• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
The BarBend Logo in white.

BarBend

The Online Home for Strength Sports

  • News
    • CrossFit
    • Strongman
    • Bodybuilding
    • Powerlifting
    • Weightlifting
    • HYROX
  • Reviews
    • Recovery
      • Best Cold Plunges
      • Best Saunas
      • Best Mini-Massage Guns
    • Supplements
      • Best Protein
        • Best Vegan Protein Powders
        • Best Whey Isolate Protein Powders
        • Best Mass Gainer
        • Best Protein Bars
      • Best Pre-Workouts
        • Best Pre-Workout for Women
        • Best Pre-Workouts for Men
        • Best Non-Stim Pre-Workouts
        • Strongest Pre-Workouts
      • Best Creatine
      • Best Electrolyte Supplements
      • Best Greens Powder
      • Best Meal Replacements
      • Best Nitric Oxide Supplements
      • Best Fat Burners
      • Individual Supplement Reviews
    • Cardio Equipment
      • Best Treadmills
      • Best Rowing Machines
      • Best Exercise Bikes
      • Best Ellipticals
      • Best Recumbent Bikes
      • Individual Cardio Equipment Reviews
    • Strength Equipment
      • Best Adjustable Dumbbells
      • Best Dumbbells
      • Best Kettlebells
      • Best Barbells
      • Best Squat Racks
      • Best Weight Benches
      • Best Resistance Bands
      • Best Leg Extension Machines
      • Individual Strength Equipment Reviews
    • Apparel
      • Best Weightlifting Shoes
      • Best Cross Training Shoes
      • Best Running Shoes
      • Best Gym Shorts
    • Fitness Tech
      • Best Running Apps
      • Best Fitness Trackers
      • Best Workout Apps
      • Best Smart Scales
    • Support Gear
      • Best Lifting Straps
      • Best Gym Bags
      • Best Lifting Gloves
      • Best Wrist Wraps
  • Nutrition
    • Diets
      • Carb Cycling
      • Vertical Diet
      • Reverse Dieting
      • Carnivore Diet
      • Ketogenic Diet
      • Intermittent Fasting
      • IIFYM Diet
    • Muscle Gain
      • How to Dirty Bulk
      • Go From Cutting to Bulking
      • Eat These Carbs
      • How to Eat for Muscle
    • Fat Loss
      • Macros for Fat Loss
      • Calorie Deficits
      • Natural Fat Burners
      • Cut 2 Pounds Weekly
    • Supplement Guides
      • Pre-Workout
      • Whey Protein
      • Mass Gainers
      • Greens Powders
      • Creatine
      • BCAAs
    • Daily Protein Needs
    • Pre- and Post-Workout Nutrition
    • Foods With Creatine
    • Bulking Tips
  • Training
    • Exercise Guides
      • Deadlift
      • Bench Press
      • Back Squat
      • Overhead Press
      • Lat Pulldown
      • Shoulder Exercises
      • Chest Exercises
      • Ab Exercises
      • Quad Exercises
      • Biceps Exercises
    • Training Guides
      • Beginner’s Guide to the Gym
      • How to Build Muscle
      • Guide to Muscle Hypertrophy
      • How to Train on a Cut
    • Workouts
      • Back Workouts
      • At-Home Workouts
      • Chest & Back Workouts
      • Full-Body Workout
      • HIIT Workouts
      • Bodybuilding Workouts
      • Farmer’s Carry Workouts
    • Programs
      • 5×5 Program
      • Bodybuilding Programs
      • Push-Up Program
      • Pull-Up Program
      • 5/3/1 Program
      • Powerbuilding Program
      • German Volume Training
      • Build Your Own Program
  • Calculators
    • Protein Intake Calculator
    • Macros Calculator
    • BMR Calculator
    • Squat Calculator
    • Calorie Calculator
  • Community Forum
Home » Strongman News » Mitchell Hooper Explains How Better Cardio Fuels Strength Gains

Mitchell Hooper Explains How Better Cardio Fuels Strength Gains

“The Moose” believes Tabata training is the best way to improve aerobic fitness. 

Phil Blechman
Written by Phil Blechman
Last updated on September 18th, 2023

Reigning 2023 World’s Strongest Man (WSM) champ Mitchell Hooper is dedicated to exploring human performance, movement, and function. He holds a degree in human kinetics, a Master’s in clinical exercise physiology, and owns a kinesiology clinic in Ontario, Canada. Hooper backs his knowledge with action and has podiumed in 11 consecutive pro Strongman contests. 

For many strongman athletes, bodybuilders, and powerlifters, cardio workouts are usually an afterthought. But Hooper’s results don’t lie. On Sept. 12, 2023, Hooper took to his YouTube channel to explain how cardiovascular training can increase strength. Check it out below:

[Read More: Best Strongman Equipment for Home Gyms]

Decoding Research

“Cardio is one of the best things you can do for your long-term strength gains,” Hooper said. However, he acknowledged that there is research suggesting that cardio training can inhibit your strength gains. A 2021 meta-analysis of 15 studies found that [aerobic] exercise induced moderate declines in measures of muscle strength with no statistically significant effects on proxies of muscle power in trained male individuals..” (1)

Hooper dissected the research to provide a more comprehensive explanation of the results. Our bodies have two types of muscle fibers — type 1 and type 2. While it’s not possible to switch between type 1 and type 2 muscle fibers during training, the type 2 muscle fibers consist of 19 fiber types that allow shifting, ranging from type 2a (very slow twitch) to type 2x (fastest twitch). 

Hooper explained that muscle fiber types mainly refer to the metabolic processes a cell goes through to get energy. Fast-twitch muscle fibers are efficient at utilizing creatine for energy, whereas slow-twitch fibers are adept at using fats as an energy source. 

 

 
 
 
 
 
View this post on Instagram
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

A post shared by Evolution Athletics (@evolutionathleticsgear)

 

[Read More: The Best Fitness Trackers for Heart Rate, Sleep Quality, and More]

According to popular opinion, doing any form of cardio can inhibit your strength gains, as you’ll develop muscle fibers that don’t align with your training goals. “This is completely true, but in isolation, not practice,” said Hooper.

Hooper clarified that several other things happen inside our body when we improve our aerobic fitness, including:

Increased Blood Volume

Cardiovascular training increases our blood volume, which pre-loads the heart more, stretching it more than usual. Thus, when it contracts, it lets out more blood into the muscles. 

More extensive heart expansions and contractions improve the cardiac cycle, meaning the heart doesn’t have to work as hard. This is also why aerobically fit people usually have a lower resting heart rate than sedentary individuals. 

Increased Capillary Density

To accommodate the increased blood volume, the human body grows new vessels, resulting in even better blood circulation to the muscles. 

Increased capillary density and blood volume don’t impact your strength training directly. However, they improve your recovery by boosting nutrient and oxygen supply to the muscles, which can enhance your workout performance and overall health and well-being. 

Different Energy Systems for Different Time Periods

Another reason people give for skipping cardio is that the body has three energy systems for different types of activities depending on the time duration. 

The body relies on ATP and creatine phosphate (CP) for explosive activities that last less than 10 seconds, anaerobic glycolysis (lactic acid system) for the next 30 seconds, and aerobic glycolysis for the subsequent 90 seconds. After this, the body starts aerobic lipolysis, where it uses fat as fuel. 

Since most strength training exercise sets last less than 30 seconds, many assume they don’t need to work on their aerobic fitness. 

 

 
 
 
 
 
View this post on Instagram
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

A post shared by Mitchell Hooper (@mitchellhooper)

 

[Read More: 12 Best Supplements for Muscle Growth of 2023]

But like muscle tissue recruitment, energy systems don’t work in isolation. Irrespective of the physical activity you’re performing and the time period, you will use some level of aerobic and anaerobic fitness. Cardio training can improve your aerobic fitness, resulting in lower oxygen debt (a temporary oxygen shortage in the body tissues arising from exercise). 

“If you are training hard for 30 to 45 seconds, you’ll be able to push harder to the end, accumulate more total volume, and recover from it better because of increased capillary density and lower heart rate,” Hooper said. “If you’re accomplishing these things, you will be on a good track to get stronger.”

Improved Body Composition

Aerobic fitness can result in a shift in energy utilization. Aerobically fit individuals burn more body fat in the oxidative phase, whereas others burn a combination of fat and carbs. The shift in energy utilization allows an individual to perform at a higher work capacity and burn through their fat stores. 

Two Ways to Improve Aerobic Fitness

“Aerobic fitness is basically — oxygen goes into our lungs, then we extract it from our lungs. Everyone is good at that; that’s not an issue, but we then need to get it from there throughout the body,” Hooper said.

Enhanced aerobic fitness through cardio training can help this process by increasing capillary density and blood volume and changing body composition. 

“There are distinct ways to train this,” Hooper explained. You can increase your cardiovascular fitness by doing LISS cardio (low-intensity steady state). Conversely, you can improve your enzymatic processes through HIIT (high-intensity interval training) efforts. 

Hooper favors Tabata sprints to boost his enzymatic system. This form of HIIT workout lasts four minutes and involves eight circuits of 20 seconds of all-out effort, followed by 10 seconds of rest.

When Will Mitchell Hooper Compete Next?

Hooper is currently recovering from a hamstring tear he sustained at the 2023 Shaw Classic, where he won the silver medal. He is scheduled to compete at the 2023 Rogue Strongman Invitational on Oct. 27-29, in Austin, TX.

For more news across the sport, check out these strongman articles:

  • Mitchell Hooper Reveals Optimal Training Volume Per Muscle Group for Strength
  • Hybrid Athlete Fergus Crawley Is Training for His First Strongman Competition
  • 2023 England’s Strongest Man and Strongest Woman Results

References

  1. Markov A, Chaabene H, Hauser L, Behm S, Bloch W, Puta C, Granacher U. Acute Effects of Aerobic Exercise on Muscle Strength and Power in Trained Male Individuals: A Systematic Review with Meta-analysis. Sports Med. 2022 Jun;52(6):1385-1398.

Featured Image: @mitchellhooper / Instagram

Phil Blechman

About Phil Blechman

Phil is a native New Yorker passionate about storytelling, bodybuilding, and game design. He holds a BFA from Syracuse University.

View All Articles

Primary Sidebar

Latest Reviews

Featured image for the Ironmaster Super Bench Pro V2 Review

Ironmaster Super Bench Pro V2 Review (2025): Our Expert’s New Favorite FID Bench

Titan T3 Power Rack Review

Titan T3 Power Rack Review (2025): An Expert-Approved Rig Beckoning to Budget-Minded Athletes

Our tester works out at the beach in preparation for the Rogue Resistance Bands Review

Rogue Resistance Bands Review (2025): Tested by a Certified Personal Trainer

Barbend tester Jake Herod works out on a Force USA Trainer

Force USA G3 Review (2025): Our Experts Tested This Compact All-In-One Rack for Small Home Gyms

BarBend

BarBend is an independent website. The views expressed on this site may come from individual contributors and do not necessarily reflect the view of BarBend or any other organization. BarBend is the Official Media Partner of USA Weightlifting.

  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Pinterest

Sections

  • CrossFit
  • Strongman
  • Bodybuilding
  • Powerlifting
  • Weightlifting
  • Reviews
  • Nutrition
  • Training

More

  • BarBend Newsletter
  • BarBend Podcast
  • The Ripped Report
  • 1RM Calculator
  • BMR Calculator
  • Macros Calculator
  • Protein Calculator
  • Squat Calculator

Policies

  • Accessibility
  • Advice Disclaimer
  • Cookies Policy
  • Disclaimers
  • Disclosures
  • Editorial Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Copyright © 2025 · BarBend Inc · Sitemap