“…It seems that low volume, maximum and supramaximal HIIT/SIT [≥85% of VO 2max velocity (vVO 2max ) or peak power (W peak )] endurance training, during CT, did not result in decrements of strength, power and muscle hypertrophy adaptations, and in many cases they induce greater resistance training adaptations, while significantly increasing endurance capacity and performance, compared with high-volume low-moderate intensity endurance training [3,8,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,28,45,61,67,68,69,70,71,72,73,74,75,76,77,78]. In addition, as described above, at the molecular level it seems that when cycling is used, compared with running, there are even lower or no negative results on resistance exercise-induced adaptations, especially on strength and power performances [8,18,28,72,73,79,80,81], indicating that cycling is superior to running [82]. Thus, according to the existing literature, inclusion of high intensity (maximal or supramaximal; ≥100% of vVO 2max or W peak ), low-volume (<20 min) HIIT and SIT endurance training seems to minimize the negative CTE, especially when cycling is preferred instead of running.…”