The German Tour de France winner has become something of a legend for his off-season weight gain, which has been pegged at more than and, before this year鈥檚 doping scandal broke, blamed for his inability to defeat Lance Armstrong. But the holidays shouldn鈥檛 be all about food and fear of fat. We posed your question to Matt Dixon, owner of and coach to several of today鈥檚 most successful endurance athletes, including Ironman Champion Meredith Kessler. Below, his fitness-saving holiday tips:
1. CHOOSE WORKOUTS WISELY
Don鈥檛 stop exercising completely. Rather, pick two or more key workouts from your training schedule that you will do no matter what. 鈥淭he rest are optional. It鈥檚 not a crisis if you can鈥檛 get them in,鈥 Dixon says. If you have a coach, ask him or her to tell you which workouts to keep, and which can be replaced by a holiday dinner party. If you don鈥檛 have a coach, keep workouts like hill repeats and high intensity days. 鈥淭he most challenging sessions are the ones that deliver the biggest training dose,鈥 Dixon says. Don鈥檛 worry about the others.
2. MAKE TRAINING A FAMILY ACTIVITY
鈥淕et people involved in something like a holiday 5K or a New Year鈥檚 Day 10K鈥攕omething active,鈥 Dixon says. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e going home for the holidays, sign up for a local event. It鈥檚 a great time to throw in something a little different, a little fun.鈥 Having a goal, like competing in a hometown race, can help keep you from skipping key workouts and scarfing extra cookies.
3. EAT
Dixon has only one rule for holiday meals: don鈥檛 starve yourself before or after the feast. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 disruptive to your health, your immune system, and stressful. It鈥檚 as disruptive as eating and drinking in excess,鈥 Dixon says. Ideally, Dixon says, 鈥測ou鈥檒l eat your regular, healthy diet, and make sure to fuel during and after your workout sessions so you don鈥檛 create a massive deficit or starvation, and you鈥檒l be less likely to gorge yourself in the big meals.鈥
Needless to say, Dixon is against 鈥減ulling a Jan Ullrich.鈥 His leaner athletes will gain three to five pounds in the off-season, while the bigger ones will gain six or seven.
鈥淎ctive people sometimes obsess about their fitness during the holidays,鈥 Dixon says. 鈥淲e just want to make sure you get through them without going backwards. This the time to be more relaxed, see your family, and have a good time.鈥