Dec 2, 2025
Do you really need to warm up before a strength training
workout? Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher kick off a brand-new
series titled Principles of Exercise Design. In this series,
they’ll break down the key components that make every workout
safer, more effective, and better aligned with your goals.
In today’s episode, they explore one of the most debated topics
in fitness: the warm-up. You’ll learn what science says about
warming up, when it’s truly necessary, and why strength training
might already include everything your body needs to prepare.
Tune in to hear how understanding the purpose behind warm-ups
can help you train smarter, reduce wasted time, and focus on what
actually drives results.
- Dr. Fisher starts by asking whether a warm-up is really
necessary before strength training.
- He explains that extensive research shows no real need for a
separate warm-up before lifting. The very nature of strength
training includes a built-in progression that prepares the muscles
safely and effectively.
- Dr. Fisher explains that most people don’t begin their first
repetition at maximum effort. Instead, the gradual increase in
resistance and intensity throughout the set gently primes the
muscles for heavier loads.
- Dr. Fisher highlights how progressive recruitment within a set
serves as a warm-up. As you perform each repetition, your body
gradually activates more muscle fibers. This process raises muscle
temperature, enhances coordination, and makes an additional warm-up
unnecessary.
- Amy and Dr. Fisher explain why some exercises, like sprints,
need a warm-up.
- Sprinting is an all-out movement that demands maximum force
right from the start. To avoid injury, the body must be prepared
through light activation that prepares the muscles and joints.
- Dr. Fisher highlights that strength training is controlled, not
explosive. Exercises like leg presses or chest presses never begin
with maximal effort or range of motion. The gradual increase in
load throughout the session replaces the need for stretching or
separate warm-ups.
- Amy explores the logic behind warming up. She points out that
it’s sensible before activities demanding sudden force or
unpredictable motion. But in strength training, your first
repetitions are never your hardest, so the warm-up happens
organically within the session.
- Dr. Fisher explains why good personal trainers skip long
warm-ups. The goal isn’t to fill time; it’s to let your muscles
warm naturally as resistance and effort increase.
- Amy and Dr. Fisher break down the two types of warm-up: general
and specific. A general warm-up involves light activity, like
cycling for a few minutes, to increase circulation and muscle
temperature. It feels good, but it isn’t essential before
resistance training.
- Dr. Fisher describes a specific warm-up as targeted preparation
for a heavy lift. This means gradually increasing load with lighter
sets before attempting a maximal effort. It’s useful when working
toward top performance in compound lifts like deadlifts.
- Learn how personal training keeps you from overdoing your
workouts. Dr. Fisher explains that a good session should be
structured so your body adjusts safely, reducing fatigue and
building strength without unnecessary strain.
- Dr. Fisher discusses whether wearing warm clothes affects
muscle readiness.
- He clarifies that feeling warm doesn’t mean the muscles are
functionally prepared. True readiness comes from gradually
increasing effort, not from external temperature.
- Amy concludes by summarizing the key insight from today’s
episode. In strength training, the warm-up is already built into
the structure of the exercise itself. The progressive loading and
fiber recruitment at the start of each set make a separate warm-up
unnecessary.
Mentioned in This Episode:
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