Jen Murphy, Wall Street Journal

November 3, 2019

Former Cleveland Browns offensive lineman Joe Thomas fueled his NFL workouts with 10,000 calories a day. Now, he would need about five days to eat that much. After retiring in March 2018, Mr. Thomas radically overhauled his diet and exercise.

During his 11-year NFL career, the 10-time Pro Bowler tipped the scales at 325 pounds. “When you’re practicing three hours a day in pads and a helmet in the heat, your muscles need fuel,” he said. “I spent years training myself to turn off my stomach-brain connection. When my stomach said full, I’d still eat two more plates of food.”

More than a decade of hits took a toll on his body. The 6-foot-6-inch Mr. Thomas has had four knee surgeries since his days playing for the University of Wisconsin. Constant joint pain and inflammation made practice excruciating during his final pro years. “My last season I made it to three training camp workouts,” he said.

By chance, the Browns installed a 25-meter lap pool in their training facility in Berea, Ohio, in August 2016. Unable to run, Mr. Thomas turned to swimming to stay fit. “At first, I was like a submarine and sank straight to the bottom,” he recalled. “I spent just as much energy staying afloat as I did moving forward.”

By the start of the 2016 season in September, he was swimming 10 lengths of the pool daily. “That’s a warm-up for most swimmers, but I felt totally gassed,” he said. “It’s great cardio, and my body always felt better after I got out of the pool than before I got in.”

Swimming and yoga kept Mr. Thomas in the game until the 2017 season, when he tore his left triceps muscle and had season-ending surgery. Having played more than 10,000 snaps with the Browns, he said his body, particularly his knee, was done.

Now an analyst with the NFL Network’s “Thursday Night Football,” the 34-year-old Mr. Thomas is almost unrecognizable from his playing days. Having dropped more than 50 pounds, he now has the svelte physique of a quarterback. “I had to re-teach myself to be a normal human again,” he joked. “The first 25 pounds fell off in a month, but the rest I’ve worked hard for by swimming and really watching what I eat. My goal is to weigh 245 pounds by Thanksgiving.”

 

The Workout

Last summer, Mr. Thomas moved his family to Madison, Wis., and began swimming with his brother-in-law, an avid triathlete, in a high school pool. He hired a coach to improve his technique. Mr. Thomas primarily swims freestyle because wear and tear on his shoulders over the years makes other strokes difficult. A typical workout lasts 20 minutes and he tries to make it to the pool two to three times a week. “I love that swimming is something I can do late into life,” he said. “If I jogged or did CrossFit, I’d have pain and swelling for days after. That’s not what I need. Swimming is good for my heart and my joints.”

Much to the amusement of his wife, Annie Thomas, he also has become a dedicated yogi. “My third year in the NFL, Eric Mangini [then the Browns coach] made it mandatory for players to do yoga in the offseason,” he said. “It was really hard. After a year doing it with just the guys I got enough courage and confidence to do it with real yogis and not be humiliated.” He prefers hot vinyasa or power yoga. “The heat lubes up my joints and makes it easier for me to get into the poses,” he says. He practices twice a week at a studio in Madison and once a week on the road, either at a studio or in his hotel room.

He recently bought a road bike and plans to train on his Peloton bike through the winter. He still lifts weights but focuses on higher reps rather than a heavier load.

The Diet

“Unless you’re doing an Ironman every day, diet is 90% of the secret to weight loss,” he said. Mr. Thomas said pounds starting falling off when he cut back on carbs and moved his first meal of the day to noon and dinner to 6 p.m. “When I was playing, I’d be hangry if I went two hours without a meal,” he said. “But once I started cutting out carbs I wasn’t as hungry.”

Dinner, his biggest meal of the day, might be six to eight ounces of pork tenderloin with sauteed squash, asparagus or broccoli. He turns the leftovers into a salad for lunch, topping it with jalapeños and olive oil. He makes his own low-carb pizza but says it doesn’t compare to full-carb, New York-style pizza. “I occasionally fall off the wagon on holidays or with friends and have pizza and beer,” he said. “You want to still enjoy food.” A pint of ice cream used to be a typical bedtime snack, but he now considers a scoop a splurge.

 

 

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