Monday, August 30, 2010

WOD Monday 31 August 2010

Can you do these? I'm not sure if I can, I'll give it a try and let you know tomorrow

5/3/1 Week two
Bench Press Set one, 3 reps at 70%
                               Set two, 3 reps at 80%
                               Set three, 3 reps (at least) at 90%
Dig in your heels and grind out as many reps as possible on the last set!


Conditioning
Row 500m
21 clapping push ups
Row 500m
15 clapping push ups
Row 500m
9 clapping push ups

All levels finish with 10 bridge wall walks. Walk your hands as far as possible down the wall towards a bridge. Do a bridge wall walk that lay on your back and do 10 bridges holding each bridge as high as possible for 3-5 seconds

Sunday, August 29, 2010

WOD Monday 30 August 2010

5/3/1week 2
Back Squat set one, 3 reps at 70%
                             set two, 3 reps at 80%
                             set three, 3 reps at least at 90%


Conditioning 
21/15/9 reps for time of
Advanced: Dumbbell jump squat, M40/F25lbs 
            Ring dips 

Intermediate: Dumbbell jump squat, M30/F15
                      Dips

Beginner: Dumbbell jump squat, M20/F8
                 Bench dips



Finish with handstand practice, 10 kick ups
 
 

Friday, August 27, 2010

WOD Saturday 28 Aug 2010

I want to make sure you are doing the calculation correctly for the 5/3/1. If you know what you one rep max is then subtract 10%. this is the number we will be taking our calculations from for the workouts.
So... if you squat 300,  90% of 300 is 270. Therefore I based my numbers off of 270lbs. So squat day of week one for me should look like
175 x 5 (65%)
205 x 5 (75%)
230 x 5 at least (85%)

If you don't know what your one rep max is here is a formula that will give a good estimate

Weight lifted x reps completed x 0.0333 + weigh lifted

Now for the workout


Play Day!!!

We've been working ourselves really hard for a while now so tomorrow should be a little bit easier.

Here are your options.....


1)Work on your gymnastic skills

2)Work on your Olympic lifting skills

3)Practice something you hate and are terrible at

4)Put all three together and make a terrible wod

Post what you did in the comments section

Thursday, August 26, 2010

WOD Friday 27 August 2010



Skill
Planche one minute total work

5/3/1 week one
Press set one, 5 reps at 65%
              set two, 5 reps at 75%
              set three, 5 reps + at 85%


Conditioning
10/9/8/7/6/5/4/3/2/1 reps of

Advanced: Kettlebell/Dumbbell swing. M70/F40
                  GHD sit up
                  Muscle up
Intermediate: Swing, M55/F30
                      GHD sit up
                      muscle up row
                      dip
Beginner: Swing, M35/F20
                 GHD Sit up
                 horizontal row
                 push up

All levels finish with 10 kick up to handstands

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

WOD Thursday 26 August 2010

Buddy Lee on the double under. If you do his method of three singles and then one double, while learning, you can count it as two reps until you can start to do double unders consecutively

Skill
Front lever one minute total work

 5/3/1week one
Deadlift set one, 5 reps at 65%
                    set two, 5 reps at 75%
                    set three, 5 reps (at least) at 85%


Conditioning 
3 rounds for time 
Advanced: 50 double unders
                  10 sumo deadlift high pull, M135/F95
                  30 pull ups

Intermediate: 40 double unders
                      10 sumo deadlift high pull, M95/F65
                      21 pull ups
Beginner: 25 double unders
                 10 sumo deadlift high pull, M65/F35
                 15 pull ups

If you can't do double unders you may sub with tuck jumps or do regular skips with a ratio of 4:1 (4 skips = 1 double under) but I seriously recommend learning the skill. It will only make you a more fit, more complete athlete  


Cool down with 10 bridge wall walks and a good stretch
   

Monday, August 23, 2010

WOD Tuesday 24 August 2010

Coach Rippetoe, doing what he does (scaring small children)

Skill
Hang power snatch, 5/5/5
All 5 rep must look identical and with good form before adding weight

5/3/1week one
Bench Press Set one, 5 reps at 65%
                              Set two, 5 reps at 75%
                              Set three, 5 reps or more at 85%
Same as with squat for your final set do at least 5 but keep going and rep out for as many as you can do. If you don't know what your max is for bench press, do something you know you can do for 5 but will be challenging. It's ok to estimate. In four weeks we will test all our maxes so next month you will know for sure what all our weights are.

You can find a max effort calculator HERE. So after set 3 just plug in the weight you used and how many reps done and it will give a pretty good estimation of your max. That way, by this weekend you should have a pretty good idea of what weights you will be using. 

Conditioning
Death by clean and jerk!
with a continuously running clock perform one clean and jerk on the first minute, two on the second minute, three on the third etc. Take as many sets as needed to complete your reps for that minute as long as they are done within that minute. The WOD ends when you can't complete all your clean and jerks within a given minute.
Advanced: M135/F85
Intermediate: M95/F65
Beginner: M65/F35

All levels finish off with 10 handstands. Use a wall if necessary.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

WOD Monday 23 August 2010

At caveman performance we squat deep


Strength/Skill
Front lever 3x5
Squat, Set 1, 5 reps at 65% one rep max
                Set 2, 5 reps at 75%
                Set 3, 5 reps (at least) at 85%
If you can keep going after five reps during set three then continue. Pump out as many reps as possible. There is essentially only one working set here so on that last set make sure you go to failure. If you don't know what your 1 rep max is then take your 5 rep max from a previous work out and divide by .85. It is a good idea to step back by about 10% because we will be following this program for a while so there is lots of time to bring out numbers up. Let's take a step back and stress perfect form so we can take 10 steps forward.

If you are so new that you have no idea what your 5, 3 and 1 rep maxes are that is not a problem at all. Start with a weight you know you can manage with perfect form. It's ok to underestimate a little bit. Be a little bit conservative. We are following a linear progression program so if you stick with it long enough you will get stronger and eventually will be setting new personal records regardless of where you start.

Conditioning
Complete as many rounds as possible in 7 minutes of:
Advanced/Intermediate, 5 handstand push ups (use piked if needed)
                                       10 sit ups
                                       20 Alternating jumping lunges
Beginner, 5 push ups
                7 sit ups
                10 alternating jump lunges

All levels finish with ten wall bridge walks.

Friday, August 20, 2010

WOD Saturday 21 August 2010

Shirts off Saturdays!

Let's see what Hero WOD are we going to do today...

In honor of Army Staff Sergeant Joshua Whitaker, 23, of Long Beach, CA who was killed in Afghanistan May 15th, 2007.
Joshie
3 rounds for time:

Advanced: M40/F25lb Dumbbell squat snatch, 21 reps Right arm
                   21 L-pull ups
                   M40/F25lb Dumbbell squat snatch, 21 reps left arm
                   21 L-pull ups

Intermediate: M30/F20lb Dumbbell squat snatch, 21 reps Right arm
                      15 tuck L-Pull ups
                     M30/F20lb Dumbbell snatch, 21 reps Left arm
                     15 Tuck L-Pull ups

Beginner: M20/F8lb Dumbbell snatch, 15 reps Right arm
                  10 Jumping pull up with L-Hang negative
                 M20/F8lb Dumbbell snatch, 15 reps Left Arm
                 10 Jumping Pull ups with L-Hang negative

*Beginners* Do your jumping pull ups and do an L-sit or tuck L-sit at the top and hold it while lowering yourself slowly back down under control.

Wendler's 5/3/1

Thank god for the internet making copyright laws pretty much obsolete. Here is an interview with Jim Wendler by T-Nation.com. Starting next week we are going to begin to follow Wendler's 531 progression for our strength work. Don't worry It is very simple. It involves using percentages of your 1 rep max so if you don't know what your 1rm is estimate and subtract about 10%. If you do know what your 1rm is, then subtract 10% anyway. We're going to start off conservatively here and pay close attention to form. So get your ego out of the way and watch your form.

So without further ado...

A Powerlifter's Progress

If you don't know who Jim Wendler is, you're probably not very strong.
Jim wendler in his powerlifting days
He's senior editor and sales manager for Elite Fitness Systems, and Elite founder Dave Tate's right-hand man. He cut his teeth in the strength game on the college gridiron, first as a player with the University of Arizona and later as a strength and conditioning coach with the University of Kentucky. Then came years under the bar at Westside Barbell, which overlapped with his affiliation with Tate at Elite.
To mere mortals, his powerlifting accomplishments in the 275-pound weight class seem inhuman: a 1,000-pound squat, 675-pound bench press, 700-pound deadlift, and a 2,375 total.
Wendler disagrees. "I wasn't strong at all," he says. "I could waddle up to the monolift and squat, but I couldn't do anything else. Really, all I could do was squat, bench, and deadlift."
Now happily retired from powerlifting at age 34, and 50 pounds lighter, he has different aspirations: "I want be able to do a bunch of different activities and still kick ass in the weight room. I want to be as mobile, flexible, strong, and in as good a condition as I possibly can. That's how I came up with 5/3/1."


Philosophy 531

If you're searching for the next great training breakthrough, one that will completely change the way you look at weight lifting, 5/3/1 probably isn't the program for you. On the contrary, Wendler describes the core philosophy behind 5/3/1 as "the basic tenets of strength training that have stood the test of time."
Basic multi-joint lifts: "The bench press, parallel squat, deadlift, and standing press have been the staples of any strong man's repertoire. Those who ignore these lifts are generally the people who suck at them. If you get good at those, you'll get good at other stuff, as they have such a huge carryover."
Starting light: While it may seem counterintuitive to take weight off the bar when the goal is to add weight to it, Wendler asserts that starting lighter allows you more room to progress forward. "This is a very hard pill to swallow for most lifters," he says. "They want to start heavy and they want to start now. This is nothing more than ego, and nothing will destroy a lifter faster, or for longer, than ego."
Progress slowly: This ties in with starting light, and keeps lifters who want to get big and strong yesterday from sabotaging their own progress. "People want a program that will add 40 pounds to their bench in eight weeks," Wendler explains. "When I ask how much their bench went up in the last year, they hang their heads in shame."
Break personal records: 5/3/1 is set up to allow you to break a variety of repetition records throughout the year. Notice that it's "rep records," and not "one-rep max." "Most people live and die by their one-rep max. To me, this is foolish and short sighted. If your squat goes from 225 x 6 to 225 x 9, you've gotten stronger."


5/3/1 by the Numbers

In 5/3/1, you're expected to train three or four days a week. Each workout is centered around one core lift — the aforementioned parallel squat, bench press, deadlift, and standing shoulder press.
Each training cycle lasts four weeks, with these set-rep goals for each major lift:
Week 1:
Week 2:
Week 3:
Week 4:
Then you start the next cycle, using heavier weights on the core lifts. And that's where a seemingly simple system starts getting complicated.
You aren't just picking a weight to lift five times or three times or one time per set. You're using a specific percentage of your one-rep max. And not your full 1RM. The calculations are based on 90% of it.
So if your 1RM in the bench press is 315 pounds, you use 285 (90%) as the base number for your training-weight calculations. Here's how it works:


Week 1

Week 2

Week 3

Week 4

Set 1

65% x 5

70% x 3

75% x 5

40% x 5

Set 2

75% x 5

80% x 3

85% x 3

50% x 5

Set 3

 85% x 5+

90% x 3+

95% x 1+

60% x 5
When you see 5+, 3+, or 1+, that means you do the max reps you can manage with that weight, with the goal of setting a rep record in each workout.
Let's walk through the Week 1 workout for bench press. Using the example above, if your 1RM is 315, you calculate all your percentages from 90% of that max, or 285 pounds.
So you're using 185 (65% of 285) x 5, 215 x 5, and 240 or 245 x 5 or more. (In his 5/3/1 ebook, available for $20 here, Wendler provides detailed lists of weights and percentages so you don't have to carry a calculator with you to the gym.
After you finish the first cycle, you add five pounds to your 1RM calculations for the two upper-body lifts and 10 pounds to your 1RM for the squat and deadlift.
To Wendler, these specific instructions for 1RM percentages and monthly progression are what set 5/3/1 apart from less useful systems. "When I see a program that says three sets of eight reps? That's the stupidest fucking thing ever. If it doesn't have a specific percentage based on a specific max, it's useless," he says. "That's the hallmark of someone who doesn't understand basic programming.
"With 5/3/1, you accomplish a goal every workout. Some programs have no fucking progression from one day to the other."
Another unique feature is that final balls-out set in each workout. You don't have to go beyond the prescribed reps if you don't feel like it, but Wendler says there are real benefits to doing so.
"I've always thought of doing the prescribed reps as simply testing your strength," he says. "Anything over and above that builds strength, muscle, and character."
He does, however, want to dismiss any parallels you might see with HIT-type programs. Yes, that last set is the one that puts hair on your chest, but Wendler says the system doesn't work without the sets that precede it. "I tried cutting those out but I got smaller and weaker. There might be only one really hard set, but the other sets are still quality work."


Some Assistance, Please?

Along with the bench press, squat, shoulder press, and deadlift, 5/3/1 includes assistance exercises to build muscle, prevent injury, and create a balanced physique. Wendler's favorites are strength-training staples like chin-ups, dips, lunges, and back extensions. But he warns not to go apeshit with these supplemental exercises:
"They should complement the training, not detract from it. You must have a very strong reason for doing an exercise. If you don't, scrap it and move on."
His 5/3/1 ebook includes a number of different ways to choose and implement assistance work, with memorable categories like Boring But Big (Wendler's version of a hypertrophy program), The Triumvirate (three lifts per workout; an example is shown below), Dave Tate's Periodization Bible, and Wendler's favorite, I'm Not Doing Jack Shit, aptly named for those times when you only have time to hit the PR in your key lift and leave.
"People laugh and call me lazy, while they twit around in their three-hour workout making zero progress," he says. "Sometimes, instead of what you do in the weight room, it's what you don't do that will lead to success."


5/3/1 and its Discontents

Jim Wendler today, 50 pounds lighter
Wendler has received a lot of positive feedback from trainees who used 5/3/1 to overcome plateaus in strength and size development. "And it's not just from advanced guys," he says. "I received a thank-you from a guy who went from 135 for one on the bench to 135 for 17."
But the program has also received criticism from lifters on two fronts: that lifters are told to start too light, and build too slow.
"Start too light" refers to Wendler's insistence that the prescribed loads are calculated off of 90% of the lifter's 1RM. If your 1RM in the bench is 315, why calculate loads off a 1RM of 285?
Wendler has a characteristically blunt response: "People who freak out about the 90% thing are usually weak in the first place. You don't need to operate at your max to increase your max. Why people get so bent out of shape about taking two steps back if it means they'll be taking 10 steps forward is beyond me."
Then there's the veracity problem. Few lifters are willing to acknowledge their true 1RM.
"I do a seminar basically every week," Wendler says, his voice rising. "Every time, without fail, when I ask someone what their one-rep max is, I get this: 'Wellll, about three years ago I hit 365 for a triple, but that was when I was training heavier ...' Most guys just don't have a fucking clue.
"By using the 90%, I account for this bullshit. By using weights they can actually handle, guys are building muscle, avoiding burnout, and most importantly, making progress every workout."
Wendler acknowledges that none of this is exactly revolutionary. "I learned this in my freshman year," he says. "I've always made my best gains when I left just a bit in the tank."
As you can imagine, he doesn't think much of the "build too slow" criticism, either. "People tell me that they don't want to take three months to build up their strength," he says. "Where are you going to be in a year? Fuck that, where are you going to be in five years, when you're still benching 205 with your ass halfway off the bench?
"The pursuit of strength is not a six-month or one-year pursuit. It's a 30-year pursuit for me. You gotta be smart about it. But everyone wants everything right now."


Countdown to 5/3/1

Ready to take 5/3/1 for a test drive? To ensure your success, Jim Wendler cautions to avoid these four common rookie mistakes.

Don't customize: This probably applies to any program published on this site, but it especially matters for 5/3/1. You must do the program the way it's written.
"People ask the craziest shit," Wendler says, his voice getting louder again. " 'Can I combine 5/3/1 with Westside for Skinny Bastards?' Why not just do one or the other and make progress?
"These same guys then bitch three months later on some message board that the program didn't work. That's like complaining that your girl got pregnant despite you using a Trojan condom, except you forget to mention you were wearing the condom on your freakin' fingers."

Take it easy with the assistance work: "Some people look for the magic combination of assistance exercises, and completely under-rate the key lift," Wendler notes. "I call that majoring in the minors. Assistance work is just that — assistance. Do one or two exercises for five sets of 10, or maybe do a few more exercises for fewer sets. It's assistance. It doesn't fucking matter.
"I sometimes just give people a rep number and let them make it up on their own. Say, 'push movement: 60 reps,' or 'pull: 100 reps.' It's all just working the muscle."

Start with the right weights: This was covered already, but Wendler says it bears repeating: "I don't know how many times people have blown away their PRs because they learn to train with some restraint and actually use weights that they can handle with good form."

Progress slowly: "I tell guys that the longer your stride, the quicker you'll tear a hamstring," says the former Division I football player. "But the problem is, people live for today's workout. No one seems to have the vision anymore to look beyond just what they are doing today.
"I plan my training for a year. I know exactly what I want to do, and what I want to accomplish 12 months in advance. And I know what five or 10 pounds a month adds up to over the course of a year.
"The game of lifting isn't an eight-week pursuit. It doesn't last as long as your latest program does. It's a lifetime pursuit."


Thursday, August 19, 2010

WOD Friday 20 August 2010



Strength/Skill
Planche 3x5
Deadlift 5/5/5

Conditioning
3 rounds for time
Advanced: 30 Box jumps, M24"/F18"
                  20 Deadlift at 55% 5 rep max
                  15 Burpees

Intermediate: 25 Box jumps, M20"F16"
                      20 Deadlifts at 50% 5 rep max
                      15 Burpees

Beginner: 20 Box jumps M16"/F12"
                 15 Deadlifts at 45% 5 rep max
                 10 Burpees

All levels Finish with 10 kicks to handstand. Use a wall for balance if needed. If using a wall hold each rep for 2 seconds and lower under control
If doing free standing handstands, hold each as long as possible or 10 seconds, whichever comes first

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

WOD Thursday 19 Agust 2010

Super Kid!


Strength/Skill
Front lever one minute total work
Hang power clean and jerk 3/3/3

Conditioning
3 rounds for time of:
Advanced/Intermediate: 10 hang power cleans at 85% 3 rep max
                                        15 handstand push ups (piked if needed)
                                        20 knees to elbows

Beginner: 7 Hang power cleans at 80% 3 rep max
                 10 Piked handstand push ups, with feet or knees on bench as needed
                 12 hanging leg raises, or knee raises as needed

All levels finish with 10 bridge wall walks. Stand with your back to the wall and your feet about three feet from the wall. Bend backwards as far as you can and use the walk to walk your hands down as close to the floor as possible. The key is to get all the way down into a bridge

Monday, August 16, 2010

WOD Tuesday 17 August 2010

Anybody who tells you you shouldn't squat below parallel has no idea what they are talking about and has no business dispensing workout advice. Here is proof that deep squats are a perfectly natural movement. We are born with proper mechanics and it is only through a lifetime of developing bad habits that we have to re-learn proper lifting posture



Strength/Skill
Planche 3x5 
From your hands and knees, place your hands on the floor and press into the best planche you can do. For pretty much all of us we will barely get our knees off the floor. Lift, try to hold for a second or two and try to lower under control back down. Don't worry if it doesn't look pretty. We just want to teach the required muscles to contract.

squat 3x5 add 5 pounds to last time

Conditioning
5 rounds for time of:
Advanced: 10 dumbbell jump squats, M45/F30
                   15 back extensions
                   20 pull ups

Intermediate: 10 DB jump squat, M35/F20
                       15 back extensions
                       20 pull ups

Beginner: 5 DB Jump squat, M20/F10
                 10 back extensions
                 15 jumping pull ups

For Dumbbell jump squats, Hold a dumbbell in each hand, squat down with proper squat form until the dumbbells just pass mid shin. Then JUMP!

All levels finish with 10 kick to handstands. Use a wall if needed and try to hold each handstand for a minimum of 2 seconds each. If you're doing freestanding without a wall then try to hold each as long as possible. 

Sunday, August 15, 2010

WOD Monday 16 August 2010

Coach Glassman teaches the push press

Strength/Skill
Snatch, 2 reps every minute for seven minutes @ 80% of your best 3rm (Best means best form not heaviest)

Strict pull up, three sets to max reps

Conditioning
3 rounds for time of:
run 400m
15 push press
Use 90% of your shoulder press 1rm (1 rep max)

All levels finish with 10 bridge wall walks. Stand with you back to the wall and your feet about three feet from the wall. Lean backwards and using the wall, walk your hands down the wall as close to the floor as you can. Try to walk your hands all the way down until you are doing a real bridge. Then walk your hands back up the wall and repeat.


 
unlike this person, do try to keep your head off the floor

Friday, August 13, 2010

WOD SAturday 14 August 2010

I'm glad to see that we all survived Friday the 13. Now let's see if we can survive a CrossFit hero WOD!

Army Sgt. Keith Adam Coe, 30, of Auburndale, Fla., assigned to the 1st Battalion, 37th Field Artillery Regiment, 3rd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division, Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., died April 27th, 2010, in Khalis, Iraq, of wounds sustained when enemy forces attacked his unit with an explosive device. He is survived by his wife Katrina Coe, two sons, Killian and Keith Jr., and daughter, Klover.

"Coe"
10 rounds for time of:
Advanced: 10 thruster, M95/F65
                  10 ring push ups

Intermediate: 10 thruster, M75/F45
                      10 push ups

Beginner: 10 thruster, M55/F30
                 10 push ups (from the knees if needed)

Give it all you've got. If you are somewhere in between levels and want to get to the next level then you should scale the weights appropriately.  If 95 is too much but 75 is too little then use 85. The goal is to get stronger and improve your overall fitness here so please, make things hard on yourself it's the only way to improve. I wish I could be there for each and every one of you during every single workout but it's not possible. Therefore I need you to take it upon yourself to scale things up whenever you can. Don't be timid, or afraid of failure. If we're doing things right then we fail at some point during every workout. The point is to not give up. Your body can only quit when your mind allows it.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

WOD Friday 13 August 2010

oooooh lucky Friday the 13th!


Strength/Skill
Front lever 3x5 
Hanging from the bar, pull to the best front lever you can manage and lower under control. For many of us that may be a slow knees to elbows or even tuck L-hang. That is ok, don't be discouraged.
Deadlift  3/3/3/3/3
Set a new PR

Conditioning
Complete as many rounds as possible in 9 minutes
Sprint 50 meters
5 KB/DB swings
sprint 50 meters
5 box jumps

SWINGS: Males use 35, 55 or 70 lbs
                  Ladies use 25, 35 or 45 lbs
Box Jump: Use 30, 24, 20, 16 or 12" box jumps

Reps are low here and the workout is short. Scale this workout slightly higher than you are comfortable with and post rounds, weights, and jump height.

Cool down with 10 kick to handstands. Use a wall if needed.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

WOD Thursday 12 Aug 2010

 Meghan "Asteroid abs" Lajoie Gettin'er done in the ASU this summer

Strength/Skill
Planche 3x5
move with control into the best planche you can do and come under control back down. Rest one second and repeat

Power Clean 3/3/3/3/3
You must be able to do three perfect reps that all look identical before moving up in weight


Conditioning
9/6/3 reps for time:
Advanced/Intermediate: Power clean and jerk,  85% 3rm
                                       Weighted pull up,  85% 5rm

Beginner: Power clean and jerk 80% 3rm
                 Strict pull up

If you can't yet do strict pull ups, do jumping pull ups with 3 second negatives (or as close as possible)

Monday, August 9, 2010

WOD Tuesday 10 August 2010

Strength
Squat 3x5 add 5 lbs to last week

Conditioning
3 rounds for time
Advanced: 5 muscle ups
                 10 overhead squats, M135/F85
                 20 GHD sit ups
                 20 back extensions

Intermediate: 5 muscle up rows
                      5 ring dips
                     10 overhead squats, M95/F65
                     20 GHD sit ups
                     20 back extensions

Beginner: 5 Horizontal rows
                 5 dips (or bench dips)
                 7 overhead squats, M65/F45
                 15 GHD sit ups
                 15 back extensions

Sunday, August 8, 2010

WOD Monday 09 August 10

Strength
Incline Bench press 5/5/5

Conditioning
Complete the following exercises for as long as possible. You can have up to three attempts at each. This is not a timed workout
Pull up hold
Planche hold
Front lever hold
Handstand hold
L sit

Do each movement to the level that you are at ie: tuck lever

Friday, August 6, 2010

WOD Saturday 07 Aug 2010

Take it easy

I have been Kicking your butts pretty hard these past couple of weeks

Run an easy 5k
Go through stretching and mobility exercises before and after

Don't forget to breathe properly

Thursday, August 5, 2010

WOD Friday 06 Aug 2010

Watch how these athletes pull from the floor. When doing Olympic lifts like snatch and clean, competitive athletes drop their hips and pull with their torso in a more vertical position. This Allows for a more aggressive pop with the hips at the top of the pull.

Strength
Snatch 3/3/3/3/3
Before you add weight you have to be able to do all three reps with perfect form. If all three don't look exactly the same do it again with the same weight or back off on the weight. Post the highest weight you can do with out loosing perfect form

Conditioning
Three rounds for time:
Advanced: row 500m
                  30 dumbbell swings, M70/F45
                  21 pull ups

Intermediate: row 500m
                      30 swings, M55/F35
                      21 pull ups

Beginner: row 500m
                21 swings, M35/F20
                15 jumping pull ups

All levels finish with handstand work

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

WOD Thursday 05 Aug 2010



Strength
Deadlift 3x5 add 5 pounds to last time

conditioning
Complete as many rounds as possible in 10 minutes of:

Beginner: 5 Bench dips
                 10 Dumbbell split cleans, M25/F10
                 15 Squats

Intermediate: 5 Dips
                      10 DB split cleans, M35/F20
                      20 squats

Advanced: 5 Ring Dips
                  10 DB split cleans, M45/F30
                  20 Squats

Finish with one minute aggregate L-Hang/L-sit work

Monday, August 2, 2010

WOD Tuesday 03 Aug 2010

Coach B and Pat "The Manimal" Barber working on some O'lifts

Strength
clean and jerk 1/1/1/1/1

Conditioning
5 rounds for time without putting the bar down. Every time the bar touches the ground is 5 burpees at the end of the workout
5 hanging power cleans
5 front squats
5 push jerks
5 back squats

Advanced M135/F85
Intermediate M95/F65
Beginner M65/F45 the empty bar weighs 45 pounds

Post the load used and how long it took and how many burpees you had to do. Stop the clock before doing the burpees they do not count towards the total WOD time

Become comfortable using the hook grip when olympic lifting. It may feel wrong at first but it is the proper grip and you will be able to lift much more weight with out loosing grip strength

Sunday, August 1, 2010

WOD Monday 02 Aug 2010



Strength
Back Squat 3x3 at 90% of your 3rm (3 rep max)

Conditioning 
complete 3 rounds of

Beginner:  One minute alternating jumping lunges for max reps
                  Plank hold for max time (time is up as soon as your but droops or you loose perfect form)
                 One minute jumping pull ups for max reps


Intermediate: One minute alternating jumping lunges for reps
                      Handstand hold for max time
                      One minute kipping pull ups for max reps

Advanced: One minute alternating jumping lunges for reps
                   One minute handstand wall run for reps
                  One minute chest to bar pull ups for reps


Move immediately from one exercise to the next with out resting. After each round is completed rest exactly 60 seconds before starting the next round
Bad plank, once your butt droops, you've lost your plank

Good Plank