Squat Deeper

Strength WOD:

1-1-1-1-1
Power Snatch + Snatch (Squat)

* Touch and go.

Conditioning:

5 Rounds for time of:

10 Ring Dips 
10 Overhead Squats (135#/95#) 
200m Run

Results

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Pwr Snatch and Snatch Complex OHS

The intent today was to get proficient going from a power snatch to a full snatch as both lifts should follow the same mechanics but the full snatch resulting in a below parallel deep squat finish. Putting these as a complex should reinforce the 1st and 2nd pull consistency while training speed under the bar in the 3rd pull into the finish position.

Cherie Chan corrects Lisa’s overhead squat – [video]

Eloy just Pumping Iron:

Pumping Iron

First Event Announcement of the 2014 Games

Injury Sidelines Rory Zambard

Nutrition:

Stop eating garbage! Friends don’t let friends eat high fructose corn syrup.

A sweet problem: Princeton researchers find that high-fructose corn syrup prompts considerably more weight gain by Hilary Parker.

Olympic Weightlifting Total

Strength WOD: 

1-1-1
Snatch 

1-1-1
Clean & Jerk 

* Snatch and Clean means full squat. Find your 1RM for the lifts listed above. 
* Total must be done in the specified order.

Optional Checkout WOD:

2 Minute Challenge: Bar Muscle Ups
Max reps in 2 mins of: Bar Muscle-ups
 
2 Minute Challenge: Double Unders
Max reps in 2 mins of: Double Unders
 

Results

Snatch_Kelby

Weightlifting day today! These are FULL snatches and cleans with push or split jerks. When you see either “snatch” or “clean” without “power” in front of it then it means full squat (hang included). This strength specific day still requires you to plan your time wisely and work on both lifts. It also forces you to have to move on while you still have something in the tank after snatching. Hitting a heavy clean and jerk after a max snatch is pretty taxing. Time flies even without a checkout. For everyone who hit a PR congrats. After the past two days of workouts and the heat it was great to see so many people near their PR or hitting a new best.

Today was also Jon’s goodbye WOD (he’s moving east to CO). Best of luck to you in your new state and be sure to come back in next time you have to visit Washington. We hope you find a great affiliate. As for everyone else none of you are allowed to move! Michelle and I (and the coaching staff) are tired of teaching you to snatch and clean only to have you move away…

Sub-3 Minutes with Julie Foucher

Nutrition:

Planning for Paleo www.theboxmag.com

Leucine: The Super Amino Acid www.theboxmag.com

Over Easy?

Strength WOD:

5-5-5-5
Overhead Squat

Conditioning:

2010 NW Regionals Event 1:

3 Rounds for Time: 

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

Results

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OHS x 5

The WOD today was the first WOD of the 2010 Northwest Regionals; a nasty short couplet that taxes the lungs. I’ll never forget this WOD at that Regionals, especially Chris Spealler doing this in under 3 minutes. At that time he weighed 135 lbs. and completed 30 bodyweight overhead squats and 150 double-unders in less than 3 minutes. 

Chris Spealler Top Time (2:39) 2010 NW Regional Event 1 [wmv] [mov]

McDreamy demo’s the WOD:

OHS_Spencer DU_Spencer 

Nutrition:
The movie the food industry doesn’t want you to see. Fed Up: The Official Trailer 

Regionals:

The schedule for the NW Regionals weekend is out (May 16-18). Go here to see the event start times by heat for individuals and teams.

Stay tuned for announcements of any potential SRCF class schedule adjustments for Friday May 16 and Saturday May 17.

"White"

 “White” (First Female Hero WOD)

5 Rounds for time:

3 Rope Climbs (15′) 
10 Toes-to-Bar
21 Overhead Walking Lunges (45#/25# bumper) 
400m Run

Results

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  White

U.S. Army First Lieutenant Ashley White, 24, of Alliance, Ohio, assigned to the 230th Brigade Support Battalion, 30th Heavy Brigade Combat Team, North Carolina National Guard, based in Goldsboro, North Carolina, died on October 22, 2011 in Kandahar province, Afghanistan, from wounds suffered when insurgents attacked her unit with an improvised explosive device. She is survived by her husband Captain Jason Stumpf, her parents Robert and Deborah, brother Josh, and sister Brittney. ~ CrossFit.com

White_Climbs

Announcements:

  • Saturday 2/22 there will be no Advanced RX WOD. Regular 9:30am class is still on so plan on the usual team-up Saturday. No change.
  • Next Monday  2/24 we will be re-testing the “Stop the Slop Performance WOD”.

Greg Glassman on the Open: Part 3 – [video]

Sub 3 minutes with Chris Spealler – [video]

Essay Challenge Winner

Dan’s Winning “Stop the Slop Challenge” Essay (He will be receiving some swag, stuff, and money and will announce prizes for all winners as soon as we retest the Performance Challenge WOD this next Monday):

Pushups and Coconut Milk: Finding the Cure for Low Expectations

By Dan L.

Dan L_OHS

It’s easy to have low expectations – the low hanging fruit for our self-confidence. Low expectations are almost always a sure thing and they rarely lead to disappointment. With low expectations, it’s easy to feel like we have accomplished something, even if that something was never that difficult to begin with – no challenge and very little reward. Truthfully, setting low expectations is just one way of saying to ourselves that we are content with mediocrity, which is a profane term that means we have made the choice never to experience the fullness of the life that has been laid out for us. As such, we will simply do what is comfortable which can be a gray and muted existence filled with the absence of passion. Dante speaks candidly and uncomfortably about mediocrity when he says that, “this miserable way is taken by the sorry souls of those who lived without disgrace and without praise.” In an effort to prevent failure, we may inadvertently sacrifice truly living.

Sadly, I believe that fear is the reason we are all too often satisfied with mediocrity. The fear of failure can be paralyzing and the fear of being looked upon by others as insufficient can be downright fatal – causing us to do everything in our power to simply blend in. Apply this to any aspect of our lives. As I’m writing I think, “I thought this was just supposed to be a high school problem.” I wish it was, but in my experience it seems that adults (all of us) have the same fears and insecurities we did when we were teenagers, but with the added pressures and responsibilities that come with being a “grown-up.”

All of this plays out in the arena of fitness, just as it does in business, family and every other area of life. In a culture that thrives on the pursuit of physical perfection (or should I say the appearance of it), our fears are feasted upon by judgmental eyes and gossiping mouths. It’s easy to look at the media and advertising, which we are inundated with every day, and choose to see everything we are not. Our vision for fitness may become more about being someone else than being the best version of who we already are. We let this strange twist on reality set unattainable expectations that only serve to feed the fear and medicate by simply lowering the expectations instead of changing them.

If we can pick one fear to start with – one fear to put to death – why not choose our fear of physical health? Why not make the decision to push ourselves and change our expectations? Too many hours in my own life have been consumed with fear and mediocrity, and it simply isn’t worth it. Enough with low expectations. In fact I think there is only one expectation worth having – to live the life that has been given to us and strive for excellence in everything even if it means experiencing failure.

There is nothing magical about these thirty days – nothing that can’t be undone in one week of normalcy. Yet it challenges us, if we choose to see it this way, to something greater. It challenges us to raise the bar in one area of our life – physical health. It challenges us to reject our fear of failure and our fear of insufficiency and see what excellence might actually look like for us. If I can fuel and train my body by constantly testing my limits and tracking my progress, can I not do the same for my mind and soul? All of these together are what make us human, and make us excellent at the things that matter: spouse, parent, and friend.

What if I fail at eating healthy? What if I am too entrenched in my old ways? What if I can’t find a way to substitute coconut milk for everything? What if I have to perform all of my god-forsaken hand-release pushups from my knees? One thing is for certain – if I don’t try, nothing will change, and that is what I am most afraid of (well, maybe not the coconut milk). Stop the Slop is whatever we choose to make of it, but I see it as another opportunity to see the fear in my life diminish into a puddle of blood and sweat on the floor (which must be properly wiped down and sanitized of course).

Pull Practice

Strength WOD:

3-3-3-3-3 
Deadlift

Conditioning:

For time:

500m Row
2 Minute Rest
400m Row
2 Minute Rest
300m Row
2 Minute Rest
200m Row
2 Minute Rest
100m Row 

Results

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Row Rest

Stop the Slop Announcement #1: Dan L. is our Essay Challenge Winner! Prizes are going to be announced along with other winners (Weight Loss and Performance WOD) but I wanted to put it out there and we will share his awesome essay on tomorrow’s post. Congrats!

Assembly

Gym Update: Progress! Painting finished last night and assembly has begun. It’s gonna start looking like a real gym again!

As the flooring, Rogue rig, and other things start getting put together and more organized, please help us out by doing the following regularly:

  1. Please help to put things back where they belong neatly! (ex. PVC’s back in the bucket, abMats stacked on each other not thrown onto the shelf, items that are mobility go only in the mobility bin which is labelled, bumpers and bars back in the correct spots, rowers back with other rowers, foam rollers back together or on the holder, etc.)
  2. Wipe down ALL equipment after you use it. This cuts down dramatically on the spread of World War Z through the box.
  3. Take your shit with you! If you brought a water bottle, 65 pack of hair scrunchies, 3 layers of t-shirts and hoody’s, pajama bottoms, 3 pairs of shoes, shakers, toys, games, chargers, etc. then leave with it! The lost/found will soon just be a “Lost” container where whatever goes in will be a mystery like the TV show and you will have no idea what happened to it. <Read: Trash Bin>
  4. Just to hammer this point a little more, PVC’s back in the bucket! There is only one bucket for them. The bathrooms, lobby, squat racks, gym floor, upstairs rooms, and squatch cave are not suitable for this, even if it seems like fun driving me batshit crazy.
  5. Don’t break stuff. Look I get it that stuff breaks. However, rowers don’t roll themselves into walls, bars don’t carry themselves into door frames, collars don’t fly across the room towards a bucket, barbells don’t fall on the floor and loaded bars with 5 and 10 lb. bumpers don’t spontaneously fall from overhead and become taco shells. Stuff is expensive. It’s like a law of science that in CrossFit gyms anything you break looks cheap but probably cost at least a $150 to $250 or more. As stuff breaks, we have to then decide how and when to replace it, meaning less stuff for everyone to use and wasteful spending. Please help us by treating it as if it is your own. Because honestly our gym is yours. It’s for our community of CrossFitters to come in and expect that our stuff is nice, functional and ready for you to be awesome with.

2RM Clean

Strength WOD:

2RM
Clean

* Touch and Go; Full

Conditioning:

3 Rounds for time of:

75 Double-Unders
50 AbMat Sit-ups
25 Air Squats

Results

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Cleans Matching Headbands

Congrats go out to: Everyone who PR’d their clean today (either 1 or 2RM), Lindsay for her 500th WOD, and Saer who recently got his first muscle-up!

Weigh-in’s tomorrow! If you didn’t weigh-in today and bought into the Stop the Slop Challenge please weigh-in on Wednesday.

SRCF 4.0 Update: Taping/Mud is underway of the walls, painting to begin either Sat. or Mon. 

Stop the Slop Challenge Update:

  • For the performance challenge we will revisit this WOD in Feb. as soon as we have the new pull-up rig installed. This will allow us to run the WOD and perform pull-ups to see who made the most improvement. However you scaled this WOD to start the challenge is exactly how you will repeat it.  This way we can measure % improved to determine a winner. Stay tuned for the date!
  • For those tackling the nutrition challenge make sure you get your weight recorded by Wed./Thurs. of this week. Tuesday 2/5 through Thursday 2/7 we will do the final weigh-in’s to calculate the person with the most % of weight loss. Please see a coach to get your weigh-in complete!
  • Anyone choosing the essay challenge must submit their essay by Wednesday 2/6. All essays will be judged by the coaches and voted for the best essay.
  • Prizes will be announced after all challenges are complete.  

M_Clean - 1 M_Clean - 2 M_Clean - 3

‘I’m Gonna Beat Khalipa’

Constantly Varied Kitchen: Bacon-Wrapped Jalapeno Poppers” with Nick Massie, CrossFit Journal video [ipod] [mov] [720 HD] [1080 HD] and recipe [pdf]

Workaround

4 Rounds for time:

400m Run
25 Kettlebell Swings (53#/35#)
40 Squats

or for those who did the above WOD at 0630 Thursday:

4 Rounds for time:

500m Row
400m Run

Results (both for Thurs 0630 and Fri classes)

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Choose Your WOD

So far the gym in on track and the larger space looks great! Next week is the framing/construction of the demising walls (for sound) and then sheetrocking and painting. While the demo and construction is underway the programming will adapt to what space and equipment we can access. Thanks for the patience and I promise you we will still do CrossFit during this phase. (Zumba doesn’t start until Sean finishes his dance training)

SRCF 4.0

“Speed Training” with Dan Bailey – video [ipod] [mov] [HD mov]

Constantly Varied Kitchen: Deep-Dish Breakfast Pizza” with Nick Massie, CrossFit Journal video [ipod] [mov] [720 HD] [1080 HD] and recipe [pdf]

"Stop the Slop" Performance Challenge 2.0

For Time:
400m Run 
40 Squats
30 AbMat Sit-ups
20 Push-ups
10 Pull-ups
20 Power Snatch (115#/75#)
10 Pull-ups
20 Push-ups
30 AbMat Sit-ups 
40 Squats 
400m Run

Results

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Sisterly Support:

Sister Support_Stop the Slop

Today was day 1 of our annual “Stop the Slop Challenge”; a 30 day nutrition, performance and essay challenge. This time we brought back the mash-up WOD but with a twist of “Baseline” and “Isabel” at a lighter load. Pairing up with someone to serve as your judge/counter enforced quality of movement and helped push your performance.

There are three challenges you can choose to participate in but you must “buy-in” to be eligible to win any of them. For those who are opting in to take any/or all three challenge(s) make sure you sign-up and bring your buy-in ($25 cash money for each challenge) no later than Wednesday Jan. 8. If you want to do two challenges and be eligible to win two then it’s $50 into the pot. 

To better understand the specific challenges READ YESTERDAY’S POST.

  • For the performance challenge we will revisit this WOD on Feb. 4th to see who makes the most improvement. However you scaled this WOD to start the challenge is exactly how you will repeat it.  This way we can measure % improved to determine a winner.
  • For those tackling the nutrition challenge make sure you get your weight recorded by Wed. of this week. On Monday 2/4 and Tuesday 2/5 we will do the final weigh-in’s to calculate the person with the most % of weight loss.
  • Anyone choosing the essay challenge must submit their essay by Wednesday 2/6. All essays will be judged by the coaches and voted for the best essay.
  • Prizes will be determined based on number of participants who buy-in. 

Make-ups:

If you are buying-in to the Performance Challenge and missed today’s workout you can make it up this week through Wednesday 1/8 but you will have to re-test on 2/4. If you don’t want to participate in any of the above challenges then simply show up for class and hit the workout hard each day. Nothing new.

Coach’s Tips:

For the next 30 days make them count. If you want to see positive results you have to have consistency. Consistency in your workouts, nutrition, recovery, and mobility. No matter what challenge you enter remember you cannot work your way out of a poor diet. You will see better results by sticking with a clean and healthy nutrition plan every single day then you will by coming in here and getting your ass kicked 2-4 times a week.

If you do this then you will see positive changes at the end of 30 days and beyond. Changes in your appearance maybe, but definitely changes in how you feel, recover, and function. If you make it through the first 30 days by stopping the slop you will have reached a point where you will likely know what effects both processed, refined sugar, alcohol and low carb crap has vs. what clean, natural foods have on your body. Then you will have an informed lifestyle choice to make.

We encourage everyone to eat clean and have provided everyone resources to use. If you aren’t following a paleo diet or a strict Whole30 then consider the Advocare 24 Day Challenge that is a 10 day Cleanse followed by a 14 day MNS (Metabolic Nutrition System) Phase that enhances weight loss when combined with clean eating.

Questions about food? Dig out the Whole9 Nutrition Guides you got in OnRamp and read up on what you should and should not be eating. Give it a shot. What have you got to lose?

The other part of the challenge is to focus on technique. Make every effort every time you come in the gym to learn, practice and perfect your movement. If you do that the PR’s will come and the injury bug will stay away.  3-2-1 Go!

Nutrition: How To Win An Argument With A Nutritionist – authoritynutrition.com

Interview techniques: Danny Broflex: Episode 1 – The Interview – video [ipod] [mov] [HD mov]