips but knowing how to make best use f it is another thing entirely. Here are 10 guidelines/rules to help you read and understand fitness science. IG: @_luketulloch Website: luketulloch.com
Sep 6, 2022
24 min
Choosing the right exercise
How does your brain choose which muscle to use during an exercise? The nervous system ‘matches’ the areas of the muscle with the best leverage to the task. But there are also individual differences, even when using the same exercises. We don’t always recruit the same muscle or even the same muscle regions with an exercise. This has been shown in studies. Different parts of the same muscle can grow asymmetrically depending on the exercise used. Instagram Website
Aug 29, 2022
17 min
How to Recomp
The holy grail. Lose fat, build muscle at the same time. Recomping is hard, but possible. The biological processes that grow muscle and burn fat compete with each other. The fastest way to lose fat is via a calorie deficit. Building muscle is fastest in a surplus. But it is possible to hit maintenance calories and do both. It's much easier under some circumstances. Free mini-course: Training Program Secrets My Instagram
Aug 2, 2022
22 min
How do you know when to change exercises?
Exercise selection is a rabbit hole. And once you've found your 'perfect' program - how and when do you change it? It's all about finding balance between personal preference, making progress, and optimising for performance over time. Thanks for listening. Here are other ways I can help you: Sign up for my Free Training Program Secrets Mini Course. Follow me on Instagram (I lost my old account, by the way. The new one is @coachluketulloch).
Jun 7, 2022
24 min
Recomping, EAAs, calisthenics and more
I have a new instagram account: @coachluketulloch I've been answering questions on my stories and thought I'd do a podcast to go a little more in depth on some of them. Enjoy!
May 19, 2022
21 min
Progressive overload
Forget everything else for a second. This is the one thing you MUST do if you want long term muscle growth. Progressive overload simply means training must stay challenging over time. It makes sure your training stays effective as you get bigger and stronger. Why? Because it maintains the number of stimulating reps in each set as your progress. The reps closer to failure are the most stimulating to muscle growth. As you approach failure on a set, your brain recruits more and more muscle fibres to keep lifting the weight. The largest groups of fibres are saved until last - meaning the last few reps are stimulating the most muscle fibres and making them grow. But unless you add reps or load over time, you'll start dropping these reps. You can jump on my newsletter below. I'll let you know when the How To Write A Program course is ready. www.luketulloch.com/links My instagram
Feb 9, 2022
21 min
Should you train to failure?
As we approach muscular failure, muscle fibre recruitment goes up. This stimulates the motor units that contain the majority of the large, highly-responsive fibres to grow. So in simple terms, the idea is that the last 5ish reps before failure are “stimulatory reps” because they involve both full motor unit recruitment and a high level of tension. But recent research indicates training to failure is not necessary. So should you train to failure? Are 'effective reps' a crock of shit? Listen in and I'll give you my take. www.luketulloch.com @_luketulloch
Dec 14, 2021
25 min
Load more