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Creatine and Rugby Training
Stew Smith | March 11, 2006
This week I decided to answer a question I have been receiving, for over ten years, from people using my workouts to prepare for Rugby and Military training.

"Your training programs are effective. I have been following the routines and can do a rather large amount of situps and pushups! The question I would like to ask is -- would this program be more affective if I took creatine while doing these workouts? And would you see a difference in a short period of time?"

During the early 90's, creatine supplementation hit the scene and gyms, nutrition stores, and supplement companies jumped on the creatine explosion. Creatine, like all other supplements sold online or in nutrition stores, is unregulated by the Food and Drug Administration. The reason is that creatine -- like protein, amino acids, and vitamins -- occurs naturally in our food and is NOT a drug. Creatine is actually found in the meat we eat. Taking a daily-recommended supplement of creatine is equivalent to eating more than ten steaks. In my mind, that goes against all that I have taught with respect to moderation -- whether you are trying to lose weight or gain weight. Besides, the long-term effect of creatine supplements has yet to be fully determined.

Creatine has been (and still is) being promoted as a way to enhance muscular performance in just about every athletic activity there is. So why not supplement to perform better in rugby physical fitness training. Right? WRONG?

Take a look at the endurance needs of Rugby Players. You are required to perform for eighty minutes of high intensity running, rucking and mauling.  The rugby player is a cross between an endurance athlete and a gymnast. The requirements of several hours of endurance activities, along with short explosive body weight movements, make taking creatine detrimental to the rugby player (if you want to be able to perform a for the whole eighty minutes). If you want to be a bodybuilder or bench press a truck -- go for it -- creatine can help you.

Physiology of Creatine in Exercise

Without getting too technical, creatine is best used by the muscles when performing short, high-intensity, explosive exercises like power-lifting, sprinting, and other anaerobic sports. Creatine can help the body grow muscle mass that is only able to do short bursts of 6-10 seconds of full-exertion movements. Once you step into the aerobic or cardio zone with longer, slower runs, creatine offers little assistance.

In fact, while preparing people for SEAL Training, with long 24-36 hour days of constant activity, the military members taking creatine were “locked up” -- experiencing deep muscle cramping in the major muscle groups of the body (thighs, hamstrings, glutes, and lowerback). These were typical athletes – football players, track sprinters, power lifters, and people who liked to lift weights to look good. In a nutshell, they did not make the cut and were released from the program. Their muscles did not allow them to finish. It was always entertaining to see the look on these athletes faces when three to five mile runs were next on the agenda. Even the 1.5 mile run, which is really a spring, is considered long distance to an athlete training with creatine.

Training with weights is NOT the enemy. In fact, it is good to have some muscle fiber capable of short bursts of speed and strength in rugby. However, you must couple that with higher repetition training and longer distance running. And studies have not produced any positive results on the use of creatine in endurance athletes.

Since I am not a doctor, I found one. His statement confirms my reservations about the supplementation of creatine. Mark A. Jenkins, MD at Rice University states, “ Creatine, and other such supplements, are not regulated by the FDA. No published investigation has been conducted on creatine to determine what impurities might be present in creatine supplements, and what their long-term effect might be. The bottom line is that no one can confidently state that prolonged creatine supplementation is safe, and its use would best be avoided until more data can be compiled. Prolonged administration is, in essence, an uncontrolled toxicity study and might yield harmful results. Is it worth the risk? Remember, it's your body!”

I am sure to receive many responses from people disagreeing with me on this one. My philosophy has always been “everything in moderation” when it comes to weight gain, weight loss, and training. I have not taken any supplements other than vitamins for the more than twenty years of training. I have power lifted and bench pressed more than twice my bodyweight and run a sub 18:00 three-mile run. You can do both types of exercises. I am merely stating that creatine supplementation does not allow you to do both very well. This is my opinion, formed from years of witnessing the negative performances by creatine-supplemented athletes in challenging military training. (“Challenging” includes the standard military PFT as well as 1.5 mile, 2 or 3-mile runs).

My workouts have both lifting and high repetition PT and running in them to help prepare people for military training and fitness tests.

Send your thoughts and questions to me at stew@stewsmith.com .

 
 
 

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