Saturday, October 31, 2009

Will CrossFit Make American Kids Smarter?


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Rest Day or Make up Day
*if you missed a day this week go back and make it up


Will CrossFit Make American Kids Smarter?
by Lisa Bakshi



Lisa Bakshi is a 2nd grade teacher in San Diego, California. She has been CrossFitting for a few years, and recently introduced CrossFit Kids workouts to her class. She has seen a statistically significant improvement in their academic performance. She wonders if there is something universally applicable here.


Fact 1: America is falling behind the rest of the world in the classroom.
Fact 2: Classroom time devoted to math and language arts—and to… Continue Reading, Courtesy of CrossFit, Inc

Friday, October 30, 2009

Soggy Saturday

Its going to be a wet one tomorrow... but once you start to sweat you wont even notice!


Workout of the Day:
In groups of three complete the following:

400m Run
(everyone must finish before moving on)
150 Back Squats #45 w/75m
125 Wallball Shots 10'/12'm
100 Box jumps 20''w/24''m

FOR TIME!
Break down the reps between all 3 people however you see fit


Leila rockin the KB swings!

Performance and Health
By Tony Leyland

Do your friends and family think you are a little crazy for doing CrossFit? At the very least I think that the majority of CrossFitters are viewed as a group highly devoted to elite fitness, conscious of their bodies and diets, and perhaps "taking it all a bit too far." My wife thinks my love of CrossFit is all part of my midlife crisis but harmless enough—despite the fact that I spent a couple thousand dollars on my garage gym. (Of course, with a good friend getting a classic Lotus Elan when he turned 50, my wife thinks she is way ahead.)
Maybe seeing the term "Forging Elite Fitness" on the website is why some view CrossFit as being for a select few, but I would suggest the main reason is the standard understanding that "fitness for health" means traditional cardio exercise and maybe some low-weight, high-repetition resistance training (with machines and/or springs).

To be continued

-Coach Corey

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Thursday, October 29, 2009

Tabata Tune Up!

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"Tabata Something Else"

Pull-ups
Push-ups
Sit-ups
Squats

*each exercise will have 8 rounds, 20 seconds max effort, 10 seconds rest. Total of 32 intervals.

Tabata Tune Up
By Matt Fitzgerald

The Tabata Protocol isn't easy, but it can dramatically increase your aerobic and anaerobic capacity in just minutes a month.

As with many things, fitness results have to be earned. The fact is, nothing works if you don’t, and there may be no better proof of this principle than the Tabata Protocol. This unique workout has been shown to produce astonishing fitness gains, despite taking just 14 minutes to complete — and that’s if you include a five-minute warm-up and a five-minute cool-down. In other words, the workout itself takes a mere four minutes. But be forewarned: It is one tremendously tough workout.


Just ask Ed Reis, 33, a management consultant in Mission Viejo, Calif. He’s very familiar with the Tabata Protocol, which consists of six to eight 20-second intervals performed at absolute maximum intensity on a stationary bike (or any appropriate exercise), separated by 10-second periods of rest. He was introduced to the workout by his personal trainer, Brian MacKenzie, CFT, CCS, owner of Genetic Potential and CrossFit Newport Beach, training facilities in Newport Beach, Calif.

“The first time I did Tabata,” Reis recalls, “I looked at my heart-rate monitor about a third of the way into the session. I saw a bigger number than I had ever seen before, and I thought, I have how many more of these?!”

Reis was able to complete the workout, but admits he still gets butterflies every time MacKenzie prescribes another set of Tabata intervals. “Some days I would definitely rather do a longer workout than go that hard!” he says. “But the results are worth it. Within a couple weeks, my legs got stronger, I had more energy, and I could play soccer and basketball for much longer before I got tired.”

MacKenzie concurs. “Doing Tabata intervals will enhance the overall benefits you get from training, from fat loss to strength development.” In other words, if you want to crank up your fitness and you’re willing to work hard to get there, Tabata might just be the ticket.  Click HERE to ready further, courtesty of Experience Life Magazine.

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Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Burpee 101

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"Twins"

#1
Row 250m
Burpees

#2
Thrusters
Back Extension

#3
Tire Flipping

*the entire WOD is dependent on group #1 with the row.  After the 250m are complete then everyone switches stations

Burpee 101

It is unfortunate that many "self-appointed" fitness gurus deceive the public with expensive, ineffective gadgets and gimmicks. A quick browse of the Internet will lead you to many sites offering "miracle" solutions to fat loss and fitness.
Unfortunately, this nonsense is not confined to the Internet. Each month we can browse the magazine rack at our local bookstore and find a dozen or more fitness magazines all claiming to contain the secret to strength and six-pack abs.

These magazines are loaded with repackaged routines and exercises. Their authors are often guilty of overcomplicating the training process.

By overcomplicating the process, gurus gain control over the public. Many athletes are left lost and confused when scouring through each month's new "training breakthrough". It gets expensive trying to keep up with each magazine and training gadget.

And what about the late night infomercials? For three monthly payments of $29.95 you can unlock the secrets to miracle fat loss and fitness...

Ahh!! These con artists make me sick to my stomach. If you are equally disgusted, I have the perfect solution. Forget about all the gimmicks and enter the world of burpee conditioning.

Read further for more burpee 101..........., courtesy of bodybuilding.com

Can CrossFit Work for My Grandparents?

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"Corey"

Walking Lunges, 50 meters
25 Sit-Ups
25 Mountain Climbers

4 Rounds FT (for time)


Crossfit Intro from htLin. on Vimeo.



Senior and Kids
by Gregg Glassman


We get email asking about the appropriateness of our program for your kids but even more concerning your parents and grandparents – our seniors. Let’s start with them.

The needs of the elderly and professional athletes vary by degree, not kind. Where one needs functional competency to maintain independence, the other needs functional mastery to maintain dominance. Improved hip capacity will help a pro ball player’s throw… Click Here to Read Futher, courtesy of CrossFit, Inc

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Tuesday, October 27, 2009

The Paleo Diet Exposed!!!

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5 Pull ups
5 Dips
8 Jack knife Push ups
12 KB Swings
AMRAP in 20 minutes
(as many rounds as possible in 20 minutes)

What is the Paleo Diet?

The Paleo Diet is a way of eating in the modern age that best mimics diets of our hunter-gatherer ancestors - combinations of lean meats, seafood, vegetables, fruits, and nuts. By eating the foods that we are genetically adapted to eat, followers of the Paleo Diet are naturally lean, have acne-free skin, improved athletic performance, and are experiencing relief from numerous metabolic-related and autoimmune diseases.

If you are ready to be lean and healthy, then look around and subscribe to our newsletter. Learn how to lower your risk of cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes, obesity, osteoporosis, arthritis, acne, gastrointestinal disease, autoimmune diseases, and more. On this website, and in our books and newsletter, you’ll learn the latest science and practical scientific tips that will lead to optimum health and performance. This truly is the world’s healthiest diet.
Click HERE for further info.............courtesy of http://www.paleodiet.com/



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Monday, October 26, 2009

What is Fitness and Who is Fit?

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400m Run
21 Deadlifts(135lbs/95lbs)
400m Run
15 Deadlifts
400m Run
9 Deadlifts


Deadlift Demo from crossfitoneworld on Vimeo.


What is Fitness and Who is Fit?


Outside Magazine crowned triathlete Mark Allen "the fittest man on earth." Let’s just assume for a moment that this famous six-time winner of the IronMan Triathlon is the fittest of the fit, then what title do we bestow on the decathlete Simon Poelman who also possesses incredible endurance and stamina, yet crushes Mr. Allen in any comparison that includes strength, power, speed, and coordination?

Perhaps the definition of fitness doesn’t include strength, speed, power, and coordination though that seems rather odd. Merriam Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary defines "fitness" and being "fit" as the ability to transmit genes and being healthy. No help there. Searching the Internet for a workable, reasonable definition of fitness yields disappointingly little. Worse yet, the NSCA, the most respected publisher in exercise physiology, in their highly authoritative Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning doesn’t even attempt a definition.

Crossfit's Fitness

For CrossFit the specter of championing a fitness program without clearly defining what it is that the program delivers combines elements of fraud and farce. The vacuum of guiding authority has therefore necessitated that CrossFit’s directors provide their own definition of fitness. That's what this issue of CrossFit Journal is about, our "fitness."

Click Here to Read Further, Courtesy of Crossfit, Inc

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Saturday, October 24, 2009

Get Out and Move!

10/24/09 and 10/25/09

Day of rest or makeup day
*If you missed a day, make it up.

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Thursday, October 22, 2009

Got Ambition?

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50' OH Lunges (45lbM/25lbF)
20 DB Snatch: Right Arm (35lbM/20lbF)
15 Push ups
20 DB Snatch: Left Arm (35lbM/20lbF)
15 Sit ups

3 Rounds

Everyone has a goal or some type of ambition, what is yours? It doesn't matter who you are, you have a goal and in some form or way you are moving towards it and if not you need to. We only live once and it's important that we work as hard as we can, play as hard as we can and strive for our goals as hard as we can! Too many people settle for less. Whether it's weight loss goal, performance goal, or overall health goal you need to move in the direction of achieving it.

This video is of the Crossfit NorthWest Regional Qualifiers held in Seattle, WA. Listen to what the WOD is, what the athletes have to say and watch and be inspired. These athletes are from Idaho, Oregon and Washington.


2009 Crossfit Games from Molly Hawkins on Vimeo.

NW Regional Qualifiers






Wednesday, October 21, 2009

What Should I Eat?

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15 Thrusters 25w/45m
15 Box Jumps 20'' w/ 24'' m

5 Rounds

Zone Meal Plans
by Gregg Glassman, Courtesty of Crossfit, Inc

Diet is paramount to optimizing human performance. Our clinical experience proves the Zone Diet, by Dr. Barry Sears is the best nutritional model for optimal performance. Issue 21 of the Crossfit Journal offers a comprehensive overview and start-up guide for implementing the Zone Diet. Included within you will find definitions, charts and recipes.

Understanding how the Zone works begins with understanding “blocks.” A block is a simplified unit for measuring the 3 macronutrients in your food (protein, carbohydrate and fat). One block is comprised of: 7 grams for protein, 9 grams for carbohydrates, and 1.5 grams for fats. Equal representation of all the macronutrients constitutes a meal. Mastery of this concept makes meal building a snap. The “Block Chart,” outlines daily block requirements, which differ from person to person, as well as the macronutrient content of common foods.

The article also contains recipes for snacks and meals ranging from one to five blocks. The recipes include a breakfast quesadilla, chili, and grilled chicken salad.

CrossFit has been experimenting with portioning strategies for over a decade. We encourage everyone to weigh and measure for one week. It may not be fun, but the benefit will be invaluable. Within a week you will have developed the ability to estimate correct food portions and formed a heightened sense of your nutritional needs.

The Zone Diet amplifies and accelerates the benefits of the CrossFit regimen. CrossFit’s best performers are Zoning. When our second tier athletes commit to “strict” adherence to Zone parameters they quickly surpass their peers.

Click below for.........



Tuesday, October 20, 2009

How Do You Do a Push-Up?

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Pull-ups
Burpees
Wallballs
Push-ups

21, 15, 9

One of the most abused exercises or should I say cheated exercises is the "Push-Up". Usually it is cheated do to a lack of coach or proper examples. At Stone Way CrossFit we perform push-ups with full extension(chest touches the ground). Also at One World Crossfit my friend Freddie Camacho leads his box the same way. Watch this video and watch Freddie give perfect examples on what is a perfect push-up. Either on your toes or on your knees you can perform a perfect or imperfect push-up. We'll work on this today at class but if you feel the need to practice before class by all means, please!

Coach


Crossfit One World Push-ups from crossfitoneworld on Vimeo.



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Monday, October 19, 2009

What are "They" Saying about Us?

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200m run
8 dips
10 squats
14 lunges
20 PVC jumps

4 Rounds

See what "Outsiders" are saying about us. What we are doing is not for the "weak" and not for the "weekend warrior". As I continuously say "My girls will mess you up", that is a straight pride saying and I hope all you ladies take great pride in that. Read this Muscle and Fitness article and be excited, encouraged and absolutely inspired!




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Friday, October 16, 2009

ATTENTION ALL LADIES!!!

101709 and 101809

Day of Rest or Make up Day


*if you have missed a workout this week or two make them up by doing a WOD today and/or tomorrow


Top 10 Reasons Heavy Weights Don’t Bulk Up the Female Athlete

By Tim Kontos, David Adamson, and Sarah Walls
For www.EliteFTS.com

David Adamson and I were driving to the IPA Nationals this past weekend talking training (yeah we’re pretty passionate about what we do) when the subject of training women with heavy weights came up. I’m in my ninth year at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) as the head strength and conditioning coach, and David has been in strength and conditioning for three years. This is a subject we deal with every year regardless of how much training information is available to the public.

The best way to get information is to go to the source. So we asked Sarah Walls, another strength and conditioning coach at VCU. Sarah is also a writer for Muscle and Fitness Hers, a former figure competitor, and a women’s tri-fitness competitor—not to mention a strong female athlete who isn’t bulked up. Therefore, she has a great perspective on the subject.

We, being a good team, put our heads together to find a way to combat this never-ending dilemma. Our way of doing that is through education. And, only one answer to a question is never enough. If you know your job well, then you know that there is more than one way to skin a cat. So we came up with the following list:

1. Women do not have nearly as much testosterone as men. In fact, according to Bill Kreamer in Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning, women have about 15 to 20 times less testosterone than men. Testosterone is the reason men are men and women are women. After men hit puberty, they grow facial hair, their voice deepens, and they develop muscle mass. Because men have more testosterone, they are much more equipped to gain muscle. Because women do not have very much testosterone in their bodies, they will never be able to get as big as men.

2. The perception that women will bulk up when they begin a strength training program comes from the chemically-altered women on the covers of bodybuilding magazines. These “grocery stand models” are most likely pumped full of some extra juice. This is why they look like men. If you take the missing link that separates men from women and add it back in, what do you have? A man!

3. For women, toning is what happens when the muscle is developed through training. This is essentially bodybuilding without testosterone. Since the testosterone is not present in sufficient amounts, the muscle will develop, but it won’t gain a large amount of mass. The “toned” appearance comes from removing the fat that is covering a well-developed muscle.

4. Muscle bulk comes from a high volume of work. The repetition range that most women would prefer to do (8–20 reps) promotes hypertrophy (muscle growth). For example, a bodybuilding program will have three exercises per body part. For the chest, they will do flat bench for three sets of 12, incline for three sets of 12, and decline bench for three sets of 12. This adds up to 108 total repetitions. A program geared towards strength will have one exercise for the chest—flat bench for six sets of three with progressively heavier weight. This equals 18 total repetitions. High volume (108 reps) causes considerable muscle damage, which in turn, results in hypertrophy. The considerably lower volume (18 reps) will build more strength and cause minimal bulking.

5. Heavy weights will promote strength not size. This has been proven time and time again. When lifting weights over 85 percent, the primary stress imposed upon the body is placed on the nervous system, not on the muscles. Therefore, strength will improve by a neurological effect while not increasing the size of the muscles.

And, according to Zatsiorsky and Kreamer in Science and Practice of Strength Training, women need to train with heavy weights not only to strengthen the muscles but also to cause positive adaptations in the bones and connective tissues.

6. Bulking up is not an overnight process. Many women think they will start lifting weights, wake up one morning, and say “Holy sh__! I’m huge!” This doesn’t happen. The men that you see who have more muscle than the average person have worked hard for a long time (years) to get that way. If you bulk up overnight, contact us because we want to do what you’re doing.

7. What the personal trainer is prescribing is not working. Many female athletes come into a new program and say they want to do body weight step-ups, body weight lunges, and leg extensions because it’s what their personal trainer back home had them do. However, many of these girls need to look in a mirror and have a reality check because their trainer’s so-called magical toning exercises are not working. Trainers will hand out easy workouts and tell people they work because they know that if they make the program too hard the client will complain. And, if the client is complaining, there’s a good chance the trainer might lose that client (a client to a trainer equals money).

8. Bulking up is calorie dependant. This means if you eat more than you are burning, you will gain weight. If you eat less than you are burning, you will lose weight. Unfortunately, most female athletes perceive any weight gain as “bulking up” and do not give attention to the fact that they are simply getting fatter. As Todd Hamer, a strength and conditioning coach at George Mason University said, “Squats don’t bulk you up. It’s the ten beers a night that bulk you up.” This cannot be emphasized enough.

If you’re a female athlete and training with heavy weights (or not), you need to watch what you eat. Let’s be real—the main concern that female athletes have when coming to their coach about gaining weight is not their performance but aesthetics. If you choose to ignore this fact as a coach, you will lose your athletes!

9. The freshman 15 is not caused by strength training. It is physiologically impossible to gain 15 lbs of muscle in only a few weeks unless you are on performance enhancing drugs. Yes the freshman 15 can come on in only a few weeks. This becomes more complex when an athlete comes to a new school, starts a new training program, and also has a considerable change in her diet (i.e. only eating one or two times per day in addition to adding 6–8 beers per evening for 2–4 evenings per week). They gain fat weight, get slower, and then blame the strength program. Of course, strength training being the underlying cause is the only reasonable answer for weight gain. The fact that two meals per day has slowed the athlete’s metabolism down to almost zero and then the multiple beers added on top of that couldn’t have anything to do with weight gain…it must be the lifting.

10. Most of the so-called experts are only experts on how to sound like they know what they are talking about. The people who “educate” female athletes on training and nutrition have no idea what they’re talking about. Let’s face it—how many people do you know who claim to “know a thing or two about lifting and nutrition?” Now, how many people do you know who actually know what they’re talking about, have lived the life, dieted down to make a weight class requirement, or got on stage at single digit body fat? Invariably, these so-called experts are also the people who blame their gut on poor genetics.

These so-called experts are the reason you see so many women doing sets of 10 with a weight they could do 20 or 30 times. They are being told by the experts that this is what it takes to “tone” the muscles. Instead, they are only wasting their time doing an exercise with a weight that is making no contribution to the fitness levels or the development of the muscle.

In case you haven’t figured it out by this point in the article, what is currently being done in fitness clubs to help female athletes tone their bodies is not working. It’s not helping these women get toned, and it is definitely not helping improve athletic performance. Maybe it’s time for a change. Contrary to the ineffective light weights currently being used, heavy weights offer many benefits for women including improved body composition, stronger muscles, decreased injury rate, and stronger bones (which helps prevent osteoporosis). Let’s try lifting some heavy weights and controlling our diet and watch this logical, science-based solution make the difference we’ve been looking for.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

What About Cardio?

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What About Cardio?

by Gregg Glassman

Conventional wisdom holds that extended bouts of monostructural training (run, bike, swim, row, etc.), commonly referred to as "cardio", confer distinct and powerful advantage to athletic conditioning. This… Continue Reading, Courtesy of Crossfit,

Thrusters(95lbs/65lbs)

Dips
400m Run

*21, 15, 9
*Post Time

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

CrossFit Introduction

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Introduction


In commercial gyms everywhere, warming up constitutes little more than spending fifteen or twenty minutes on a bike, treadmill, or stair climber. While better than nothing, this approach to warming up is largely a waste of time in that it will not improve flexibility, does not involve the whole body or major functional movements, misses an ideal opportunity for reinforcing and practicing some critical exercises, and poorly prepares an athlete for… Continue Reading, Courtesy of Crossfit.com

Skills Day

Double Unders
10-10-10-10-10-10-10-10-10-10

*D.U is two revolution around in one jump. Jump rope needs to land behind feet to count as a revolution.
*FT, but only with proper mechanics and consistancy

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Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Working Out Works!

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5 Push Press

10 Sit-ups
12 OH Lunges (both arms)

*AMRAP in 20 minutes
* post rounds completed

Working Out Works!
By: Daniel Green
So many women still think that starving themselves is enough to initiate and maintain a weight-loss program, when in fact they are simply setting themselves up for disappointment and ultimate failure. Very few people are able to maintain a "starvation diet," since it by definition leaves the body wanting and unsatisfied, not to mention adversely affecting overall health and actually slowing down the metabolism (see 10 Ways To Increase Your Metabolism, http://www.workoutsforwomen.com/a081_increasemetab.asp). Dieting (or better yet, eating sensible and balanced meals) must be combined with cardiovascular and resistance training to be successful long-term.

Daniel Kirschenbaum, Ph.D., the director of the eating disorders program at Northwestern University Medical School, writes what should be obvious to everyone by now in his book The 9 Truths about Weight Loss: "exercising is critical for effective weight control." We are so used to hearing this by now that we may miss the real importance of that statement. Dr. Kirschenbaum is not writing about weight loss, but rather weight control, or the ability to lose weight and keep it off, which is where so many of us fail. Dr. Kirschenbaum goes on to provide a comparison of active and inactive individuals, offering a list of 50 benefits of exercise. Numbers 1 and 2, respectively: Increase weight loss and Improve maintenance of weight losses. In other words, to lose weight and keep it off you must combine sensible eating with exercise.
What many women leave out of this equation is strength training, which is an essential component of a positive lifestyle change. A strength-training program will help maintain or build muscle tissue, which becomes increasingly important as we get older. Don't be discouraged if you don't see immediate weight loss when you add a strength-training component to your workout. Because muscle is more dense than fat, you will look and feel healthier before these changes are reflected on the bathroom scale. Try instead to pay more attention to the way your clothes look and feel on your body as you add muscle tissue and erase unwanted fat.



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Sunday, October 11, 2009

Tabata What?

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Researchers Nix Low-carb Diet (December 17, 2007) — For most of the past decade, there was much hubbub about the Atkins and Zone diets. Both focus on quick, effective ways to lose weight through high-protein and low-carbohydrate foods. Today, many ...read more



"Tabata Mix"

Tire Flip
Push-up
Sprint
Wall Ball

*20 seconds of max effort, 10 seconds of rest- 8 rounds
*for assistants on exercise email, fitbyfocus@gmail.com

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Friday, October 9, 2009

Think You're In Shape?

101009 and 101109

Day of Rest

Or
Make up a day missed

Think You're in Shape?


If you have ever had the question, "am I in shape?" Then its safe to say that you are not in shape. If you need to question your fitness level then its definitely safe to say that you are not in shape. But, that doesn't mean that you have to deal with those consequences. The secret is getting your body in motion and getting out doing things.


"Crossfit pushes workouts to another level".

Click to read further......courtesy of timesnews.net
http://www.timesnews.net/article.php?id=9015448

Thursday, October 8, 2009

A Day at the CrossFit Games

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250m Run

9 Straight Leg Dead Lift
15 Pull-Ups
21 Box Jump "24"

4 Rounds


Think of it as Bonnaroo with deadlifts and handstand pushups. Or Burning Man with kettlebells, and without all the acid. Okay, I can't vouch for everyone there, but if one of the competitors managed to get through the first day with a brain pulsing with Doc Ellis' dinner mints, then they are capable of any physical feat they choose to tackle, up to and including swimming the Bering Straits buck naked covered in chum in January.

Click HERE to ready further, courtesy of http://www.sportingnews.com/

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Facing Down the Gila Monster

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Facing Down the Gila Monter, read about how the Crossfit workout converts a newbie. Courtesy of msn.com
400m Run

5 rounds for time

*however long it takes to finish your round, rest for that length then continue
*post each rounds time

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

What is CrossFit?

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21 burpee

15 Goblet Squat/Front
400m Run
3 rounds
*post time

CrossFit started out as an Internet Web site in 2001. Now it's an international fitness phenomenon with affiliate gyms and online afficionados (some say addicts) who say it's actually fun to practice the daily regimen and push themselves to the limit.






Monday, October 5, 2009

The Truth about CrossFit

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Power Clean
SDLHP
Back Extension
*21, 18, 15, 12, 9

Read................Interesting ARTICLE, "The Truths About Crossfit".
 Courtesy of T.MUSCLE.com