Thursday, 6.02.16

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Amateur

Squat 3×5 (add 5 lbs to last workout) Bench Press 3×5 (add 2.5 lbs to last workout)

Collegiate

Barbell Walking Lunge 4×6 Each Bench Press 5 RM, Max Reps @ 90%

Conditioning

Complete One Round on the Minute: Dumbbell Power Snatch – 2 Reps Lateral Burpees – 6 Reps *Complete 10 Rounds or 10 total minutes. For every missed round, complete 500 m rowing at the end of the workout.

Programming 5.30.16 – 6.5.16

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[cs_content][cs_section parallax="false" style="margin: 0px;padding: 45px 0px;"][cs_row inner_container="true" marginless_columns="false" style="margin: 0px auto;padding: 0px;"][cs_column fade="false" fade_animation="in" fade_animation_offset="45px" fade_duration="750" type="1/1" style="padding: 0px;"][x_accordion][x_accordion_item title="CLICK ME FOR NEW THINGS!" open="false"]Wellness Wednesday - Are you kicking ass at life, or is life kicking your ass? CrossFit Football Seminar Coming to CFSB! Click here for details Starting Soon! 2016 Summer Sports Strength and Conditioning Camp Whole Foods Bring a Friend Day and Paleo Tour Dates released! Click here Write up - Tempo Movements and Programming June Fundamentals Registration is up! Click here to send some fundamentals info to your friends!   ***Like us here at CFSB? Show us some love by clicking here to review us on google, or here to review us on facebook. (it really does help a lot!)***[/x_accordion_item][x_accordion_item title="Monday 5.30.31" open="false"]Monday 5.30.31 A. "Murph" For time: 1 mile Run 100 Pull-ups 200 Push-ups 300 Squats 1 mile Run In memory of Navy Lieutenant Michael Murphy, 29, of Patchogue, N.Y., who was killed in Afghanistan June 28th, 2005. This workout was one of Mike's favorites and he'd named it "Body Armor". From here on it will be referred to as "Murph" in honor of the focused warrior and great American who wanted nothing more in life than to serve this great country and the beautiful people who make it what it is. Partition the pull-ups, push-ups, and squats as needed. Start and finish with a mile run. [/x_accordion_item][x_accordion_item title="Tuesday 5.31.16" open="false"]Tuesday 5.31.16 A. 5 Rounds 8 Turkish Get Ups, alternating arms rest 60s 6-10 Strict Pull Ups rest 60s score is number of strict pull ups B. 5 Rounds 15 Kettlebell Swings 30 Double Unders 8 Minute Time Cap score is time - scale so that you finish within the cap [Notes:] Part A: This should take no more than 28 minutes, Find something smooth you can move steadily through all of the 8 turkish get ups, I don't want those to take forever, I'd rather see a lighter weight here and consistent movement through all 8. For the strict pull ups, if you can easily hit 10 each round with a nice little pause at the top...add a weight belt. Part B: Scale so that you can finish in the time cap[/x_accordion_item][x_accordion_item title="Wednesday 6.1.16" open="false"]Wednesday 6.1.16 A. 15 - 20 Minutes to establish a Bench Press x 7 @ 32X1 score is weight B. 4 Rounds At the top of a 4 minute mark 12 Front Rack Reverse Lunges 200m Run score is weight [Notes:] Part A: Stick to the tempo or it doesn't count, I know its hard, and you can't hit the weights you normally could if you were snapping the bar down and up. Part B: I want you finishing the rounds with plenty of time in the 4 minute mark - the weight is pulled from the floor, so that may be a limiting factor for some of you. If you have tight hips and just can't go all the way down...don't. If you can't run, row a 250. [/x_accordion_item][x_accordion_item title="Thursday 6.2.16" open="false"]Thursday 6.2.16 A. 3 Rounds 8 Minute Amrap 3 Power Cleans 6 Lateral Bar Over Burpees 9 Wall Balls rest 7:00 between amraps - go on a 400 yard walk between rounds and get some sun to kill the time. score the three rounds separately as a total, start from 0 at the beginning of each amrap. [Notes:] Overall - this is a lot of knee flexion/extension in this workout, so err on the side of performing these light, and remember, I want matching numbers from round to round. Power Clean weight: something you are super technically comfortable doing, if you can't pull from the floor well, perform a hang power clean - if you haven't developed the ability to perform those with volume, perform a kettlebell swing in its place. I'd like for the weight to be something you can touch and go. Lateral bar over burpees: watch your landing, try to not turn your ankles out hard. can't perform the push up well? turn it into a no push up burpee in place. Wall Balls: Again, consistency, choose a weight you shouldn't have to break up the rounds with. [/x_accordion_item][x_accordion_item title="Friday 6.3.16" open="false"]Friday 6.3.16 A. 15-20 Minutes to find a Back Squat x 7 @ 30X1 score is weight B. Every 90 seconds for 5 Rounds Ring Row 6-10 score is total reps C. 2 minute max calorie row 2 minute max 10 yard shuttle runs (10 yards = 1 rep) 2 minute max step ups 24/20 score is reps [Notes:] Part A: We've hit a 7-5-3 at a more aggressive tempo this block already, a lot of bottom pausing, now as we get closer to testing we are removing that bottom pause but still want the tension practice on the way down and making sure you hit full depth. 3 seconds down remaining tight, that 0 at the bottom means you can shoot out of the bottom and that X indicates intent - As. Fast. As. Possible. Remember, as fast as possible...BUT keep the positions clean, and that should be a no brainer. Click here to read more about tempo.  If you hitch over and cannot keep solid posture on the way up, lower the weight - even as much as to body weight, if that is still an issue with that tempo, limit range of motion. Part B: Find something difficult with your feet and mark the spot so you hit it every time, no air humping while you do this, and no throwing the head into it. Only the arms move. If you can do 10's each time with your feet on a box, try pausing at the top with the rings IN CONTACT with your body. If you can do THAT for 10's each time, add weight to your chest. Part C: We are getting closer to testing again, so the workouts will more closely resemble some fast paced burners, go ahead and go hard on this one, I still wouldn't like to see you die and burn out on it - 90-95% effort. [/x_accordion_item][x_accordion_item title="Saturday 6.4.16" open="false"]Saturday 6.4.16 [Notes: Scroll down and read the notes FIRST] A. 3 Rounds 1 Minute Burpees 1 Minute Power Snatch 1 Minute Box Jumps 1 Minute Thrusters 1 Minute Chest to Bar no rest between rounds, just be consistent each time you cycle back through the movements - this will lead you to want to be reserved in the first few rounds. ***rest 10 minutes between the different wods - stay busy and walk around during your rest*** 3 Rounds 1 Minute of wall balls 1 minute of kettlebell swings 1 minute of Box Step Ups 1 minute of Push Presses 1 minute of calorie Row [Notes:] remember, with the weekend I am programming a bit more than an hour, if you are a beginner, the first 3 rounder should be fine for you, if you are a little more advanced, stick around and hit the second one - no judgement zone if you don't want to hit the second one This looks nasty on paper and there are a lot of moving parts. But this isn't anything different than the last few weeks of 15 minute amraps we have been doing. Whats the most important thing here is that the exercise selection and weight selection here is something you can cycle, all.fucking.day. light weight. I want you to be breathing heavy, not struggling on weight, and I should see the minute markers on this match. I'll give a ton of suggestions here. Pacing: because of the longer duration you are repping here, in order to remain consistent, break your sets up - looking at the 60s broken up like this for each round - This is definitely relative to the athlete, the movement, AND how good the athlete is at said movement, but here are a few things to think about. 0-20s hit an unbroken set of repetitions 20-35 take 3 long breathes to control your heart and breathing rate 35-50s hit another set 50-60s transition to the next movement and be read to repeat. Movement Selection and Scaling anything barbell/external object related - go light and cycle it clean bodyweight - change range of motion if you need to in order to cycle it pull ups - don't be a dumbass and tear your hands. One last side note...These energy system training days are about the dose response of the energy system, with movement training involved, if you are newer, I may simplify this a LOT for you to get the right response. If you've been a member for a while and you don't read the blog, I may not have time for your silly ass questions about the workout and just scale you down hard to make sure you get the right response.     [/x_accordion_item][x_accordion_item title="Sunday 6.5.16" open="false"]Sunday 6.5.16 A. Perform 1 set of max reps toes to bar - leaving a little in the tank Perform 1 set of max hspu - leaving a little in the tank B. 3 Rounds   3 minutes to perform   7 Kettlebell Swings 5 Burpees 100m Run 7 Kettlebell Swings 5 Burpees Max Meter Row in time remaining Rest 20 minutes between rounds...during that 20 minutes perform 0 - 5 mark - walk 5:00 mark 30-50% of your max toes to bar 7:00 mark 30-50% of your max hspu 9:00 mark 30-50% of your max toes to bar 11:00 mark 30-50% of your max hspu 13:00 mark 30-50% of your max toes to bar 15:00 mark 30-50% of your max hspu 15-20 mark get ready for the next round [Notes:] We are on week 6 of 9 right now moving through this, so for those of you who have been attending these Sunday's frequently - we've worked through some 20s, 40s, 60s, 90s, 120s pieces that look closely related to this - we are now moving into 3's, then 4's and then trimming rest out of the 4's - all the while keeping muscle endurance with toes to bar and hspu work during this. We will only be doing one block of this, but the time will still be long, you are looking at... 10 minutes - warm up 3 minutes 20 minutes 3 minutes 20 minutes 3 minutes[/x_accordion_item][/x_accordion][/cs_column][/cs_row][/cs_section][/cs_content]

Monday 5-30-16

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It's max out week! This is week 6 of the cycle, and Saturday you'll be finding a heavy single/1 RM! A. 3-position C&J - 5x1 - increase 5-10# from 5/16 B.  Front squat - 5x3@85% of 1RM FS C.  3 times through -- :30 max reps barbell roll outs, 1:00 rest, :30 max reps hang power cleans @70% of 1RM C&J, 1:00 rest. Try to maintain number of reps from 5/16!

Tempo Movements and Programming

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[cs_content][cs_section parallax="false" style="margin: 0px;padding: 45px 0px;"][cs_row inner_container="true" marginless_columns="false" style="margin: 0px auto;padding: 0px;"][cs_column fade="false" fade_animation="in" fade_animation_offset="45px" fade_duration="750" type="1/1" style="padding: 0px;"][cs_text]Throwing in tempo training for classes As we go through the year of coaching, making discoveries about what works and what does not for our general population - we learn as coaches and hopefully the athletes learn a little as well. Generally most of the population doesn't ask a ton of questions, although I would say to you, you all should be asking questions if you have them to educate yourselves as athletes. You may have noticed we have been throwing in a lot of tempo over the last 9 week block, and you may see trends that occur from block to block, like pistol or single leg squatting progressions that occur frequently, or olympic weightlifting volume rising or falling, we can only fit so much into a 9 week - 1 hour a day program, so the exercise selection, formats, and concepts have to be put in intelligently to move people toward improving function, health, aesthetics, and performance all relative to the goals of the group. So how does tempo work, and what does it mean? What Does 30X0 Mean? Tempo prescriptions come in a series of four numbers representing the times in which it should take to complete four stages of the lift. In a workout, the tempo prescription will follow the assigned number of reps, such as: Front Squat x 2-3 reps @ 30X0 The First Number – The first number refers to the lowering (eccentric) phase of the lift. Using our front squat example, the 3 will represent the amount of time (in seconds) that it should take you to descend to the bottom of the squat. (The first number always refers to the lowering/eccentric phase, even if the movement begins with the ascending/concentric phase, such as in a pull-up.) The Second Number – The second number refers to the amount of time spent in the bottom position of the lift – the point in which the lift transitions from lowering to ascending. In our front squat example, the prescribed 0 means that the athlete should reach the bottom position and immediately begin their ascent. If, however, the prescription was 32X0, the athlete would be expected to pause for 2 seconds at the bottom position. The Third Number – The third number refers to ascending (concentric) phase of the lift – the amount of time it takes you to get to the top of the lift. Yes, I am aware that X is not a number. The X signifies that the athlete should EXPLODE the weight up as quickly as possible. In many cases, this will not be very fast, but it is the intent that counts – try to accelerate the weight as fast as you can. If the third number is a 2, it should take the athlete 2 seconds to get the lift to the top regardless of whether they are capable of moving it faster. The Fourth Number – The fourth number refers to how long you should pause at the top of the lift. Take, for example, a weighted pull-up prescription of 20X2, the athlete would be expected to hold his or her chin over the bar for two seconds before beginning to come down. Counting – It seems silly to even mention how to count seconds, but I have heard many clients audibly count to 4 in less than one second while under a heavy load. So, to ensure that your 4 second count and mine are the same, use “one thousands,” as in: 1-one thousand, 2-one thousand, 3-one thousand, 4-one thousand. If you need more practice, think about how you would perform the following: Push-Up x 15 reps @ 2111 Bulgarian Split Squat x 6-8 reps @ 41X1 Pull-Up x 81X2   Why are we doing it? Improved Quality of Movement Quality of movement should be your first priority. Intensity comes only after one can consistently demonstrate the proper mechanics of a movement. Proper tempo prescriptions can help athletes develop awareness and body control by giving them an opportunity to “feel” which muscle groups are activating to keep them in proper positions. If you cannot create tension through the range of motion at a particular weight, the answer is not to remove it and travel the the movement at speed. Especially with kids who think nothing of plunging into the bottom of a squat, secure in their belief that their young, elastic connective tissue will catch and help propel them back to the top. The problem is, as they descend their knees often collapse inward, their chest sinks in and their pelvis rolls into a posterior tilt (the dreaded “butt wink”). By requiring a 53X1 tempo, for example, we can help them learn how to keep their chest up, knees out and lumbar spine neutral by allowing them the time to “feel” those positions throughout the four phases of the lift. If the student is unable to control the descent and perform the movement at the prescribed tempo, we know the load is too great. In more experienced athletes tempo can be used to emphasize problem areas and shore up weak links in technique. For example, if you struggle in the bottom position of an overhead squat, a prescription forcing you to spend some time in that position will help solidify your technique, create more comfort in that weak position, and permit greater improvements down the line. What happens if you cannot hold the position we are prescribing under load? Then you reduce the load so that you can pick on the position properly and with solid mechanics What happens if you cannot hold the position/tempo or perform the movement even under minimal load Then you either move backwards to bodyweight, or you really step back and look at this movement in regards to whether you really should be traveling through the full range of motion in the first place - considering changing the joint angles you are moving through until mobility or stability has been improved to the point where the range of motion can increase. Even while including the tempo in a decreased range of motion can allow you to feel those positions and spend more time challenging them slightly under a manageable load. Reduced Risk of Injury Improving the quality of the movement obviously helps to reduce the risk of injury for athletes. But in addition, slowing down the tempo of lifts can ease the stress placed on joints and shift that additional stress to the muscles powering the lift. More stress on the muscles and less on the joints is a good thing. Muscles are far better at adapting to increased loads. Connective tissue typically takes longer to strengthen and adapt to the increasing loads, so by slowing down the tempo you can give your connective tissue some rest while still strengthening the surrounding musculature. Tempo prescriptions also naturally control intensity (and perhaps, rein in egos). Let’s use the bench press as an example. If you excessively load the barbell you might be tempted to speed up the lowering phase and bounce the barbell off your chest – don’t lie, you do this. But if you know that the prescription calls for a 3 second descent and a 2 second pause at the bottom, you’re not going to be tempted to load anywhere close to the same amount. Control/Validity This ensures the workout / movement is the same from session to session, not only in testing purposes and training purposes, but also in dose response purposes. For instance: If I were to perform a Bench Press under these two conditions Bench Press x 3 @ 60X1 - Time under tension = 21 seconds Bench Press x 3 @ 20X1 - Time under tension = 9 seconds Those are two completely different dose responses for that lift when it comes to CNS, Cellular Growth, and Muscle Endurance. Improved Strength Gains This alone should have been sufficient, but I threw in the first two for all of the coaches out there. Proper tempo prescriptions can lead to vastly improved strength gains. First, different tempo prescriptions permit for greater training variety and stimulus. This means fewer plateaus and more adaptation. Second, they allow us to shore up weak links by overloading certain areas of movements. For example, how many of you feel more comfortable with your second and third deadlift reps than your first? I am guessing a lot, and it’s because you are using the benefit of either or both the elastic “bounce” of your stretch-shortening cycle or your rubber plates hitting the hard floor. But if your tempo prescription called for a slow descent and a longer pause at the bottom, you might actually have to get stronger through your weak points. Third, slowing down movements with tempo prescriptions can allow for greater amount of time under tension with less overall stress on an athlete’s central nervous system. This can be particularly important for CrossFit athletes, who are often pushing themselves to the limits with maximal effort lifts and workouts, by creating a way to continue training and making an athlete stronger without overtaxing his or her system. Fourth, isometric pauses at the top and/or bottom of lifts force you to recruit more muscle fiber, and more muscle fiber recruitment (particularly more fast-twitch fibers) equals greater strength gains. where this all fits into the grand scheme of programming? Click below to expand and read "The Art Of Programming" Have thoughts on either? post to comments and create some discussion![/cs_text][x_accordion][x_accordion_item title="The Art Of Programming" open="false"]The Art of Programming Some say programming is an art and some say that programming is a science. I tend to believe that it is a bit of both. Think about how programs are created. There must always be a sound reasoning for why we prescribe something, at least there better be! But, within that program comes historic experiences of what has worked and what hasn’t, assessment and testing of that specific athlete or group of athletes, consultation with that athlete or athletes that leads you to either include or exclude volume/intensity/specific movements. What happens if we happened to catch you client after a tough day at work and speaking with us - pointed us in a direction that you were over worked? Would we suggest coming in the rest of the week and hitting it hard? Of course not. Without continued learning, over time, around our clients we will not be able to get you moving in the right direction immediately. Sure, sometimes a program just hits the mark spot on right away, but the program should always organically improve as we learn about our client’s tendencies and as our client learns about his/her capacity for the training. So, to be a great programmer you must think scientifically and creatively in unison. With that programming thought fresh in your mind I propose this question: Is our program for our gym taking into account who we are trying to help make progress? Look around the gym….what do you see? If the answer is that you see people of all types then you are like most coaches, normal! In 99 out of 100 situations the gym will NOT be made up of CrossFit Games Athletes. But, are you programming with that understanding or are you trying to take your clients and make them into Games competitors when nothing about their structure or lifestyle point to that route being a successful one? It’s time that gyms program for their intended audience. If you are marketing to the masses and you succeed you will get, well, the masses. You had better program as smartly for them as you can. There is nothing wrong with going after athletes but that talent pool is small. There is nothing wrong with targeting the masses either. But, in either situation, you owe your group the best training possible and we both know that both of those targets require different help. Take a moment to reflect on the current audience: Who are the EXACT people we serve as a coaches What are their current abilities? Strengths? Weaknesses? More importantly, what are their current goals? Often times, unfortunately, coaches will program for clients based on multiple underlying factors outside these considerations, including: What the coach thinks he or she should do (i.e. ‘Everyone needs to learn how to snatch’, or ‘CrossFit is all about high-intensity and met-cons’ or ‘Never do the same thing twice; always keep it constantly varied’). What other people and boxes are doing around them (“we’ve got to beat those guys”). Often times this comes from over watching Facebook or Instagram! What their personal biases or goals are (“Everyone wants to be a better athlete right?”). Far too often, coaches ‘spin their wheels’ by trying to write programs with no real end goal or gains in mind or by designing programs based on their personal, one-track minded goals…that they miss the boat on actually doing what it is their job title reads: A coach (noun) is: : a person who teaches and trains an athlete or performer : a person who teaches and trains the members of a sports team and makes decisions about how the team plays during games : a private teacher who gives someone lessons in a particular subject Are you really teaching, leading and guiding your ‘players’ (i.e. gym members, class members, trainees) in how to make progress…in fitness, with their personal goals, in their lives and health (outside the gym)? For instance, take the workout “The Murph”—a classic Memorial Day favorite at affiliates across the globe, entailing a: 1 mile run 100 pullups 200 pushups 300 squats 1 mile rune Murph, no doubt, is a challenging workout—one of those workouts that makes you dig deep and find your ‘inner athlete’ or ‘inner strength’ when the going gets tough. While it is a wonderful idea to honor our fallen soldiers this specific workout simply isn’t a smart idea for a “normal” client. At a minimum they aren’t improving their fitness. Instead, for your average gym member, your common clients could get so much more out of a workout such as: Row 250 meters 15 incline pushups 20 ring rows 25 air squats x 4 rounds Is this workout perfect? Of course not. But, it is similar in aerobic nature, it takes the eccentric component off of people who have no business running a mile (especially in a weight vest), it reduces the total rep count, and it allows for better technique in the push ups. “But my workouts are scale-able,” said most coaches who program most of their workouts in any group affiliate model. However, the level of ‘scaling’ most commonly taught is to ‘Build a workout to crush an Olympic athlete and then make a version for the normal clients that is the hardest version that they can do.’ In reality though, your clients’ workouts should not be the ‘hardest versions they can do.’ Your best, most resilient clients may not get hurt or risk injury…but what about the others? Maybe they can’t do 100 pull-ups…heck they can’t do one pull-up on their own…so the next best, ‘hardest’ option is strapping them in a band and having them go for it? Yet…without the ability to even get the chin over the bar in a band…or full lockout position at the bottom of the pull-up…or the ability to do more than 5 at a time…those 100 pull ups are going to go south fast. Scaling at the ‘hardest level possible’ is probably not the best choice for them. Instead, coaches should base their program designs around meeting their clients where they currently are, and no matter what, keeping form, stability, strength and progression at the foundation of it all. Progress workouts based on the adaptation of your clients (rather than trying to fit a square peg in a round hole with poorly executed versions of the ‘substitute’ or scale you’ve been told is the ‘next best option’ in the first place). This could look like, for someone who is unable to complete pull-ups efficiently… Taking out the pull-ups altogether for a time…and working a strength piece of over-the-bar chin holds for short bursts x 4-5 rounds. In a conditioning workout, this could be 10-15 ring rows, with a 2-second pause at the top and strong, neutral core and spine throughout the movement (driving home an ‘impeccable form’ philosophy), followed by 10 negative push-ups and a 60 second Air Dyne sprint x 5 rounds Recognize what your program, as well as your client’s outside lifestyle factors, are doing (and can be doing) to affect the people you are working with…and then work with these to truly impact those clients and allow them to make progress. Most people really don’t need you to break them down. These programs should allow for you to get to your priorities. If someone isn't sure of what their gym's priorities (or true abilities, baselines, strengths and weaknesses are)? Well, that is exactly where assessment and testing comes into play. We Collect data. The only way we can understand what your priorities are, is if you are tracking your results, whether by paper or by other means, if you are showing up consistently, if you are communicating with us, or if you are working with us as an individual client. If you show up, you don't communicate, don't really have the want to set clear cut goals, its hard to program for you. Every 9 weeks or so we perform a comprehensive series of baseline fitness assessments. From about 2 years ago we began really sitting down and asking what your goals are…and the why behind those goals. That way we can let you know if what the majority of the programming is here, is in line with that. Chances are…’look good naked’ and ‘get stronger’ will come up more than once (i.e. lose weight, improve body composition, drop body fat, gain muscle). Of course there are outliers, people with goals that are in a different direction than what our programming is headed. In which case, just shoot us an email and you can become an individual client, that way we can definitely make sure we are meeting your needs. We have everyone in ranges from Competitive athletes, distance biking, solely gymnastics programming, etc. Click here to drop us a line. We have to make sure our program is aligned and allowing progression towards improvement? Or is it a random, varied melting pot of various movements, occasional strength (no real system or method to the madness), benchmarks and ‘intense’ workouts thrown together. Dig a little deeper folks. Program Design is where the true secret sauce, the magic, lies. Adapted From Original Source - Jim Crowell[/x_accordion_item][/x_accordion][/cs_column][/cs_row][/cs_section][/cs_content]