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Terry Crews
Getty Images; Amazon; MH Illustration

After Giving Up Running Due to Knee Pain, This Is What Terry Crews Uses for Cardio

And other gear Terry Crews can’t live without.

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TERRY CREWS TURNS 58 at the end of July, but the former Men’s Health cover star isn’t slowing down in the least. Crews, who’s hosted America’s Got Talent for nearly a decade, is doing voice work in the PAW Patrol movie later this year, and he just started hosting 100 Cooks, a new competition show for chefs. (Oh, and his likeness recently landed in the video game Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 in June.)

Despite all that, Crews remains as muscular as ever, skillfully balancing a rigorous gym schedule with his crazy workload—and plenty of dad time with his five children. How does he get it done? As he detailed in our Strong Talk podcast last year, a nuanced approach to fitness helps. So does his go-to gear.

Even before Crews landed in Black Ops 7, he was a fan of the long-running shooter franchise as a way of getting quality time with his children. “We would play these games together,” he says. “To be a part of this, it’s a bonding experience for me and my son. It’s an honor.”

Crews says his favorite version of the franchise was Modern Warfare 2, which released four years ago. “Nostalgia is king at the moment,” says Crews. “I feel there’s a nostalgia for Call of Duty as well. I think it’s a new appreciation for the creativity and making these games.”

Read More: The Best Tech Gifts

Terry’s Key Cardio Gear

GMWD Stair Stepper

Stair Stepper
Terry’s Key Cardio Gear

GMWD Stair Stepper

Crews used to love running, and a few years ago, he’d regularly set his treadmill to eight miles-per-hour then crank out a four-mile run. But as he’s gotten older, he says, his knees and hips have started to ache if he runs too often.

The fix: A stairmaster, like this badass from GMWD It’s enough to rev Crews’ heart rate, sans the joint impact that comes with running. “Now I’ll do 45 to 50 minutes on the stairmaster,” he says. “You get all the cardio benefits the same way.”

Read More: The Best Stair Climbers

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Not that Terry’s completely given up running. He picks his spots now, partly because he knows he needs to keep his cardio up. When he does run, he turns to his AlterG Anti-Gravity Treadmill.

Yes, this bad boy is pricey—partly because of how it changes the running experience, tweaking the air pressure in its bubble casing to essentially make your body lighter. “It literally lets you run lighter,” Crews says, “and that’s what I love about it. I can take 40, 50 pounds off (my bodyweight) and still run, which is one thing I love to do.”

Like plenty of ultra-fit guys, Crews loves to track his metrics, especially when he’s on set. And when he is filming, he usually burns a ton of calories, he says. “What’s so crazy, I found, in a day, I burn 7,000 calories,” he says. “It blew my mind.”

Whoop’s latest band offers a low-profile way to keep up that tracking. And Crews can’t help loving that, especially when he thinks back to how little data he had at the start of his career. “I’m from an era where we didn’t have a lot of monitors,” he says.

Problem solved.

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Crews definitely does a lot of calorie-burning cardio, but he still gets after it in the weight room, too. And his tool of choice remains the classic barbell—even if he does admit that he uses it differently than he did a decade ago. His days of maxxing out are done, he says, in favor of (slightly) lighter weights done for (slightly) higher reps. “I could probably try that 600-pound deadlift,” he says. “But why? I have to think about the reasoning. Instead of doing 600 pounds, I would do 400 pounds three times.”

It’s enough to still elicit a strong training stimulus—without completely battering Crews’ body. And it starts with a foundational barbell, like Titan Fitness’ Performance Series Power Bar.

Terry’s Ultimate Squat Hack

Bells of Steel Belt Squat Machine 2.0

Belt Squat Machine 2.0

Yes, when Crews played in the NFL, classic back squats were king. But these days, the classic barbell move isn’t a requirement for Crews. And heck, when Crews catches up with NFL players, he says, they don’t rely on it either. “I hosted the Pro Bowl games,” he says. “They don’t do squats. They do... what is it: the belt squat. And these guys are the best athletes that ever existed.”

A machine like the Bells of Steel Belt Squat allows Crews to seriously challenge his quads without battering his lower back—a perfect lower-body training combination.

Headshot of Ebenezer Samuel,  C.S.C.S.

Ebenezer Samuel, C.S.C.S., is the fitness director of Men's Health and a certified trainer with more than 10 years of training experience. He's logged training time with NFL athletes and track athletes and his current training regimen includes weight training, HIIT conditioning, and yoga. Before joining Men's Health, he served as a sports columnist and tech columnist for the New York Daily News.  

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