Tonight, write your daily protein target: bodyweight in pounds × 0.9 grams. If you're in a cut, hit it every day or strength leaves before fat does.
Cutting doesn't wreck your lifts. Bigger surpluses don't grow you faster. The strongest data is clear on both.
HIGH CONVICTIONTonight, write your daily protein target: bodyweight in pounds × 0.9 grams. Hit it tomorrow.
In a cut, this is the single rule that decides whether strength holds or leaves. Below this floor, strength loss accelerates fast.
Takes 30 seconds. No equipment needed.
The Verdict
Cutting calories does not wreck your lifts. A bigger bulk does not grow you faster.
Think of strength like a skill and muscle like a savings account. Skill stays sharp as long as you keep practicing, even if you stop putting money in the account. The bank account only grows when you deposit more than you withdraw, but the savings rate caps fast. A bigger paycheck doesn't deposit more if the bank already maxed out your daily limit.
Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling
The headline pattern — deficit blunts hypertrophy but preserves strength when protein and training are adequate; small surplus matches large surplus for build-phase strength gains; large surplus adds fat without adding strength — sits on multi-RCT meta-analytic evidence with consistent direction across cohorts.
An independent, blinded RCT of ≥80 already-trained adults (≥3 years RT, <15% BF male / <22% BF female), 12+ weeks at sustained −500 kcal/day with 2.0–2.4 g/kg protein and supervised RT volume, showing >5% mean strength loss versus an isocaloric-maintenance control. Two such trials would force a downgrade from HIGH to MODERATE. Currently none show that pattern.
An independent blinded RT trial of ≥60 trained men running 12+ weeks at +200 kcal/d versus +500 kcal/d (matched protein, matched volume) showing >25% greater lean-mass or strength gains in the larger-surplus arm. One such trial would force a downgrade.
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