Four Times the Fun

4 Individually Timed Rows:

500m Row
Each row is a max effort. Rest 3 minutes between rounds.

Results

View this photo
View this photo

Max Effort:

Aftermath

Teri pulls and Greg pushes:

Pull hard_Teri and Greg

Boathouse:

Row and Rest

Rowing Technique by Concept 2 Rowing:

   

Notes:

Don’t forget to register for Railroad Days 5k/10k and Kids 1k next Saturday! Wear your SRCF shirt if you are running. We will also still have a Saturday class. Michelle is going to run class and I will run the 5k and then scoot back to the box for the Adv. RX Class. 5k run for time!

This article has lessons that are applicable both in the box and out:

Plateau Busting: How to Take Your Life to the Next Level” by The Art of Manliness

Basic Training

Rona_Situp Solitude

This week is kind of basic training. The WOD’s aren’t all basic, in fact some are the opposite. They will be just as challenging as any other day, as well as fun. However most of the movements are basic. Staples and building blocks that we learned in Elements or Fundamentals. They may be heavier or a little advanced, but they will be the basic movements that we see commonly in CrossFit. So get ready to row, deadlift, run, overhead squat, pull, throw and press. Then the following week get ready for a fun week of “Girls“…

Good Read. “Show Me Who You Are” by CrossFit Lisbeth

This was shown at the opening ceremony to the 2011 Reebok CF Games. I love that if you removed the narration it still showed what CF is in images.

Fitness is my sport Video:

Teamwork

Main Class:

In Teams of 3 complete:

3000m Row (One rower per team)

After row is complete, then move on to:

150 Burpees
30 Wall Climbs  
(Break up the reps however you like, Only 2 work while 1 rests)

Once complete, then all must:
Run 1 Mile with plate (45#/25#, Share the plate, one plate per team)

Advanced RX Class:

7 Rounds for time:
7 Power Snatch (95#/65#)
7 Snatch Balance (95#/65#) 
7 Overhead Squats (95#/65#)

Results

View this photo

Team Row

Share the Load

Amy Front Squat_Hammer

“Burning Runner: An Inside Look Into CrossFit Culture” from Competitor.

"Rankel"

U.S. Marine Corps Sergeant John Rankel, 23, of Speedway, Indiana, assigned to 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, 1 Marine Expeditionary Force, based out of Camp Pendleton, CA, was killed on June 7, 2010, while supporting combat operations in Helmand Province, Afghanistan.

As Many Rounds As Possible in 20 Minutes of:
6 Deadlift (225#/155#)
7 Burpee Pull-up
10 Kettlebell Swing (70#/53#)
200m Run

Results

View this photo
View this photo

Burpee Pull-ups

Adults at Play  Run

Today’s WOD we honored a fallen Hero. The turnout, energy, and hard work was strong class after class. Way to push through!

Quote of the Day: “The CrossFit Games test the training methodologies and resolve of the athletes unlike any other competition in the world.They separate the doing from the talking, highlight the optimally prepared, and reveal the best practices. And we’ve got beer.” ~ Coach Greg Glassman – CF Founder

2011 Fittest Man on Earth™ Rich Froning:

Froning_Champ

Froning_Sled Push

2011 Fittest Woman on Earth™ Annie Thorisdottir:

Annie_All Smiles

Annie_Killer Cage with Kurtis

The Champions, Rich Froning and Annie Thorisdottir – video [wmv] [mov]

CrossFit New England, The Affiliate Champions – video [wmv] [mov]

CFNE

Want to know what the specator experience was like this year? Here’s a glimpse in fun-city:

“This Is Sick” from the 2011 Reebok CrossFit Games – video [wmv] [mov]

Game(s) Over

Quote of the Day: “It’s not what happens to you that determines how far you will go in life; it is how you handle what happens to you.” ~ Zig Ziglar

2010 Northwest Regionals WOD #1:

3 Rounds for Time:

10 Overhead Squats (135#/95#)
50 Double-Unders

Results

View this photo
View this photo

Results from Friday (Death by 10m Sprints)  View this photo

Results from Monday (5 rds: 400m Run, 30 Air Squats, 20 Push-ups)  View this photo

Empty Stadium

We are back! First thank you. Thank you to Moe for covering classes, thank you all who showed up and worked out together outside the box when it was closed and thanks for understanding that our annual vacation is a tradition that Michelle and I take each year and literally begin planning and saving up for 11 months before. While we are sad it’s over we were stoked to get the time together (kidless for the first time in a year!) and able to enjoy it with the greater CrossFit community while catching up with old friends and meeting new ones. We are already counting down to the 2012 Games. Only 51 more weeks until we return to Cali for some prime tanning time to watch jacked and tan people do epic sh*t.

Second, the Games are over. In the books. What a weekend! How do you succinctly explain the Games and CrossFit competition experience in a post? I can’t. What I will do though is focus the next couple posts around some of our experiences as fans, coaches and CrossFitters. For this post I want to focus on the Masters events for Pat, the toughness of CrossFit competitions and the positive outcome that comes from putting it all out there.

Pat_Clean and Jerk 1RM Event

Props to Pat for qualifying for the Games and competing and finishing in the top 20 in the world! That is something I would love to have on my resume someday. It’s a rare feat and something not to be taken for granted or taken too lightly. With only 20 men worldwide in that age category who earned the right to compete, it’s not quite the same as entering a weekend race or tri that simply means you pay the fee, show up and try your best in a field of thousands.

Pat_False Grip MU

Pat showed tenacity and courage under fire. He dealt with triumph (the 1RM Clean and Jerk) and adversity (the Muscle-Up and Handstand Push-up workouts) in two action packed days in front of a crowd that was also beamed for all to watch on the internet. While some of the workouts didn’t go well, he pushed to the last second in each and every WOD and left it all out there. That isn’t easy and the unique lessons and experience he takes away from it is something to be proud of, inspired by and motivated to train for. Congratulations Pat! You are a CrossFit Games athlete! 

  Bailey_Finishing up

Competing in CrossFit takes guts. Why? Because if you do it then you better expect beyond ANY doubt that what you suck at will turn up. If not that then what you take for granted will go wrong. Guaranteed. It will rear it’s ugly head and bite you right in the ass. That thing you have been avoiding or neglecting in your training will happen. Don’t believe me? Then look at every single Games, every Regional, every Sectional or Open to date. I’ll give some examples:

  • This year it was obvious that one team in the finals had an athlete who was weak at ring dips. She fought and struggled for a solid 15 minutes while her team watched helpless in front of a packed crowd to get through them while the 5 other top teams flew threw the final workout. 
  • In an event as laughable as a softball throw it quickly showed who can’t throw as well as who can’t think. When given two chances to land a ball within a 5 yard gap as far as you can throw it, it blew my mind to watch a few athletes try to throw it out of the stadium rather than “get on the board” with their first throw and go on to get zero points with two off the mark throws. 
  • The swim WOD was another example. 2 females DNF’d the swim while one top male had to be rescued and another favored to win it all had a freak swimming accident that ended his 11 month quest to return to the podium due to a wave taking out his ear drum. While ocean swimming may have been a twist, swimming period should not as the clues were there; it has been talked about the last two Games, the main site has listed a swim WOD this year and the Games site listed the pool and the Home Depot Center as a venue for the past several months.
  • In 2010 the current champ Rich Froning lost that year’s Games and came in 2nd because he couldn’t climb a rope. Rope climbs should not have been a surprise to him yet he was the only athlete who couldn’t use his feet. I remember him looking into the crowd for advice on how to lock his feet in that final WOD. (He obviously fixed that deficiency this year). 
  • In one of the 2011 Regionals AJ Moore (a favorite to win that region) was considered a “lock” until it showed he had not trained his kettlebell swings to the standard published (which I saw video of). He also showed he couldn’t adjust on the fly and fix his swing or ask the judge clearly what to fix as he was no-repped over 80 swings and fell out of the podium placement after a final tie-breaker for 3rd with Spencer Hendel.
  • In 2009 reigning Games champion Jason Khalipa showed he didn’t take running seriously as he struggled to finish dead last in the opening 7k Trail Run event and almost passed out 100m from the finish line. Watching him bounce off the railing and stagger around was a massive surprise to all in the crowd. Watching him climb from dead last after event 1 to finish in the top 5 was even cooler.
  • In 2009 newcomer Annie Thorisdottir showed up to the Games in Aromas and quickly established she was a force. Right up until the final chipper that had muscle-ups. While she was able to get her first ever one to a roaring crowd, she was eliminated by virtue of a DNF. 
  • In 2010 Mikko Salo showed that he didn’t train his weaknesses in the pistol/double-under WOD as well as in the opening “Amanda” workout in which he was outclassed by the likes of Speal and Froning in snatches and muscle-ups.
  • At the NW Regionals I competed in during 2009 I remember it had two events; a deadlift/press 1RM event and a classic triplet of muscle-ups, wall-balls, and sumo high pulls. I remember an unknown named Tommy Hackenbruck crushing the triplet but struggling on the strength portion and missing the cut. (He went on to nab a spot in the online “last chance” qualifier and then proceed to place a surprising 2nd in the Games to Mikko)
  • At this years Regionals (for Mark with the handstand push-up workout), last year’s Strongman event at Rainier CF (for Moe with the farmer’s carry) and in the 2010 Regionals (for me) all of us experienced our own massive disappointment in WOD’s that we essentially took for granted or expected to go better. 

Pick them up

For me personally in the 2010 Regionals I deliberately dismissed how hard the opening workout was that year with heavy overhead squats and double-unders. I thought that my strength in overhead squats would allow me to “hide” my suckiness with the jump rope. I will never forget stressing out the night before and right up to the WOD about those f*cking double-unders. I will also NEVER forget how embarrassed and frustrated I was when I then proceeded to bolo the workout when things just fell apart. I had a judge who counted much differently than most people (as in 28, 29, 27…), and a rope that was literally one or two jumps away from falling apart as it was slowly getting longer and longer without me knowing it, leading to even more snags and frustrating failed reps. When I finally finished I was was dead last in my heat. “Welcome to Regionals” I thought! That all changed as each workout proceeded to go a little better and I tried to put it behind me. I remember Pat telling me to “just have fun” over the wall right before my final workout which helped me relax the nerves and win my heat and claw my way to climb back up in the standings.

Annie_Sled Pull

Today I programmed this WOD since I was thinking last night about the Games and reflecting on experiences. Three months after the Regionals in 2010 I subsequently held a rematch with this WOD and PR’d by a huge margin. I also have since put a lot of work into my double-unders over the past year plus.

For all of the examples above I could write easily a dozen more. The Games and qualifiers are competitions where each CrossFit athlete is out there to be judged and to throw down. It will always be tough and grueling, and will always find your weaknesses. That is how the events are designed. They are searching to select the fittest at every level. If it is programmed correctly it should find and select those athletes who have the most work capacity and the least skill deficiency. The question is if you don’t make the cut how will you handle it? Will you be prepared enough for it next time, fight through it and come out stronger either mentally or physically? Will you get back to the gym and train for the next time vowing to do better? Will you just add to the never ending list of skills to work on? For me I know that answer is a solid yes. Game ON!

Triumphant CFNE

Notes:

Chris Spealler: a great example of an elite athlete overcoming adversity and training his weaknesses (smallest competitor and always fighting the CrossFit tendency of favoring strength based events)

Speal_Sled Push

2010 Northwest Regional Event 1

Video of him crushing today’s WOD in 2:39 at the 2010 Regionals I competed in and talked about above:

Download as QuickTime
Download as Windows Media

Death by 10m Sprints

With a continuously running clock perform 1 sprint (10 meters) the first minute, 2 sprints (10 meters) the second minute, 3 sprints the third minute, and so on, continuing to add 1 sprint each minute until you cannot complete the required number of 10 meter sprints in the given minute.

Score total rounds and sprints in the last round completed.

Results – To be posted

Quote of the Day: “The only good race pace is suicide pace, and today looks like a good day to die.” 
Steve Prefontaine

Foot Race

Cooking With Nick Massie: Bacon Sprouts“, CrossFit Journal preview video [wmv] [mov]

"Baseline"

2 Rounds for Time:
400m Run
40 Squats
30 Sit-ups
20 Push-ups
10 Pull-ups

* Vest (20#/15#) Optional if you previously have a men’s time of sub 9 minutes and women’s sub 10 minutes as RX’d

Post “Baseline” work on skills

Results

View this photo
View this photo

Sit-ups_Baseline

Time to take a test. Today was a re-test for everyone with “Baseline”. This one we try to do every 6 months or so as a gauge of progress. Congrats on all the PR’s! Remember each one is improvement no matter how big or small the PR. You earned them through sweat, consistency and hard work.

Sneak Preview of the new CrossFit Inov-8’s (blue/white and all black)

Vintage 7-UP ads for kids (posted by Whole9). And you wonder why we are a nation of obesity, metabolic dysfunction and autoimmune diseases. Read the fine print on these old ads. Mixing 7-Up with milk for your baby?! Seriously?

9 Days until the CrossFit Games! Don’t forget we are closed 28 July to 1 August.

“Pat Sherwood is Ready” – video [wmv] [mov]

The Games Update IV – video [wmv] [mov] [HD mov Download Only]

Reminder this Saturday there is no 1045 Advanced RX Class. Main class at 0930 is still on the normal schedule.

"Morrison"

50-40-30-20-10 Rep rounds for time:

Wall Balls (20#/14#)
Box Jumps (24″/20″)
Kettlebell Swings (53#/35#)

Results

View this photo
View this photo

Morrison

U.S. Army Specialist Scott Morrison, 23, of Blue Ash, Ohio, assigned to 584th Mobility Augmentation Company, 20th Engineer Battalion, 36th Engineer Brigade, based out of Fort Hood, Texas, died on September 26, 2010, from injuries suffered on September 25 when insurgents in Kandahar, Afghanistan attacked his vehicle with an improvised explosive device. He is survived by his father Donald, mother Susan, brother Gary, and sister Katie.

Morrison

Amazing effort from everyone today in a hero WOD that paid tribute to a fallen American soldier. Although most of you have heard this before I wanted to reinforce it here. One of our regular box rules is no whining. If you do then you earn your 15 burpees. All of us do it at some point. Coaches included. Fess up and knock them out if and when you ever do. It’s excusable and sometimes humorous.

One big rule that we 100% enforce and take very seriously however is that we never whine during a Hero WOD. These workouts are special in their meaning and symbolism. It’s a physical tribute that each of us chooses to undertake when we show up for the WOD. We walk through the door on that day to not only get our butts kicked but to also workout in memory of that fallen soldier, sailor, airmen, marine, firefighter or law enforcement person who happened to be a CrossFitter. It has zero to do with politics or beliefs about war or other unimportant things. It has everything to do with honoring those who have died while serving our country and communities and protecting our liberties and way of life. On this day for this workout we care much less about the clock and more about pushing or soldiering through. When it gets tough just remember that sacrifice and keep moving or pick that weight back up.

I love that our box takes Hero WOD’s 100% seriously and for that I am grateful. You all rock.

Notes:

Fight Gone Bad 6 in support of Special Operations Warrior Foundation – video [wmv] [mov]

Quote of the Day: “Perfect practice makes perfect.” ~ Coach Mike Burgener

Note the form and position of these athletes below.

Perfect practice:

KB Swings Open Hips_Laura F

Snatch and Run

3 Rounds for time of:

400m Run
15 Squat Snatch (75#/55#)
9 Handstand Push-ups

Results

View this photo
View this photo

Justin snatches:

 Justin_Snatch

Simple before and after mid-WOD correction. Justin lined up very far from the wall in the 1st round of the WOD for his handstand push-ups. Note how he resembles a bow up against the wall and is putting a large amount of stress on his back. By moving his hands closer he was in a safer position and closer to working on that hollow and press out. He also noted a big difference and how much easier it felt to finish those HSPU’s.

HSPU_Too Far HSPU_Closer

Quote of the day: “It is folly for a man to pray to the gods for that which he has the power to obtain by himself.” ~ Epicurius

Are you looking to do your first pull-up, muscle-up, HSPU or ring dip? Then read below:

Finding Your Base Strength” by RX Girls: Miami

“Iceland Annie” is one of the top athletes in CrossFit and a favorite to win the Games this year. (She could beat half the men)

Annie Thorisdottir talks 20092010 and 2011 Games” – video [wmv] [mov]

Great Basin Qualifier WOD

5 Rounds for Time:

7 Deadlift (275#/185#)
30 Squats
7 Handstand Push-ups

* From the 2009 Great Basin Regional Qualifiers

Results

View this photo
View this photo

Moe Pike HSPU Travis DL

I was asked today where I had found this WOD and could only remember that we have run this before so I went digging back in time. I found a couple things interesting. One is that we were scaling to a box with the pike handstand push-up a year ago but now we are ensuring the head and arm motion tracks even more in the range best suited to develop shoulder and tricep strength. A few people have learned to do HSPU (both strict and kipping) since then.

The same lesson as a year ago still applies:

“We find this scaling works well for getting people strong enough to progress towards inverted HSPU’s on the wall. Simply doing a handstand and then putting several AbMats under head limits the range of motion and avoids the toughest part of the HSPU; the point at which the arms are fully bent and the head is touching the floor (or one AbMat). If you cannot press out of that position you need to work on developing your press strength with either the box or a barbell.

In conjunction with developing the press and HSPU, don’t forget to practice the handstand! Do static holds, get upside down and learn to get in the “hollow” position.”

The second thing I found interesting is that we had a visitor drop in for the first time to the box from the east coast back then (Kristen) who was also just here this past weekend. 

Coach Coordination:

Twins

Notes:

Mobility Class tonight was a good one. Don’t forget every Wednesday this summer at 7pm you can get your stretch on with Rona! Ask for details.

Mobility WOD Instruction

Read: “The Women of the 2011 Reebok CrossFit Games

Nutrition: This Paleo “e-cookbook” of 370 plus recipes looks pretty darn good! Note that it’s downloadable only as a PDF file including the bonuses to be viewed electronically and not delivered as a physical copy.

PaleoRecipe3covers

Paleo Recipe Book

SNORIDGE CROSSFIT