You're correct that most forms of vigorous cardio burn more calories during the actual workout than weight training. Running for an hour will usually burn more calories than lifting for an hour; aerobics vs anaerobics. You constantly do cardio whereas weight lifting, there's the resting factor. Higher average HBPM compared to its counterpart, I get it, but again my point was about what happens afterward. Weight training creates muscle damage, glycogen depletion, which demands protein synthesis, and recovery costs that continue after the workout ends.
So if two workouts both burn 500 calories during the session, the lifting workout will usually have a larger post exercise energy cost. Pretty much what
@5byfive said below.
Back to Wild Weasel;
So, again, between cardio and weight lifting, the latter wins.
🤣
You're well versed in this literature so you already know that the more muscle our bodies contain, the more energy is consumed - TDEE compared to fat. Here's another fantastic example, set by me
😎, for ya; if we're to do absolutely nothing all day and one guy is 200lbs with 10% body fat and the other guy is 200lbs with 30% body fat, the one with the lesser body fat will lose more calories simply because he has more muscle.
Doing cardio has its benefits, but compared to weight lifting? Again, the latter wins.
Fight me.
🥷