Tag Archive for 'CrossFit'

Be Well Rounded or Die: Report from the CrossFit Games

Where the theme at the Northeast Qualifier for the CrossFit Games was virtuosity. The Games themselves were different. They were about all-around fitness, with a stress on both ‘all-around’ and on ‘fitness’.

Sand Bag Sprint -- Annie Thorsdottir -- CrossFit Games 2009

Sand Bag Sprint -- Annie Thorsdottir -- CrossFit Games 2009

One of the CrossFit definitions of fitness is “performing well at any and every task imaginable” and the Games this year emphasized exactly this dimension. From unusual tasks like hammering a 4′ metal stake into the ground on the first day to strength and skill challenges like hand stand push ups and muscle ups on the second day, the winners were those able to perform in all these dimensions. Of the sixteen male and sixteen female competitors starting the day on Sunday, only twelve men and ten women were able to complete the assigned tasks.

CrossFit Games 2009 — Deadlift Ladder from Mark Connell on Vimeo.

The total amount of work was also amazing with five WODs on Saturday and three more on Sunday. Not one of which gave the athletes a chance to rest. The program was:

Event 1 – The Run — 7.1 k trail run
Event 2 – The Deadlift — One rep max, working up 10# per lift
Event 3 – The Sandbag Hill Sprint — Run 170m uphill carrying two/one 35# sandbags
Event 4 – Row / Hammer Stake — Row 500m, Hammer a stake into the ground, Row 500m
Event 5 – The Couplet — Three rounds of 30 wall ball shots and 30 squat snatches
Event 6 – The Snatch — One rep max
Event 7 – The Triplet — AMRAP 4x hand stand pushups, 8x kettle bell swings and 12x glute ham sit ups
Event 8 – The Chipper — 15 barbells cleans, 30 toes to bar, 30 box jumps, 10 muscle-ups, 30 DB push presses, 30 double-unders, 15 thrusters, 30 pull-ups, 30 burpees and walking lunges holding a bumper plate overhead.

Jason Khalipa--Hand Stand Push Up

Jason Khalipa--Hand Stand Push Up

The starting fields of 74 men and women were reduced by ten competitors after the second event and a further ten after the fourth event, leaving only 54 athletes for the last event on Saturday. It was here that exhaustion really began to bite. Almost a third of both the women’s and the men’s fields failed to complete the couplet in the 20 minutes allowed.

One interesting vignette during the couplet was Jason Khalipa (last year’s winner and coming from behind this year due to a disastrous 72nd place finish in the first event). Rather than doing an explosive squat snatch with the 75# bar, he would muscle snatch the bar overhead with his enormous shoulder strength and then squat to complete the lift. Doing this he saved his explosive power for the wall ball shots and sailed to a first place finish 38 seconds ahead of the second place competitor.

Mikko Salo -- One rep max snatch attempt (Mike Burgener coaching)

Mikko Salo -- One rep max snatch attempt (Mike Burgener coaching)

Sunday dawned with sixteen finalist women and men. The day began with a one rep max snatch followed by two brutal workouts which would go on to eliminate nearly a third of each field with DNFs.

The triplet WOD began with four hand stand pushups, done on parallettes where the athletes had to touch their heads on a stack of bumper plates below hand level. Four of the sixteen female finalists could not complete a single round of hand stand push ups and were eliminated from the competition as DNF. While all the men finished, there was a wide split from first to sixteenth place with the winner getting 172 reps in the WOD and the last man only 27 reps (where each round of the triplet included 24 reps).

Tanya Wagner -- One rep max snatch

Tanya Wagner -- One rep max snatch

The final event of the Games, the appropriately named Chipper WOD, really ate up what was left of the field. Of the remaining twelve female finalists, two more DNF’ed by failing to complete the ten required muscle ups. The carnage was even higher in the men’s field with four DNFs due to failure at muscle ups and a fifth DNF due to time.

CrossFit Games 2009 — Thruster Overload from Mark Connell on Vimeo.

Loud cheers went up during this last workout each time the Icelandic competitors completed a muscle up. Annie Thorsdottir (2nd place woman going into this last event) and Sveinbjorn Sveinbjornsson (in the men’s field) had never done a muscle up before Sunday morning. Despite expert last minute coaching by Nicolle, Annie only completed one and Sveinbjorn finished with eight.

Mikko Salo -- Finishing the plate lunge on the chipper workout and winning the overall title

Mikko Salo -- Finishing the plate lunge on the chipper workout and winning the overall title

The day ended with Finnish fireman Mikko Salo taking the men’s championship and Tanya Wagner the women’s title. Over the sixteen WODs completed by the pair, there was only one first place finish (Mikko in the chipper WOD). This is great proof of the CrossFit training philosophy that fittest athlete is not the one who is outstanding in one or two dimensions, but the one who is pretty good in all dimensions.

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Stacey Kroon -- Muscle Up

Stacey Kroon -- Muscle Up

Stacey Kroon of CrossFit Boston (and first place finisher in the Northeast Qualifier for the CrossFit Games) finished in tenth place overall, displaying her usual quiet determination as she worked through these punishing events. James Hobart of CrossFit Boston (and first place finisher in the Northeast Qualifier for the CrossFit Games) got eliminated after the second event due to the enormous strength on display in the men’s field—sixteen men worked up to the highest weight on the deadlift (505#) resulting in a sixteen-way tie for first in this event.

[See the nuBound stream of Tweets and Twitpics from the course of the Games: http://twitter.com/nuBound and scroll back to July 12th and 13th]

A hero from CrossFit Boston — RIP Christian Charles Major

People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.
George Orwell (alternately attributed to Winston Churchill)

Christian sucking it up at BUD/S in Coronado back in the day

Christian sucking it up at BUD/S in Coronado back in the day

Those of us in civilian life owe a debt of gratitude to our brethren in the military who’ve made many sacrifices this past decade. In addition to being rough men ready to do violence, a surprising number are also kind men ready to do good. Christian embodied both capabilities.

A former soldier, who was working as a private security contractor in Afghanistan, Christian passed away two weeks ago (from non combat related causes). Babatim over on the blog FreeRangeInternational.com describes working with Christian:

I instantly became a big fan of his when I saw him interacting with the local beggar kids on our first morning together. He had exceptional language skills, he was a very big and very fit guy, had an infectious smile, great sense of humor and like all the good guys in my line of work a tender heart. As many of us do he sponsored children from the slums paying them to go to school. Unlike many of us he followed up on his investment ensuring unscrupulous family members did not take the money from his charges and force them to beg in other parts of the city. Christian Major was a good man

I met Christian only once, a year-and-a-half ago during the week between X-mas and New Year’s, when he was on leave in town. Although he was doing another workout, he came over (without my asking) to spot a 135# bar while I was doing floor wipes.

This is of a piece with the things those who knew him better have written. He didn’t have to break his workout and I could have struggled through the sets myself. But, it was the gesture of a good guy.

Neal Thompson of CrossFit Boston
put together a Hero WOD to honor the memory of Christian.

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NB–Originally this post made the mistake of identifying Christian as a “former SEAL”. While he did attend BUD/S, he did not finish the course. Thanks to the friend of Christian’s, who was in the Army and at BUD/S with him, for pointing this out. Please note that Christian never claimed to be a SEAL; that was my mistake alone.

Nonetheless, as his friend noted “Christian had several friends that were SEAL’s and they have told me that they thought of him as a special operator, as do I. The guy was amazing. He has done more things in a combat theater than most special operations guys I know personally, but he wasn’t qualified [as a SEAL].”

World to End, CrossFitters and Paleo Eaters Survive

Wheat spike in a field

Wheat spike in a field

Literally no, but Richard Fernandez illustrates a larger point with a crisis that’s threatening to wipe out 80 percent of the world’s wheat crop. A new strain of stem rust, a fungus that destroys wheat, has begun spreading around the world and the only way to combat it is to replace existing strains of wheat with rust resistant varieties.

(CrossFitters and people eating paleo will survive, of course, since they are not eating wheat any way).

The larger point is important. Crises happen when something unpredictable occurs. Since the predictable happens with regularity, plans exist to acommodate and manage. When the improbable happens, things fall apart and it’s only those with spare capacity or extra resources that survive.

Hernandez notes, “when the danger posed by a rare but catastrophic event is factored into the picture, the simplistic vision of an over-capitalized, excessively-scientific and inhuman West is replaced by an appreciation of what it is in times of crisis: the stored fat of a world which will face the occasional existential crisis”. For stem rust this means the ability of labs, across the world, over the course of a decade to develop new, rust-resistant strains of wheat. Spare capability is the ultimate key to survival.

Which brings us back to the CrossFit prescription for fitness. “Routine is the enemy”. In an extreme situation, it’s those with the flexibility to adapt and the capacity to do more that survive.

“The Difference” — Getting inside the head of an athlete

Rafael gently encouraging James to row a little harder.  Photo - Evan Saint Clair.

Rafael gently encouraging James to row a little harder. Photo - Evan Saint Clair.

Patrick Cummings over at Again Faster reflects on the impossible to capture essence that separates elite athletes from the merely good ones.

Virtuosity : Efficiency : Performance

Virtuosity is much discussed in the CrossFit community.

Every time we walk onto the floor at CrossFit Boston the lead instructors (including Neal Thompson, Jon Gilson and Eva Claire “EC” Synkowski) emphasize proper technique as the most important lesson. The refrain is that the number of reps doesn’t matter; perfect form is what makes the difference. Counting pushups when your chest didn’t touch the floor or pullups when you haven’t gotten above the bar might allow you to “count” more reps in any workout. But unless you’ve done the movements correctly you’ve not accomplished more, you’ve only pretended that a poor performance was better than it actually was.

Virtuosity : Efficiency : Performance (Stacey) from Mark Connell on Vimeo.

As a spectator at the CrossFit Games Northeast Qualifier over Memorial Day weekend I saw several hundred people making all out efforts. What separated the winners was the ability to perform more efficiently. The first place finishers, Stacey Kroon for the women and James Hobart for the men, are both instructors at CrossFit Boston.

Bent elbows pulling the clean ... Wrong!

Bent elbows pulling the clean ... Wrong!

The folks pictured above were working to their limits in cleaning a 155 lb barbell, but faults in their form left them doing more work than they needed to do. Pulling up on the bar with bent arms is like lifting a weight tied to a spring. The work done by the muscles in their arms is all wasted effort. In contrast, the efficient technique is to pull with straight arms, which is comparable to lifting a weight tied to a rope. Pictured below are Stacey on the left and James on the right pulling the barbell into the air. By keeping their arms straight, they use the bigger muscles of the hips, the posterior chain and the shoulders, while avoiding unnecessary effort in their arms.

Straight elbows pulling the clean ... Right!

Straight elbows pulling the clean ... Right!

The video below shows James doing kettle bell swings during the final day of competition. Compare James’ form with the fellow in the background (who starts swinging a kettle bell at 9 sec into the video). Like he did with the clean, James leaves his arms straight like ropes and uses the power of his hips and posterior chain to move the kettle bell. The fellow in the back uses his arms to lift the kettle bell, while for James the kettle bell moves as a result of the follow through from opening his hips. It’s easy to see which athlete will tire first in this exercise.

Virtuosity : Efficiency : Performance (James) from Mark Connell on Vimeo.

Virtuosity is key. Mastering technique allows an athlete to operate at peak efficiency. In a situation like the CrossFit Games, where several hundred elite athletes are competing, the prize goes not to the biggest nor the strongest, but to the most efficient. The result is top performance.

EC and Jon of CrossFit Boston at the CRASH-Bs

EC (aka Gunzelle) Synkowski at the CRASH-Bs

EC (aka Gunzelle) Synkowski at the CRASH-Bs

EC at the finish of her pull, and Jon acting as cox, at the CRASH-Bs. Featured on the main CrossFit site today.