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Bodybuilding
Success Blueprint: Gustavo Badell Profile, Take
That!
By: David Young
If you were going to hand out a trophy for the
Most Improved Bodybuilder of 2004, it would
have to go to Gustavo Badell. A few years ago
I was having lunch with friends who were also
IFBB pro bodybuilders, and Gustavo's name came
up. The guy has a great physique, I said. He
just needs to get his conditioning down and
work on bringing up a few lagging bodyparts.
'No, David,' one man argued, 'the guy will never
be a top contender. He placed 13th at the IRON
MAN Pro and 24th at the Olympia.' I kept quiet,
but I knew I was right.
Well,
guys, I hate to say I told you so. Actually,
that's not true. I don't mind saying it at all.
I told you Gustavo had the stuff. With the help
of Milos Sarcev and a nice sponsorship contract
with MuscleTech, Gustavo turned his entire bodybuilding
career around and thumbed his nose at the skeptics.
I've always said that you should never judge
bodybuilders by their past showings. A person
can look the same for years and then make some
changes in diet, training and/or attitude, and
presto. He or she is like a whole different
person.
By
now everyone with access to the Internet knows
that Gustavo placed third at the '04 IRON MAN
Pro, where he qualified for the Olympia, but
the fierce competitor didn't stop there. He
placed seventh at the Arnold and an amazing
third at the Olympia, beating some of the hugest
names in the sport.
He's
had his pictures in every magazine and on many
Web sites, including IRON MAN's graphicmuscle.com
and flexonline.com, and he's been discussed
on some of the biggest bulletin boards, including
getbig.com, musclemayhem.com, ironage.us and
bodybuilding.com.
With
all he's accomplished, Gustavo\'s most impressive
quality is that he absolutely loves life. He
loves his family and loves training and competing.
It's wonderful to see that kind of enthusiasm
in a pro these days. Many lose the hunger after
earning their cards. Not Gustavo. You can feel
it when he speaks.
DY:
Where were you born, and where do you live now?
GB:
I was born on November 3, 1972, in Venezuela.
Now I live in Carolina, Puerto Rico, with my
wife, Jessica, and our two children, Gustavo
Jr., 11, and Barbie Ann, two. They are my biggest
fans!
DY:
What are your height and weight, and how long
have you been training and competing?
GB:
I'm 5'8' tall. My competition weight is 236
pounds, and my off-season weight is 255 to 260.
I began training when I was 18 years old. My
first competition was the 1990 Junior Caribbean
Championships, which I won.
DY:
So you've been training for nearly 15 years?
GB:
And loving it!
DY:
How did you get started in bodybuilding?
GB:
When I was young, I always liked contact sports
like boxing and kickboxing. When I was 16 or
17, I started amateur boxing, but I was skinny.
My trainer told me to start lifting to put on
weight and build up my arms because you get
hit on the arms a lot, and it helps if they're
bigger.
I
started training and, as it would turn out,
I have good genetics for bodybuilding. My arms
started growing like crazy, and all I was doing
were chinups, pushups and dips. People started
asking me if I was training for bodybuilding,
but I said, 'No, I'm just boxing.' They would
say, 'Wow! Your arms are huge for your body!'
So then I started lifting weights, and I bought
some books and magazines to learn about training
and dieting. I began to really like it, and
after six months I entered and won my first
show. Now I love it. I'm so happy to be a bodybuilder!
DY:
Besides being a pro bodybuilder, what do you
do for a living?
GB:
I'm a personal trainer in Puerto Rico. Most
of my clients are top-level business executives
and bankers and lawyers.
DY:
Do you participate in other sports?
GB:
I like aquatic sports like snorkeling, and I
go shrimping sometimes.
DY:
What motivates you to train and diet?
GB:
Well, I love bodybuilding, and I love training,
so diet is part of my life. In the past I really
didn't know the proper way to diet for competitions,
but I've always been very disciplined with my
diet because I want to do well. I'm very motivated'very
motivated! I never complain about my diet. My
wife is supportive, and that helps. Milos Sarcev
has been great at giving me the knowledge about
training and diet that I needed. Milos is so
knowledgeable, and he's become a good friend.
I'm
motivated by being better at every competition.
I love bodybuilding and want to do it all my
life. The only time when I'm going to stop is
when I die. I love the sport. Seriously!
DY: Your passion and enthusiasm really come
through, and they're contagious. How does your
diet vary from off-season to precontest?
GB:
In the off-season I eat more complex carbohydrates
like potatoes, rice and oatmeal. I also eat
more red meat. Before a contest I restrict carbohydrates
and eat more chicken and fish. It's all part
of the plan to improve every time I compete.
DY:
Do you have a cheat day?
GB:
No, never in contest season. I'm very disciplined.
No one has to push me. I want it badly.
DY:
Tell me about something you've done that you're
proud of.
GB:
My nephew, Charlie, has Down's syndrome. I wanted
to take him to the gym and show him how to train.
Everyone at the gym said, 'Why are you even
trying?' They didn't think he could do anything.
Sometimes
I couldn't communicate with him with words,
but I'd show him how to do things by example:
breathing, form, contracting up and down. Then
he started to like it, and he's gotten really
good at it. He uses great form and everything.
It makes me feel so good to see how happy it
makes him! I love him very much, and he's my
number-one fan'he has all the magazines I've
ever been in.
DY:
Do you have any role models?
GB:
Shawn Ray was the guy I most wanted to be like.
He's not too big, but he's not too small. He's
just perfect. Plus, I like his attitude. He
would always smile, he's well-spoken, and he
was also a great poser. So when I first started
bodybuilding, I said to myself, I want to be
like him.
Now
my role model is Milos Sarcev. He's my trainer
and my friend. He's like a big brother to me,
and he's taught me so much, not just about training
and dieting but also how to enjoy bodybuilding
no matter what the result of a contest. I'm
just so happy to be competing and doing what
I love, and he's the same way. He's a real inspiration
to me, and I feel fortunate to know him and
his family.
DY:
What are your goals?
GB:
I want to be the best bodybuilder I can be'not
to win contests, but for me. It would be great
to be Mr. Olympia, but I can't say, 'I'm going
to win,' or 'I'm going to be in the top five.'
You never know what the judges think. I want
to show everyone how good I can be, and I want
to always get better. I don't want to get bigger,
just always better.
DY:
How many weeks out do you start your preparation?
GB:
I start at 12 to 18 weeks, but I'm already eating
clean and staying lean at that point.
DY:
What do you do for cardio?
GB:
Cardio is 30 minutes in the morning first thing,
working up to 45 minutes, and another session
at night.
DY:
What supplements do you use?
GB:
Muscletech Meso-Tech shake. Muscletech Cell
Tech and the Hydroxycut before each cardio session.
DY:
Can you describe a typical day of contest dieting?
GB:
Okay.
Meal
1
2 cups oatmeal
15 egg whites
Water
Meal
2
Muscletech Meso-Tech shake
4 weeks before a contest switch to
2 chicken breasts
Steamed broccoli
Meal
3
White fish
Baked potato
Steamed broccoli
Meal
4
Muscletech Meso-Tech shake
4 weeks before a contest switch to
2 chicken breasts
Steamed asparagus
Meal
5
Steak
Baked potato
Steamed broccoli
Before evening cardio
Muscletech Hydroxycut
Meal
6
Muscletech Meso-Tech shake with Crystal Light
4 weeks before a contest switch to
White fish
Steamed broccoli
Meal
7
15 egg white whites
Steamed broccoli
DY: How do you overcome plateaus?
GB:
First, I just take a break for a week or two.
Then I come back and change it up a little.
Do that, and eventually, you'll start growing
again.
DY:
What's your training philosophy?
GB:
I listen to my body. I thrive on high-volume
workouts.
DY:
Can you outline your training routine?
GB:
Sure, I train each bodypart one time a week
all year, even before a contest. Most exercises
get four sets, and I like high repetitions'in
the 12 to 15 range'with heavy weight.
Monday:
Chest, biceps and abs
Incline presses
Bench presses
Machine vertical bench presses
Flyes
Dumbbell curls
Standing barbell curls
Preacher curls
One-arm cable curls
Standing cable curls
Reverse curls
Wrist curls
Various ab exercises
Tuesday:
Back, triceps and abs
Chins
Pulldowns
Barbell rows
Dumbbell rows
Lying extensions
Dips
Pushdowns
Various ab exercises
Wednesday:
Shoulders and abs
Dumbbell presses
Hammer Strength machine presses
Dumbbell laterals
Upright rows
Rear-delt machine
Dumbbell bent-over laterals
Shrugs
Various ab exercises
Thursday:
Quads and hamstrings
Front squats
Squats
Hack squats
Leg presses
Lunges
Leg extensions
Leg curls
Deadlifts
Friday:
Calves and abs
Smith-machine standing calf raises
Standing calf machine
Seated calf raises
I
work abs four times a week in contest season,
usually supersetting these exercises:
Crunches
Cable crunches
Leg raises
Cable serratus pulls
DY:
What are some of the challenges you've faced
as a pro bodybuilder?
GB:
Being noticed and judged all the time. When
you're a baseball player, unless you're really
famous, nobody notices you. You don't stand
out. As a bodybuilder you are so much bigger
than everyone that you stand out. Wherever you
go'to the bank or to the supermarket'people
notice you. Some people tell you how good you
look, but others start talking about steroids.
It
bothered me when my son came home from school
and said, 'Papa, a bunch of boys from school
said the only reason you got big is because
of steroids.' So I said to him, 'Well, what
do you think?' And he said, 'You eat six or
seven times a day, and you train so hard every
day and you take a lot of protein.' It bothers
me when people tell my son that they don't respect
what his father does. They respect baseball
players, but bodybuilding is harder than baseball.
Baseball is about having a talent and playing
a game. But with bodybuilding you have to train
and diet and get enough sleep and take supplements
and do cardio. Bodybuilding is not just a sport'it's
a lifestyle. You have to live it all the time.
DY:
Name something you love about bodybuilding.
GB:
The people you meet as a bodybuilder and the
respect bodybuilders have for each other. Everyone
is so supportive within the community; it's
a great feeling.
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