Thanks Kark

just thought i'd put it up after all the effort.
Ride on: I didn't do that section, but as far as i'm aware, the Tremblay study wasn't used to glorify HIIT (even though we are talking about lifesprints, a particular
type of HIIT; this is also why it is listed as a medical breakthrough, if you count 07 a new!), it was used to indicate the first study done on comparing HIIT with continuous. The results from that study don't really matter, the two in the "results" section do.
I couldn't read the entire article, could you prove to me it was fat loss not weight loss for the 0.1 kg? What methods did they use for this? By the way, you shouldn't always take
average group weight losses at face value all the time, maybe some lost 5 kg or even 10 kg, but because others didn't do so well (covered in part of the website) it makes the overal reduction look minimal.
So the Tremblay was cited more because of it's historical value, in that case you're incorrect, it is a good study to cite.