Archive for July, 2010

20 for 20 in 20

Monday, July 12th, 2010

jumpropeLet’s face it, you stink at double unders.  In an attempt to get Sweat Shop members to improve their double under skills, and simultaneously offer my own contribution to the economic stimulus plan, I’m offering the 20 for 20 in 20.  For those that can currently only do 5 consecutive double unders or less, I’m offering $20 cash if they can improve to 20 consecutive double unders in a matter of 20 days!  I even have some extra jump ropes at the gym that I’ll allow you to take home during the 20 day challenge.  The 20 day challenge ends on August 2nd, so you HAVE to demonstrate your 20 consecutive double unders no later than that Monday.  Good luck!

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Saturday’s WOD:

9:00 AM Class

3 Rounds
200m Run
then 3 cycles of:
6 Pullups
9 Pushups
12 KB Swings

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10:00am Class

A.) Squat Cleans
3-3-3-3-3

B.) 4 Rounds
12 Ring Dips
200m Run
1 Rope Climb

results:

Featured Athlete: Mike Banks

Saturday, July 10th, 2010

mike_bMike on the Lyon St. stairs last year.

Mike is honestly one of the most inspirational members for me at CrossFit Sweat Shop.  Four days a week he is in the gym giving it his all!  Best of all, regardless of how it may affect his finishing time, he always holds himself to the highest range of motion standards during any and all workouts.  Keeping a truly diversified fitness program, he even leads a couple of the other 6am’ers through a workout at a local track or park on the mornings they’re not at the Sweat Shop!  Mike, and his wife Lones, have also been like a second set of parents for me when I first moved out to California, having me over for dinner on Thanksgiving and Christmas.  Quiet and focused, Mike, not Lones  ;) is every teacher’s dream!  Mike will also be competing in the Firefighter Olympics next week!  Wish him good luck.

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Name: Mike Banks

Age: 57

How long have you been doing CrossFit? A little over a year, since March 2009.

How did you get into CrossFit?  I first learned about CrossFit from my two sons, Brandon and Connor. Nabil and I watched them compete in the 2007 CrossFit Games. Having trained with Nabil for several years at Velocity Sports Performance, it was natural for me to join him when he opened his own CrossFit Affiliate.

What has been the most significant benefit/change since you’ve been doing CrossFit? Although it is still a work in progress, my lower body strength has improved a great deal.

What is your favorite exercise?  Any type of overhead press.

What is your least favorite exercise?  Wall Balls.

What is your favorite healthy meal?  Chuck roast with plenty of vegetables, slow cooked in a crock pot.

What is your favorite cheat meal/snack:  Dark chocolate.

What do you enjoy most about training at CrossFit Sweat Shop?  I enjoy a number of things:

Our trainer, Nabil

The always challenging workouts.

Strength days with a workout A and a workout B.

The members of CrossFit Sweat Shop – we’re all a little bit crazy;

My comrades in the 6:00 am class on M-W-F.

Working out with my wife Lones.

Now that you’ve been doing Crossfit, what’s one thing you could never see yourself doing again? Gratefully, I will never have to step foot in another 24hr fitness again.

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Thursdays WOD:

3 Rounds

12 Summo Deadlift High Pull
12 Thrusters
403m Run

results:

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Friday’s WOD:

A.) Clean & Jerk

B.) As many rounds as possible in 12 minutes:

10 Box Jumps
7 Clean & Jerks
5 Burpees

results:

Jin’s first muscle up

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

Jin got his first muscle up this morning, nice work!

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Wednesday’s WOD:

A.) 20 Minutes to work up to Overhead Squat 9 Rep Max

B.) 1 Minute of each exercise, followed by 1 minute of rest between each exercise.  Repeat for two total rounds:
Wall Balls
Knees to Elbow
Burpees

results:

Hand Taping Method

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

Lots of you are doing more and more kipping pullups.  Even 75 in a single workout! ;)   Tears in the hands are more or less inevitable.  Keeping callouses in your hands shaved down will reduce the chance of tearing, but there is still the possibility of tears.  This video will show you a quick way to tape your hands in the event that you have tears on your hand yet you still want to do exercises that require a firm grip.

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Tuesday’s WOD:

4 Rounds

Max Reps Bench Press
Max Reps Front Squats
Max Reps Pullups

*1 minute of each exercise
*continous running clock
*REST for 3 minutes after completing all 3 exercises
*Rx’d weight: Men 100% body weight, Women 65% body weight

results:

Coffee

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

 coffee1

15 Things Worth Knowing About Coffee

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Monday’s WOD:

806m Run
15 KB Swings
35 Wall Balls

403m Run
25 KB Swings
25 Wall Balls

200m Run
35 KB Swings
15 Wall Balls

results:

11 Tips for CrossFit Athletes

Monday, July 5th, 2010

 kid_squatCourtsey CrossFit.com

11 Tips for CrossFit Athletes-
Brought to you by Jon from Potomac CrossFit: 

1. Breakfast is everything. If I can convince you to eat meat and eggs for breakfast, the other meals are usually OK. If you negotiate with me about having probiotic yogurt instead of meat and eggs, we’re in trouble

2. I can get someone 70% of the way there in the Olympic lifts in about 3 hours. At that point, the limiting factor for men is usually shoulder and hip mobility. For women, its front squat and overhead squat strength out of the bottom.

3. If you aren’t a total idiot with what you eat, you should set a PR pretty much every time you step in the gym for the first 2 years.

4. The shorter the workout, the longer the warmup should be. You need to warmup for 35 minutes for Fran. You need to warmup for 5 minutes for Murph.

5. Unweighed unmeasured Paleo eating works best if you’ve done “The Zone” first. Your Zone experience will give you a ballpark idea of how much you should be eating. If you don’t come from a “Zone” background, you’ll likely do things like sit down and eat 85 Macadamia nuts and wonder why you aren’t losing any weight.

6. As you get better, you need to take a back off week about every fourth week (not because of injury). You can still come in and workout, but take some more rest days and just chill out.

7. You don’t need to learn to butterfly kip. Seriously, stop it. You are going to hurt yourself and you’d be much better off working toward a bodyweight press.

8. Dumbbells are the most under appreciated piece of equipment in the gym.

9. Prior runners do not need supplementary running to improve their run times. People without a running background do. I think this mostly has to do with learning to pace correctly.

10. You can’t just train weaknesses. It’s too depressing. Every now and then, pick something you are amazing at and crush it.

11. You can get away with a lot of inefficiencies if you’ve got a strong grip. Do more farmers’ carries.

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Friday’s WOD:

5 Rounds

3 1/2 minutes to complete:
250m Row
15 Overhead Squats
Double Unders for REPS

REST 90 seconds between rounds

results:

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Saturday’s WOD:

A.) Deadlift
3-3-3-3-3
with pause between each rep

B.) 500m Row
40 Squats
30 Situps
20 Pushups
10 Pullups
403m Run

results:

Benefits of the Barbell

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

ohsI’ve recently begun reading Starting Strength: Basic Barbell Training by Mark Rippetoe & Lon Kilgore.  The introduction not only gives an excellent summary to how the invention of Nautilis equipment in the 1970′s has continued to shape how most people view fitness, but also why free weight training is a far superior method of training. 

Among the first tools developed to practice resistance exercise was the barbell, a long metal shaft with some type of weight on each end.  The earliest barbells used globes or spheres for weight, which could be adjusted for balance and load by filling them with sand or shot.  David Willoughby’s superb book, The Super Athletes details the history of weightlifting and the equipment that made it possible.  But in a development unforeseen by Mr. Willoughby, things changed rapidly in the mid-1970′s.  A gentleman named Arthur Jones invented a type of exercise equipment that revolutionized resistance exercise.  Unfortunately, not all revolutions are universally productive.  Nautilus utilized the “principle of variable resistance”, which claimed to take advantage of the fact that different parts of the range of motion of each limb were stronger than others.  A machine was designed for each limb or body part, and a cam was incorporated into the chain attached to the weight stack that varied the resistance against the joint during the movement.  the machines were designed to be used in a specific order, one after another without a pause between sets, since different body parts were being worked consecutively.  And the central idea (from a commercial standpoint) was that if enough machines – each working a separate body part – were added together in a circuit, the entire body was being trained.  the machines were exceptionally well made and handsome, and soon most gyms had the obligatory, very expensive, 12-station Nautilus circuit.

Jones even went so far as to claim that strength could be gained on Nautilus and transferred to complicated movement patterns like the Olympic lifts without having to do the lifts with heavy weights, a thing which flies in the face of exercise theory and practical experience.  but the momentum had been established and Nautilus became a huge commercial success.  Equipment like it remains the modern standard in commercial exercise facilities all over the world.

The primary reason for this was that Nautilus equipment allowed the health club (at the time known as the “health spa”) industry to offer to the general public a thing which had been previously unavailable.  Prior to the invention of Nautilus, if a member wanted to train hard, in a more elaborate way than Universal equipment permitted, he had to learn how to use barbells.  Someone had to teach him this.  Moreover, someone had to teach the health spa staff how to teach him this.  Such professional education was, and still is, time consuming and not widely available.  But with Nautilus equipment, a minimum-wage employee could be taught ery quickly how to use the whole circuit, ostensibly providing a total-body workout with little invested in employee education.  Furthermore, the entire circuit could be performed in about 30 minutes, thus decreasing member time on the exercise floor, increasing traffic capacity in the club, and maximizing sales exposure to more traffic.  Nautilus equipment quite literally made the existence of the modern health club possible.

The problem, of course, is that machine-base training did not work as it was advertised. 

The reason that isolated body-part training on machines doesn’t work is the same reason that barbells work so well, better than any other tools we can use to gain strength.  The human body functions as a complete system – it works that way, and it likes to be trained that way.  It doesn’t like to be separated into its constituent components and then have those components exercised separately, since the strength obtained from training will not be utilized in this way.  The general pattern of strength acquisition must be the same as that in which the strength will be used.  The nervous system controls the muscles, and the relationship between them is referred to as “neuromuscular.”  When strength is acquired in ways that do not correspond to the patterns in which it is intended to actually be used, the neuromuscular aspects of training have not been considered.  Neuromuscular specificity is an unfortunate reality, and exercise programs must respect this principle the same way they respect the Law of Gravity.

Barbells, and the primary exercises we use them to do, are far superior to any other training tools that have ever been devised.  Properly performed, full range of motion barbell exercises are essentially the functional expression of human skeletal and muscular anatomy under a load.  the exercise is controlled by and the result of each trainee’s particular movement patterns, minutely fine-tuned by each individual limb length, muscular attachment position, strength level, flexibility, and neuromuscular efficiency.  Balance between all the muscles involved in a movement is inherent in the exercise, since all the muscles involved contribute their anatomically-determined share of hte work.  Muscles move the joints between the bones which transfer force to the load, and the way this is done is a function of the design of the system – when that system is used in the manner of it design, it functions optimally, and training should follow this design.  Barbells allow weight to be moved in exactly the way the body is designed to move it, since every aspect of the movement is determined by the body.

Machines, on the other hand, force the body to move the weight according to the design of the machine.  this places some rather serious limitations on the ability of the exercise to meet the specific needs of the athlete.  For instance, there is no way for a human being to utilized the quadriceps muscles in isolation from the hamstrings in any movement pattern that exists independent of a machine designed for this purpose.  No natural movement can be performed that does this.  Quadricpes and hamstrings always function together, at the same time, to balance the forces on either side of the knee.  Since they always work together, why should they be exercised separately?  Because somebody invented a machine that lets us?

Even machines that allow multiple joints to be worked at the same time are less than optimal, since the pattern of the movement through space is determined by the machine, not the individual biomechanics of the human using it.  Barbells permit the minute adjustments during the movement that allow individual anthropometry to be expressed.

Furthermore, barbells require the individual to make these adjustments, and any other ones that might be necessary to retain control over the movement of the weight.  this aspect of exercise cannot be overstated – the control of the bar, and the balance and coordination demanded of the trainee, are unique to barbell exercise and completely absent in machine-based training.  Since every aspect of the movement of the load is controlled by the trainee, every aspect of that movement is being trained.

There are other benefits as well.  All the exercises described in this book involve varying degrees of skeletal loading.  After all, the bones are way ultimately support the weight on the bar.  Bone is living, stress-responsive tissue, just like muscle, ligament, tendon, skin, nerve, and brain.  It adapts to stress just like any other tissue, and becomes denser and harder in respnse to heavier weight.  this aspect of barbell training is very important to older trainees and women, whose body density is a major factor in continued health.

Post thoughts to comments.

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Holiday Schedule:

Saturday:
9am Class
10am 5K Run (free and open to all levels)

Monday:
8am class
9am class

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Legitness of the Week

Liz 130×1 Clean (PR)
Liz 110×3 Thruster (PR)
Tammy 110×2 Thruster (PR)
Vanessa 120×1 Thruster (PR)
Nathan 175×1 Thruster (PR)
Chris G. 175×2 Thruster (PR)
Josh 185×3 Thruster (PR)
Mike S. 130×3 Thruster (PR)
Valerie 60×3 Thruster (PR)
Nik 185×2 Thruster (PR)
Jin 175×1 Clean (PR)
Jin 140×1 Thruster (PR)
Alex 315×1 Overhead Squat (Sweat Shop Record)
Aaron 225×2 Overhead Squat (PR)
Jessica 6 consecuetive unassisted pullups (Goal Achieved!)
Alexa 95×1 Clean (PR)
Don B. 215×1 Thruster (PR)
Helen 120×2 Thruster (PR)

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Thursday’s WOD:

A.) Thruster
3-3-3-3-3

B.) Alternating Tabata
Ring Dips
Box Jumps

results:

Water

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

img_6186Lululemon aluminum water bottle, perfect for transporting your filtered water

Nathan, co-owner of CrossFit Adventure in Concord, recently posted about tap and bottled water.  Check out the excerpt below which I learned something from, and click on the full post to also view the video.  And I can’t say for certain if it’s the water or not, but Nathan has been demonstrating some pretty impressive gains in the gym lately!

For drinking water, I fill up my 5 gallon container with Reverse Osmosis water from Whole Foods’ filter. Do not get the DI (deionized) water. DI water is void of anything but water (no minerals at all). The body has adapted to water that contains minerals and drinking DI water may through off the balance.

Read full post here.

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Wednesday’s WOD:

A.) 75 Pullups
*perform 4 Burpees every minute on the minute

B.) 30 KB Swings
403m Run
20 KB Swings
200m Run

results:

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