10 Run a Faster 5K with Run/Walk Intervals
Give these cross-training options a try to broaden your running routine.
Other Hearst Subscriptions. Races - Places?
Running is great—but there a tons of people out there who don’t have the time or patience to take to the road and pound pavement.
For many, though, running sticks in their fitness repertoire because it burns calories better than just about any other cardio exercise they know. At a 10-minute-per-mile pace, you’ll fry about 10 calories a minute, which isn’t too shabby. (Once you up that pace, you can burn even more.)
“In general, you burn more calories by doing high-intensity weight training than you do running,” Harold Gibbons, a trainer at Mark Fisher Fitness in New York City, and the New York State Director of the National Strength and Conditioning Association, told Menshealth.com.
That’s often because the number of calories you’re told you just burned is typically estimated from The Compendium of Physical Activities, Health - Injuries.
That works well for low- to medium-intensity exercise, but not so well for higher-intensity activities that rely on anaerobic metabolism.
In fact, when researchers at the University of Southern Maine used a more advanced method to estimate energy expenditure during exercise, they found that weight training burns up to 71 percent more calories than originally thought. Which suggests that a fast-paced circuit workout burns as many calories as running at a 6-minute per mile pace.
But resistance training isn’t your only option for cardio exercise. There are other, more exciting workouts that can boost your burn, too. We found 10 cardio exercises that will help you incinerate calories—without ever having to spend a boring hour circling a jogging loop.
1. Agility Ladder
You'll burn a ton of calories with the short bursts of speed, balance, and coordination it takes to finish a full agility ladder circuit—especially if you run through the drills continuously with limited rest.
But your brain might get the best benefit from this type of cardio exercise. A 2014 study from the Air Force Research Laboratory showed that Running Shoes - Gear along with boosting cardio levels. Instead of just plodding mindlessly along on a run, agility drills help you hone your VO2 max, athletic footwork, memory, and concentration.
If you don't have an agility ladder at your local gym or you just want one of your own, we like this one from Yes4All.
2. Kettlebell Swing
This explosive cardio exercise works the big, powerful muscles around your glutes and quads, and sends your heart into overdrive, according to research from the University of Wisconsin.
In the study, participants burned 20.2 calories a minute and their average heart was 93 percent of its max for the course of a 20-minute workout.
“The kettlebell swing works you so hard because it’s not a movement you’re used to,” says Dan John, a strength coach in Salt Lake City and the author of Intervention. “You’re not super efficient at it, which taxes your body.
The whole point of experimenting with your cardio is to beat boredom, right? How could you ever have a boring workout while you swing around Iron Man himself?
3. Indoor Rowing
A 185-pound guy can burn 377 calories during 30 minutes of vigorous rowing, or about 12.5 calorie per minute, reports a Harvard University study.
And because you need to utilize the muscles in your arms, legs, and back for efficient strokes, it's a great total-body trainer.
Run a Faster 5K with Run/Walk Intervals The 5 Rowing Mistakes You Don’t Know You’re Making.
4. Burpees
A 180-pound person burns about 1.43 calories per burpee, says exercise scientist and Spartan Coach Jeff Godin. So if you can hammer out at least seven a minute you're in the double digits.
But you should shoot to average at least 10 every 60 seconds, or a rate of 14.3 calories per minute.
Why? Performing just 10 reps at a fast pace can rev your metabolism as much as a 30-second, all-out bike sprint, according to a study presented at the American College of Sports Medicine annual meeting, and that makes the burpee a killer cardio exercise.
5. AirDyne Bike Sprints
But you should shoot to average at least 10 every 60 seconds, or a rate of 14.3 calories per minute proved that it's possible to blast 87 calories in one minute on this stationary bike How to Adjust Your Run Schedule After a Big Race.
The key: Give everything you have in that 60 seconds. Note: This was by no means a scientific experiment, and relies on the accuracy of the built-in AirDyne monitor, which calculates calories by converting revolutions of the fan into physical work.
6. Jumping Rope
Moderate-intensity rope jumping—about 100 to 120 skips per minute—burns about 13 calories a minute, according to the Compendium of Physical Activities.
This cardio exercise uses more muscle groups than jogging, and challenges your balance and coordination—especially if you practice drills that require extra hand and foot skills.
7. “Cindy”
This CrossFit Workout of the Day (WOD) burns an average 13 calories per minute, according to scientists at Kennesaw State University.
It’s effective because it pairs three exercises—5 pullups, 10 pushups, and 15 air squats—that work different major muscle groups, and you do as many rounds as possible in 20 minutes.
So if you’re in amazing condition, you can go all-out for each one, without slowing down or stopping to recover in between.
8. Cross-Country Skiing
Zipping along on skis delivers a better cardio workout compared to running at about the same pace, thanks to the fact that the sport requires you to push with your lower-body and pull with your upper.
In fact, a good cross-country ski session can burn more than 12 calories a minute, according to the Compendium of Physical Activities.
That explains why Nordic Skiers consistently collapse in exhaustion at the finish line of Olympic races. (No fresh snow? Look for the new Concept2 SkiErg machine at your gym.)
9. Tabata Jump Squats
This four-minute miracle drill burns major calories both during a workout and after. In an Auburn University at Montgomery study, participants who did eight rounds of all-out jump squats—20 seconds of hard work, separated by 10 seconds of rest—burned 13.4 calories per minute and doubled their post-exercise metabolic rate for at least 30 minutes.
10. Battle Ropes
In a recent College of New Jersey study comparing various workout styles, battle-rope exercises came in first in terms of total oxygen consumption and an average calorie burn of 10.3 calories per minute.
Watch Next
Run a Faster 5K with Run/Walk Intervals
Should Children Run Long?
It sounds downright crazy, but Gym Jones manager Rob MacDonald
6 Hacks For Carrying Essentials on the Run