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the KING of SWING
Muscle & Fitness June 2003
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What fuels baseball super hitter
Barry Bonds?
Natural talent and a voracious regimen
of bodybuilding style training and nutrition.
By Jim Schmaltz
In a moment portending
doom to the emotional stability of National League
pitchers, Barry Bonds stepped up to the plate on Feb.
28 for his first spring training at bat and smacked
a towering, see-you-later, nice-to-have-known-you
home run.
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in a scene much like the one played out 613 times before
in 17 seasons, the 38 year old San Francisco Giants
slugger took his familiar stroll around the diamond,
ignoring the dejected glare of hapless Cubs pitcher
Mark Prior.
"Unbelievable," Cubs outfielder
Sammy Sosa, no homer hitting slouch himself, said
afterward. "That guy is ready."
"Ready" would seem an inadequate
description. Bonds was, as they say, born ready. The
son of Major League great Bobby Bonds, Barry's genetic
gifts were further nurtured by his godfather, Willie
Mays, whose home run total of 660 will likely be surpassed
by his godson later this year - an accomplishment
that makes Barry wince when he considers eclipsing
his idol. Bonds is also in reach of Babe Ruth's 714
round-trippers - which doesn't make him wince - and
may have a shot at Hank Aaron's mark of 755 homers,
a record long thought to be untouchable. No more.
Bonds has a history of making
history. When he strides to the plate, it's not an
at-bat, it's
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an event. Two years ago, the Giants outfielder
stunned the baseball world by breaking Mark McGwire's record
of 70 home runs in one season, rocketing 73 out of ballparks
from sea to shinning sea. Last year, he won his first batting
title, registering an average of 370 while winning a record
fifth MVP award. He hit only 46 home runs in 2002, seemingly
below his standards, but you can hardly blame him. He was
walked 198 times (a record), 68 time intentionally (another
record). If the rest of the league wasn't so terrified of
him, Bonds might have smacked another 73 homers.
Welcome to Barry's world. A place where
Cy Young award winning pitchers suddenly become quivering
nerlings who'd rather give Bonds a free pass to first base
than test their fastballs against his bat speed. A place
where a ball he smacked out of Pac Bell Park is so valuable
that it can become the center of a landmark legal case,
as his 73rd home run did when two men fought over who legally
nabbed it in the stands (the judge made them split the revenue
from the ball's sale). A place where Americans can temporarily
forget their troubles, as they did when Bonds chased McGwire's
record in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks.
While he may not have the charisma or
PR savy of Michael Jordan and Tiger Woods, Bonds resides
in their rarefied air. He is a confounding bundle of contradictions,
an enigmatic living legend, scourge of sportswriters, doting
father of three, and a studied professional who finds himself
in his prime while pushing 40.
On July 24, he will turn 39. At an age
where most players are struggling with eroding skills and
gray stubble, Bonds is flourishing, statistically and physically.
At 6'2", 230 pounds, he's in the best shape of his life,
which sounds like a hoary cliché until he peels off his
shirt to expose sledgehammer biceps and thick, contoured
delts worthy of Michelangelo's craftsmanship. It's the physique
of a man who works at it.
GOING CELLULAR
Bonds' imposing musculature reflects this new dedication
to the physical arts. Working with personal trainer Greg
Anderson, the superstar slugger has refined his weight training
and nutrition regimens, and it shows. "Definitely, my improvements
as a player are down to training and nutrition," Bonds tells
MUSCLE & FITNESS. "Without a doubt. It has made me a better
athlete than I was before."
While he's no newcomer to the gym, for
Bonds, it's a case of old dog, new tricks. "I started weight
training when my son was born in 1989," says Bonds, referring
to Nikolai, his first-born. "Before, I would train really
hard in the off-season and work out just a little bit during
the season, trying mostly to keep my flexibility Then I'd
hit a wall in August. But the last few years I've been training
all year, and that has changed my whole career, because
I don't get weaker during the year. I don't suffer a down
spell or hit bottom. I stay strong all year."
But Bonds' rejuvenation owes itself
to more than sets and reps. He's now calibrating his athletic
performance at the cellular level. Since winter of 2000,
Bonds has worked closely with San Francisco-based nutritional
consultant Victor Conte of Balco Laboratories. Conte precisely
measures the nutrient levels in the outfielder's blood,
and then prescribes specific supplemental regimens to correct
imbalances. Like the managers of every National League team,
Bonds has noticed the difference.
"I'm just shocked by what they've been
able to do for me," he says. "Before I didn't understand
how important these nutrient levels were, because I was
just listening to old standard nutritionists who tell you
to just eat 4,000 calories a day. Everyone's body changes
over time, and every individual is different. To have your
blood drawn and analyzed can tell you what your body produces
more of, what it lacks. You're able to create a program
that fits for you as an individual."
This attention to detail is the latest
advancement in sports science (see "Personalize Your Supplement
Program," March 2003), and Bonds is a true believer. Given
the chance, he spouts like an evangelist at a revival meeting
about the importance of mineral levels and blood work.
"People don't understand how important
this is," he explains. "I visit Balco every three to six
months. They check my blood to make sure my levels are where
they should be. Maybe I need to eat more broccoli than I
normally do. Maybe my zinc and magnesium intakes need to
increase, and I need more ZMA. Nobody ever showed it to
me in a scientific way before, how important it is to balance
your body I have that knowledge now."
FATHER FIGURE
This commitment to arduous training and analytical supplementation
may surprise those who assume that Bonds merely needs to
roll out of the rack every morning to be the greatest baseball
player in the world. Like any athlete, he needs structure
and discipline, and his training and nutrition regimens
provide the support.
"The training has helped me mentally
as well as physically" he says. "The discipline of training
and watching what I eat carries over into my playing ability.
Being a professional athlete, it's easy to get distracted.
You're going to make your millions anyway so it's easy to
rest on your laurels."
This dedication reinforces the lessons
learned as a youngster. Yes, role models matter, even to
Barry. "I learned by watching Muhammad Ali and Magic Johnson
when I was younger. I learned that those great athletes
are self-motivated. They don't need anyone to knock on their
door. They don't need a wake-up call; they're self-motivated.
To be the best, you must be self-motivated.
"I remember a line in a movie: If you
wake up in the morning and all you want to do is sing, then
you're a singer.' I wake up wanting to do my job. I want
to play baseball, I want to train."
Of course, adds Bonds, it helps to have
a few irritants on your side. "Victor will call me to make
sure I'm taking my supplements, and my trainer Greg will
sit near my locker and stare at me if I don't begin working
out right away. I have these guys pushing me. I'm irritated
by them most of the time," he says, chuckling.
With his status already established
as one of baseball's all-time greats, why does he do it?
Why sweat and toil with huge weights, suffer through the
ascetic discipline of dietary restrictions?
"When my son Nikolai was born, that
changed my whole life," he says. "I have three children
now. I have this big responsibility in front of me. I want
what's best for my kids."
Asked if he would walk away from it
all - the glory, fame and riches - for his family, Bonds
replies without hesitation: "Definitely."
The moment of Bonds' departure is one
of great consequence, and not just to rotisserie fanatics
and bleary-eyed statisticians. When will the King of Swing
hang it up?
'As long as I can see, I can hit a baseball.
I may not be able to catch it in the outfield because I'm
getting slow, but I can hit a baseball until I'm 50. And
the only reason I say that is because Willie Mays comes
down to spring training. He's in his 60s, and Willie Mays
can still hit home runs. So can my Dad, and he's 57 years
old.
'Am I going to be able to play at a
level of a major league baseball player, five, six, seven
years from now? Sure, I can play at the level of a major
league baseball player, but will I play at a level I think
that I should be playing at? No, I won't be able to do that
five, six, seven years from now.
"I think that there's a time, maybe
after 20 years in the game, for me to step aside and allow
a young man who deserves to start his life and his career.
My children will be in high school. As a father, I need
to be home."
For now, pitchers will continue trembling,
scoreboards will continue lighting up, and stitched rawhide
will continue to sail over walls covered in ivy and spilled
Budweiser. And as long as his name is scribbled on a lineup
card, the weights will clang; the nutritional supplements
will be taken.
"I've tried to install into my children
that as long as you work hard at whatever you do, you're
always a winner," says Bonds. "Always. You don't lose by
working hard. You only lose if you make excuses. You don't
lose by trying."
WHAT KEEPS BARRY SWINGING?
Barry Bonds’ nutrition regimen is based
on his particular needs as measured by BALCO Laboratories.
Victor Conte, head of BALCO, supplied Muscle & Fitness with
the following program Bonds currently follows.
THE NUTRITION REGIMEN
Morning
50 grams special whey protein blend
25 grams complex carbohydrates
5 grams glutamine peptides
5 grams New Zealand colostrum
Preworkout
1,000 mg phenylalanine
1,000 mg tyrosine
10 mg Vitamin B6
200 mcg chromium (as polynicotinate)
2 mg copper (as sebacate)
Post-Workout
50 grams whey protein isolates
50 grams dextrose
5 grams glutamine
2 grams arginine
200 mcg chromium (as polynicotinate)
1.5 grams magnesium creatine
1.5 grams creatine monohydrate
5 grams New Zealand colostrum
Afternoon
10 mg iron (as glycinate)
200 mcg selenium (as selenomethionine)
10,000 IU Vitamin A
500 mg Vitamin C
800 IU Vitamin E
400 IU Vitamin D
25 mg Vitamin B1
25 mg Vitamin B2
25 mg Vitamin B6
500 mcg Vitamin B 12
400 mcg folic acid
500 mg omega-3 fatty acids
250 mg d-glucosamine sulfate
350 mg n-acetyl d-glucosamine
200 mg omega-6 fatty acids
150 mg chondrotin sulfate
Evening
50 grams special whey protein blend
25 grams complex carbohydrates
5 grams glutamine peptides
5 grams New Zealand colostrum
Before Bedtime
3 capsules ZMA, which contain 30 mg zinc (as monomethionine/aspartate),
450 mg magnesium (as aspartate) and 10.5 mg of Vitamin B6
200 mg L-theonine
50 mg 5-HTP
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