3 Rounds for time:
400m Run
12 Deadlift (Bodyweight)
21 Box Jump (24″/20″)
Results
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Sorry for the late post. We have been under quarantine:
Pre-WOD Mobility:
Community. Coaching. Caring. Since 2009.
3 Rounds for time:
400m Run
12 Deadlift (Bodyweight)
21 Box Jump (24″/20″)
Results
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Sorry for the late post. We have been under quarantine:
Pre-WOD Mobility:
Proceed through the sequence below completing as many reps as possible in 10 minutes of:
30 Snatch (M 75 / F 45 lbs)
30 Snatch (M 135 / F 75 lbs)
30 Snatch (M 165 / F 100 lbs)
Max Rep Snatch (M 210 / F 120 lbs)
This workout begins from the standing position with the barbell loaded to the starting weight. In the Snatch, the barbell goes directly from the ground to overhead in one motion without stopping at the shoulders. This can be a muscle snatch, a power snatch, a squat snatch or a split snatch. A clean and jerk is not permitted.
* No scaling loads allowed unless you cannot do the starting weight for a snatch. This means if you can only do the first load (75#/45#) for 30 reps then your WOD is 10 minutes to complete a scaled “Isabel”.
Results
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Don’t forget to post your score if you are competing in the Open on the Games site! Great job to everyone today who came in and worked on your snatch. Remaining athletes will go on Saturday or Friday pm.
This workout is one that seems to be getting a lot of “likes” and a surprising amount of flak at the same time for being “dangerous”. I would disagree with the dangerous part. If it’s at a gym that does not coach or set expectations and allows people to try and “miracle” it overhead then I can see the potential for danger. If it’s conducted by someone who knows their limitations but is unrealistic about them and thinks they are the next US Olympic team hopeful then it’s likely a disaster waiting to happen. However if you are smart, know your capabilities, and work smart then you will come away with a score that likely reflects the level of strength and skill in this lift. This perspective will help you understand why you may be getting extra attention from a coach during a WOD. If you need to fix something we will do our best to tell you and cue you. Please stop, slow down and internalize or ask for clarification (or say “show me what I’m doing” and “Show me what you want”) so that you can move better and SAFER. Remember we are exercising. Focus on technique then intensity.
From Ricky Frausto of CF Omaha regarding Open WOD 12.2:
“There are a lot of people out there that both love the workout or disagree with the programming of 12.2. From an outside perspective, it does look rather suspect as the snatch is one of the most technical movements in all of sports. Technique at relatively significant loads requires absolute preciseness and accuracy. Higher strength levels can also help but at a point can also become counterproductive without the proper mechanics. At significant loads, higher rep ranges and overall volume must be kept in control relative to the athlete you’re working with.
I have been approached as to my take on this workout and here are my first thoughts: I both agree and disagree with this workout (mostly agree). We will see breakdown in form and this coming from a gym that prides itself on technique at a higher volume. The goal of the coach is to then be the one that steps in and makes sure that athletes stay safe. The majority of athletes will only get 30 reps and there will be a bit fewer that get deep into the next 30. Those that risk getting hurt the most are the ones that can’t perform a snatch (how it’s supposed to be performed) at the lightest weight. They will do the poorest on 135/75(100) and most certainly won’t be able to hit 165/100(120). Those are the ones we have to watch out for. For the rest…. Well, those that have average to better technique but are newer and weaker will not get very far but will learn how to snatch. They will actually hit a few at the next weight and be a better Olympic lifter because of it. They will actually learn something and it will stick with them. This will be their greatest teacher. Better than any Olympic lifting coach can help them.
The upper echelon athletes will get as far as their size and technique will allow and like any sport, there may be an injury but the percentage will be low just like the sport of Oly lifting. They can take care of themselves and have practiced for countless hours higher loads at low volume, have occasionally taken the volume up with moderate to significant weight, and/or have done many reps at lighter loads. The upper echelon athletes know how to practice and differentiate between practice and competition. They spend countless hours not just bringing up capacity as it pertains to metabolic conditioning but also mechanics, mechanics, mechanics. They are better because their mechanics put yours to shame. This doesn’t exclude them from injury and doesn’t change the fact that this workout potentially has them doing 90 reps or so of a very technical movement (only seen in CrossFit) but it does make it a little bit of a different workout for them compared to everyone else.
So really, we only have to worry about that middle group. Strong enough but don’t know how. Those are the ones coaches have to watch out for. Those are the ones that have the strength to bypass the technique but that only works for so long and is what gives the sport a bad name. Their unwillingness to embrace the movement as it should be performed but rather focusing only on points and having the strength to allow this is what makes this workout not the best. On paper, it may come off as stupid workout but in the gyms, with good coaches who aren’t afraid to stop a workout, it’s a different story.”
Note: If your birthday is in Feb. or Mar. and you want to have a brithday WOD let us know and we will program it after the Open is over.
CrossFit Games Open 12.2 workout instructions and demo – video [wmv] [mov] [HD mov]
Rich Froning 98 reps, Dan Bailey 95 reps
Workout video demo with Elijah Muhammad 80 reps – [wmv] [mov]
Choose:
“Lite” WOD (less filling) for time:
20 Handstand Push-ups
40 Toes-to-Bar
600m Run
60 Push Press (75#/55#)
120 Double Unders
“Main Site” WOD (tastes great) for time:
25 Handstand Push-ups
50 Toes-to-Bar
800m Run
75 Push Press (75#/55#)
150 Double Unders
WOD Demo at the CrossFit Competitor’s Course – video [wmv] [mov] [HD mov]
Results
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Toes to bar:
Open WOD 12.2 has been announced. Click the link below to read up and then watch the video for some snatch tips. Tomorrow we play with snatches!
CrossFit Games Open Workout 12.2 Announced.
“Efficiency Tips: The Snatch” with Eric O’Connor and Chris Spealler, free CrossFit Journal video, preview – [wmv] [mov]
Download a PDF of the workout description and scorecard
Here are the expectations for Open Week 2 for everyone:
Workout 12.2 (For Thursday all classes)
Proceed through the sequence below completing as many reps as possible in 10 minutes of:
30 Snatch (M 75 / F 45 lbs)
30 Snatch (M 135 / F 75 lbs)
30 Snatch (M 165 / F 100 lbs)
Max Rep Snatch (M 210 / F 120 lbs)
This workout begins from the standing position with the barbell loaded to the starting weight. In the Snatch, the barbell goes directly from the ground to overhead in one motion without stopping at the shoulders. This can be a muscle snatch, a power snatch, a squat snatch or a split snatch. A clean and jerk is not permitted.
Take care of yourself. Mobility Class each Wednesday night at 6pm:
Strength WOD:
Every minute on the minute (EMOM) for 10 minutes complete:
5 Front Squats – unbroken (135#/95#)
* If you miss a round in a minute, then complete the set and rest next minute. Post total rounds completed.
Checkout WOD:
3 Rounds for time of:
400m Run
25 AbMat Sit-ups
Rest 90 Seconds
Results
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Roll out then squat:
One version of the history of the burpee: Reebok Crossfit Games: History of the Burpee
Team Purple:
3 Rounds for Time of:
300m Row
20 Wall Balls (20#/14#)
10 Pull-ups
Results
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Wall Balls:
Just doing what we do best:
Fast metcon today. All go and no slow. Tomorrow will include some barbell work with a slightly different format that I borrowed from CF Advantage. Move fast and don’t waste time between each mini-WOD.
Matt and Cherie Chan profile and commercial for Rogue Fitness – video [wmv] [mov] [HD mov]
12.1 Done and in the books:
Quote of the Day: “When I started crossfit last year I couldn’t even run a mile. The box had a goal setting speaker from Lululemon and I made a goal to do a half marathon. Today I achieved my goal and actually ran the first 7 consecutive miles which would be unheard of a year ago. I finished the race and feel amazing!!!! I stepped out of my box when joining crossfit which has made me step out of the box with new athletic activities I would never try normally!!! Thanks for having a box that makes me step out of the box!!!” ~ Angie
Congrats Angie!
Greg knocks out another burpee:
“Down. Up. Down. Up” from CrossFit Delaware Valley (PA).
Lucy agreed to share her outstanding “Stop the Slop Challenge” Essay talking about her Whole30 experience and what it meant to her. Read her very open and honest account below of what she deals with in having celiac disease and why eating clean and doing CrossFit can be truly lifechanging. Thank you for sharing your story!
My Whole30 Journey: Lucy
The WOD for me is the easiest part.
Don’t get me wrong I hurt and I ache and often long for it to be over. I have shed blood, sweat (lots of) and tears during WOD’s, but I can take the pain. None of that compares to the daily battle I have with myself.
Too much information I hear you shout! I’m British, we don’t like to bare our souls, or what the Brits see as ‘weakness’. But really I want to share this, because for me it is at the heart of what CrossFit and The Whole30 is and has done for my life.
I have always been ‘sporty’ from riding, swim team, cross country running, field hockey during school and rowing for University, then for a London rowing club. Being ‘fit’ , an athlete and slim was just who I was, I didn’t know any other way.
This all changed when I went to Africa in 1996. I got Giardia, while I was there and from that day onwards I didn’t feel good. Not at all! My heart would race, I started to gain weight and cellulite (shock, horror). I was lethargic and couldn’t train with my crew anymore (I was Women’s Captain of the Rowing club at the time). I would have panic attacks and bouts of depression. I couldn’t sleep. I would catch every bug going (and when you live in London, that’s a lot of bugs), I started to have IBS and had to run out of client meetings 2-3 times every hour, because I couldn’t wait. I developed a horrendous, raw, blistering, painful, swelling and rash around the eyes, which often made me look like I had endured 10 rounds with Mike Tyson. I was ashamed of my face and doing my job became hard. I itched and ached all over. My joints hurt. The week before we married I couldn’t have engagement photos taken, because my face was so swollen. On my wedding day, I didn’t feel beautiful.
I was desperate to find answers, I was angry.
The doctors gave me steroids, told me I was stressed (too right I was), anti-spasmodic drugs for my bowel, anti depressants…the list goes on. They thought I was a hypochondriac, I lost faith in the medical profession. I took matters into my own hands and visited Nutritionists in Harley Street, Dermatologists, Gastroenterologists, Ayurvedic healers, Naturopaths, Homeopaths………all had different angles, but none of them an answer.
Finally, one day after a business lunch with lots of white bread sandwiches and cookies for lunch, I was terribly sick. It suddenly occurred to me, that I was always really ill after white bread. I started to cut it out of my diet and felt a bit better.
Over the next year or so this helped, but I still experienced periodic symptoms, sickness, general malaise and had gained weight, which I was unable to shift.
Only in 2004 when we emigrated to the US at my first doctors appt., did the doc say she thought I had Celiac disease. Hallelujah! Gluten was the enemy! From that day onwards life got immeasurably better. It took me two years to get to the heart of what I could eat and what I couldn’t and find places that sold it, but life was finally good again. I started eating a whole food diet with lots of whole grains, organic vegetables, pulses etc, plus juicing too.
In spite of this turnaround, the cost of all of this was I had lost my old self. I was plump around the edges (more than), puffy, had huge cravings food wise, either for sugar or carbs and was bloated a lot of the time. I had accepted and resigned myself to being grey, over weight and middle aged and I looked old. After all isn’t that what happens when you hit forty? I just looked like a lot of my relatives did at my age, right?
Truth is, my body was starved of nutrients, there were holes in my gut from years of consuming gluten, that were still healing but leaking stuff into my system, my blood sugar was wreaking havoc and I was still totally out of balance diet wise.
Then I met Michelle and Tom.
They were and are bright eyed and bushy tailed and freakin’ fit! How did you look like that? How do you get like that? I asked Michelle one day, walked into their garage gym the next and two years later I am fitter than I have possibly ever been, I am happier than I have been in a long time and I cannot imagine a life without CrossFit and my SnoRidge CrossFit family.
But, as I said, the WOD is the easy part for me.
The Whole30 was and is still the toughest challenge, but the big turning point for me. It is really hard. Hard to stick to, hard to plan, especially with the crazy lives we lead, hard to ignore the incessant craving in the first two weeks, hard to resist the pressure of family and friends to just have one drink, or just one slice of pizza, so hard not to have cream in my coffee, hard to sit in front of the tv and not comfort eat, hard to keep to the serving sizes….hard to turn down the fries….its a constant mental dialogue and battle. But, it’s so worth it.
I am still fighting to lose that last 20 lbs, my body is still healing, I still get sick if I digest even the tiniest amounts of gluten, but I know that, slowly, I can get back to optimal health and well being by eating The Whole30 way. Only now, without all grains and dairy, is my body finally healing. When I do it and stick to it I feel amazing, there is clarity in my life, I look shiny and clean and have boundless energy. It doesn’t get much better than that. I have that fit, zippy, forty something in shorts, socks and a vest in my sights and I’m not stopping now.
Right now, one month in, I too am bright eyed, bushy tailed and one day in the not so distant future 20 lbs. lighter. I don’t feel old anymore. I’m not angry any more. Whole30 is the only way forward for me.
I am, finally, me again.
~ Lucy
Teams of 2 complete for time:
Chin Over Bar Pull-up Hold
60 Hand Release Push-ups
Deadlift Hold (225#/155#)
1000m Row
100m Run
80 Kettlebell Swings (53#/35#)
Overhead Bumper Plate Hold (45#/25#)
100 Squats
* One bar per team, Partner 1 begins with the hold (or run) while Partner 2 begins completing the required number of reps. (ex. Partner 1 holds Chin Over bar while Partner 2 completes HR Push-ups. Swap when partner 1 drops from bar)
** Switch when Partner 1 cannot maintain the hold position (or when Partner 1 returns from the 100m run)
*** Alternate until the task is done and move on.
Results
I borrowed the idea for this WOD from one that was done at the UFC Fan Expo/CrossFit Men’s Final Event last year (video below). Having just tried that version of the WOD with Mark this is what felt like a good mix of scaled movements and logistics for a Saturday class. Having to test your grip strength and crank out reps or meters for your partner to minimize the struggle to just hold on is a fun new way to train. We will see this format again for team workouts.
Congrats to all who did 12.1 today and left it all out there. There was a lot of heart, effort, sweat and almost tears (as well as a few PR’s). After tomorrow the CF Games Open WOD 12.1 will be in the books. As of right now our team is tied for 24th in the region. Let’s hope we can hold on each week to stay in the top 30!
“K-Starr Plans For the Open” by the CrossFit Games
UFC Fan Expo/CF Men’s Final Event:
21-15-9 Reps of each for time of:
Power Cleans (115#/75#)
Thrusters (115#/75#)
Results
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See? We’re not the only ones who care about putting things back where they belong…
“Police Your Sh*t” by CrossFit One World
“Ode To Fran” – video [wmv] [mov] [HD mov]
Markessa reveals his…I mean, her strategy for qualifying for the Games:
For a downloadable PDF of the workout, click here.
Complete as many reps as possible in 7 minutes of:
Burpees (Jump and touch target that is 6″ above reach with both hands)
Checkout WOD:
Tabata AbMat Sit-ups
Results
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Kristan Clever 128 reps, Rebecca Voigt 107 reps, Katie Hogan 91 reps.
Submit your results as part of the CrossFit Games Open.
Buck Furpees:
Workout 12.1 is almost in the books! Great effort and camaraderie today. The CF Teens group joined in and after some skill work finished with the same WOD and the same standards! Everyone (adults and teens) did a great job judging, counting and pushing one another. Reps were all legit and standards were maintained. All in all a good day. Except for the 7 minutes of burpee Hell…
Workout video demo with Katie Hogan – video [wmv] [mov] [HD mov]
Notes:
For those who are registered for the Open your last chance is this Saturday at 11am (including “do-overs”). Make sure you submit your score on the Games site NLT Saturday. If you aren’t registered we will let you make up this WOD up Friday through Saturday at 0930 class.
Note this doesn’t guarantee that future weeks we will have any make-ups for non-registered athletes if you miss that week’s Open WOD. Depending on what the next workouts are and the logistics required you can expect to have to show up on Thursday to hit it (again Sat. at 11am is for registered competitors).
10 Individually Timed Max Efforts of:
100m Row
Rest as needed between intervals, post time of each row
Post WOD:
Mobility work
Results
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Okay peeps and coaches, here’s the skinny for WOD 12.1 of the Open that we will run tomorrow.
Complete as many reps as possible in 7 minutes of:
Burpees
You must hit your chest and thighs to deck and stand and jump to hit a target with both hands that is 6″ minimum above your full standing reach. If you miss then you just jump and re-touch (you don’t have to go back to ground).
1. Each class you will pair up and go in a minimum of 2 waves.
2. If you are registered and competing in the Open then you will go first.
3. Judge is also responsible for counting and calling “no rep”.
4. Only two things to judge: chest not touching the floor and both hands not hitting target.
5. Push your fellow athlete!
Target standards:
1. You must be measured (measuring tape is on the box with the iPod and speakers) to a target at 6″ minimum above your outstretched hand overhead
2. Target options:
– You may use the cage (different height bars)
– You may adjust a set of rings and place a PVC across them (helps prevent sway)
– You may adjust a single ring to height
– You may use the adjustable pull-up bar on the cage (Kids bar)
– You may tape two pieces of tape hanging down from the pull-up cage to stop at min. 6″ above reach
– You may loop two pull-up bands to the cage and tie them in the middle to height
3. Both hands must hit the target.
Have fun and remember burpees suck! Buck Furpees!
For a downloadable PDF of the workout, click here.
CrossFit Games Open 12.1 workout instructions and demo – video [wmv] [mov] [HD mov]