Angela Cullen and Lewis Hamilton shed light on fitness routines of top drivers

How do racing drivers physically prepare?

Angela Cullen and Lewis Hamilton
Angela Cullen and Lewis Hamilton

The myth that racing drivers have it easy because they are satꦓ in a cockpit hasꦦ long been busted as cars have become so physically demanding over the years.

Top-flight racers, like Formula 1 drivers for example, are some ofꦗ the most physically in-tune athletes on the planet.

Due to ܫthe demands placed on their bodies, both physically and mentally, well-balanced trai🧔ning regimes are a must to be successful.

Angela Cullen, who previously acted as seven-timeﷺ F1 world champion Lewis Hamilton’s personal trainer and now works with Marcus Armstrong in IndyCar, revealed some details on the fitness programmes drivers have during the year.

“They’re training is pretty stable throughout the season,” she told IndyCar’s official YouTube ch👍annel in a recent video.

“You know the demands of the heavy races, so that’s what you’re training goals are. But training fits in around busy schedules, they normally🍌 train twice a day.

💜“I know he [Armstrong] does an hour cardiovascular and then he does a weight session. Some days he may do two weight sessions, generally doing four hours of training a day specifically for racing.”

The curren💦t F1 summer break may lead one to think drivers can take some time 🎃to rest from their normal routines.

But Cullen notes that the lack of racing simply allows drivers to focus on bigger training sessions than they normally 🗹would between events. 

“It’s kind of a reset, but that’s where they can get their big training sessions in because they’ve got time to recover,🐎” she added.

“So, rest, recovery, nutrition  are the three biggies. So they’re always balancing how much they need to sl💝eep, how much they need to train and always refuelling at the same time.

“Coming into race weekends they taper off a little bit, they rest a bit more to make sure they are full🍸y recovered so they’ve got the energy for the mental game as well as the physical game during a weekend. So it’s a really fine balance.”

Hamilton says adapting a trai𝕴ning regime, training-wise and nutritionally, is important as things such as time zones will have an impact on your body.

“You ꩲdefinitely adapt always, and you learn you have to just watch your energy,” he told Esquire.

“Recovery is huge, a really big part of the process. It’s the whole 360 thing. It’s not just going to the gym. It’s ho👍w much you stretch, how much physio you end up doing, what you eat. And that’s constantly changing week by week.

“And obviously, dep꧂ending on how much energy you haveཧ, the different time zones that you’re in.”

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