I am extremely happy with this weekend’s competition. We took a 4 person team down to Ft Worth to compete in the “Texas Barbell Massacre” hosted by GSX CrossFit. There were 5 group workouts and 3 individual “floater” challenges spread out over the weekend. I want to add that the team we took down had zero experience competing in the team division and was up against several high caliber teams that included 2012 regional’s and game’s competitors. Of the 8 events scored this weekend Team Koda scored in the top 50% in all but 1 event while scoring 1st in one event and 2nd in two events. We got 4th in the max Clean and Jerk workout and ended the weekend in 4th place, narrowly missing the podium.
Through all the yelling, slamming of loaded barbells, and general chaos that surrounded this weekend’s events there was something that kept sticking out to me. In past events I was selfishly only concerned with the other competitors in my division and I rarely took note of performances in any other divisions. I think that this has changed since I have become a gym owner. Countless times this weekend I caught myself watching the top performers in a particular heat and comparing them to clients we have at Koda. The crazy thing is that I believe we have several people that would have placed very highly this weekend in the Masters, Team, and Individual divisions.
This revelation, combined with the newly acquired floor space at Koda, has inspired me to start to develop competitors programming. Since Koda’s middle room will be available for open gym and elements classes I plan to post daily workouts on a separate white board for those who would like to push their skills to the next level. My goal will be to create workouts that can be completed within a 30 min window allowing the “Koda Competitors” to do the extra work before or after the regular class. They will cover the skill and strength movements that are typically seen at CrossFit competitions and local fitness challenges. The programming will taper down to more muscular endurance and lactate buffering style WODs as we get closer to some of the big competitions (ACO, the Fittest Games, and the Open).
I hope that we have a good size group participating in the program throughout the day but I completely understand if you do not want to commit the extra 30 min on top of the hour long class that you are already attending. That being said, I expect the ones who are participating in this program to be taking care of themselves and their issues. That means having your diet and mobility in check. Extra work can easily lead to injury if your issues are not addressed regularly.
Before we start on this adventure I would like to compile a list of movements that seem to give us the most trouble. If you want to participate, please post a couple of your “goat” movements in the comments sections. These can be strength, skill, or stamina deficiencies that you feel need work. This will allow me to get an idea of how many I need to plan for and some areas to focus in on.
I am excited,
-Brice
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Halted at 90kgs
This last week of training started off with one of my most dreaded workouts…. Murph. Long running and a ridiculous amount of body weight movements are not exactly my strong suites. I was planning on going through the workout at a mediocre pace until I started to get caught by a 40 year old dentist that looks like a skinny Kimbo Slice. Tuesday was our 5th 20 rep squat attempt at Koda. I made it through a painful 19 reps with 335 only to fail on rep 20. I would like to blame Murph but I am going to attribute 50% of the loss to mental weakness. Even though I missed 335 I am going to keep going up and shoot for 345 on Wednesday. This will be the final week of the 20 squat challenge at Koda. I have not released what the next cycle’s heavy mover will be but I can tell you that Jared and I found our 1RM thruster this week and are testing out EMOM percentages.
So after 3 months of training with Steve Miller he has finally allowed me to start snatching from the floor. I was pretty pumped. Steve’s professional coaching style allows no deviations in efficiency and since my form was extremely inefficient it took FORVER for me to move through his snatch progressions. We started at the very top of the second pull and have slowly been working backwards toward a full snatch. I thought that, now that I was going from the floor, I would be able to go all out on my efforts and see what my true max was. Well I reluctantly report that Steve is not letting me get anywhere near my true max. This week he found issues with my form at 90 kilos. Now I DRILLED this weight at least 10 times with not a single miss but I was not allowed to increase the weight. I was either pulling my head into the clouds at the end of the second pull or I was leading the first pull with my hips instead of my chest. He was not going to let me go up until I was able to get both of those things correct on a single lift. At the time I was a little frustrated. Obviously I could handle more weight than this but I know that drilling technique now will pay dividends in the future. If I can’t get 90kgs perfect I will never get 110 at all. These are the times that help me remember that everyone needs a trainer.
Here is a link to sign up for Steve’s Oly Lifting Seminar at Koda on 6 Oct. Since we are in the creation process of his Olympic Lifting for CrossFit Seminars it is only $150 per person ($700 for CF Oly). I highly recommend signing up!
http://www.kodacrossfit.com/class-rates
-Brice
So after 3 months of training with Steve Miller he has finally allowed me to start snatching from the floor. I was pretty pumped. Steve’s professional coaching style allows no deviations in efficiency and since my form was extremely inefficient it took FORVER for me to move through his snatch progressions. We started at the very top of the second pull and have slowly been working backwards toward a full snatch. I thought that, now that I was going from the floor, I would be able to go all out on my efforts and see what my true max was. Well I reluctantly report that Steve is not letting me get anywhere near my true max. This week he found issues with my form at 90 kilos. Now I DRILLED this weight at least 10 times with not a single miss but I was not allowed to increase the weight. I was either pulling my head into the clouds at the end of the second pull or I was leading the first pull with my hips instead of my chest. He was not going to let me go up until I was able to get both of those things correct on a single lift. At the time I was a little frustrated. Obviously I could handle more weight than this but I know that drilling technique now will pay dividends in the future. If I can’t get 90kgs perfect I will never get 110 at all. These are the times that help me remember that everyone needs a trainer.
Here is a link to sign up for Steve’s Oly Lifting Seminar at Koda on 6 Oct. Since we are in the creation process of his Olympic Lifting for CrossFit Seminars it is only $150 per person ($700 for CF Oly). I highly recommend signing up!
http://www.kodacrossfit.com/class-rates
-Brice
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
MANAGING YOUR PAIN-
I would like to take some time to go over a few concepts concerning injury prevention. Actually, a better term for this would actually be injury "mitigation". It is important for you to understand that you are currently in a fitness program that is built to push you toward the limits of your physical capabilities. As with any method that elicits this type of response there is going to be bumps, bruises, scrapes, sprains, pulls and tears along the way. Here are a few things that I use to minimize my potential for injury and to manage injuries when they occur. As you read over these think about your own issues and start devising a maintenance plan to keep you training.
EVERYDAY-
It is extremely important for both injury prevention and power generation/performance that you identifying your own tight joints. These are the areas that you find are limiting factors on some of the basic movements like dead lift, shoulder press, and squats (back, front, and OH). Tight joints will be ones that you find have a limited range of motion and hinder your ability to demonstrate your true strength. One of the best examples of this would we watching a guy try to overhead squat with poor shoulder mobility. As he lowers into the hole his chest inclines forward and the weight he is holding overhead shifts forward as well. Since he does not have the shoulder ROM to pull the weight back over his mid-foot he is pulled forward by the weight and is not able to OHS much more than half of his body weight. The guys that I typically see in this scenario are easily strong enough to overhead squat the weight but are limited by range of motion issues (mainly in the shoulder but sometimes the hips and ankles as well).
I am not going to go into all of the tests and trick that we use to identify issues at Koda. If you do not know yours get with your local trainer to help you identify the ones you need to work on. I should take the time to say that there are a few people who have been gifted with genetic flexibility or where dancers for the past dozen years.
After you have identified your tight joints you need to develop a daily strategy to slowly correct the issue and, in doing so, avoid future impingement. I recommend setting up a quick warm-up and cool-down that includes some fascia manipulation followed by some ROM work under tension/load. "Fascia manipulation" is anything that digs into a relaxed muscle and breaks apart the sticky fascia that is holding individual muscle fiber together. When your muscles are tight the individual fibers are glued together by the fascia and resemble clumps of clay. Ideally, our muscle fibers should be supple and move past each other like silk on silk. Fascia manipulation greatly resembles a deep tissue massage and uses tools like a foam roller and lacrosse ball. "ROM work under tension/load" refers to placing the joint into its end range of motion and allowing some external force to push past it. This could be as simple as getting into a deep squat with the barbell in the racked position and allowing the weight of the BB to force a deeper squat than would be achieved by and ordinary air squat. By doing the fascia manipulation first you will allow your joints to be in a better position for the ROM work. I know that this sounds a little confusing so here is an example of what I am talking about.
Braden is a jacked, 25 year old beefcake that can squat the house and curl a ¾ ton Ford. He has huge traps and reminds all the girls in the gym of a real life Ken doll. On the surface Braden looks like a killer CrossFit competitor. That is, until you get him to squat while holding weight overhead. At that point he looks like he had never lifted before and loses all his previously mentioned sex appeal. In order to get Braden the shoulder ROM to have a respectable OHS we need to follow the 2 steps discussed earlier.
First, I will get Braden to work the muscles around his scapula by lying on the ground and rolling out with a lacrosse ball. This is the "fascia manipulation" step of the process and will create more available length in the muscles that were previously holding his scapula down (without scapula rotation the shoulder joint is not able to direct upwards and a stable overhead position is not achieved). After he worked one scapula for 2-3 minutes I would have him stand and place his arms overhead so that we could see if his treated side was able to get into a better position than his untreated side. Braden could also use the lacrosse ball to work his pecks and the roller to work his lats and t-spine as each of these will create space within the shoulder joint.
Now that Braden has finished his fascia manipulation step I would have him move on to ROM work under tension. My go-to move would be the "Dolf Stretch" (named after the famed, Kristen Dolf) using a stretch band to apply tension. We want to focus on creating good external rotation of the shoulder while adding pressure at the limits of his current ROM. Over time he will be able to see his ROM slowly increase as his overhead position gets better and better. There are other alternatives to the Dolf Stretch and I would have Braden rotate between a few of those for his warm-up and cool down.
By adding these two techniques into his warm up and cool down routine Braden begin to see marked progress in his shoulder ROM and his ability to control weight in the overhead squat. I follow this same process for my shoulders, hips, and ankles almost every day and vary the focus depending on the movements that will be in that specific workout. Devise your own warm-up and cool-down routine that targets your tight joints and you might see your chance of injury decrease while your performance increases.
-Brice
P.S. Get signed up for Steve dMiller's Olympic Lifting Seminar
EVERYDAY-
It is extremely important for both injury prevention and power generation/performance that you identifying your own tight joints. These are the areas that you find are limiting factors on some of the basic movements like dead lift, shoulder press, and squats (back, front, and OH). Tight joints will be ones that you find have a limited range of motion and hinder your ability to demonstrate your true strength. One of the best examples of this would we watching a guy try to overhead squat with poor shoulder mobility. As he lowers into the hole his chest inclines forward and the weight he is holding overhead shifts forward as well. Since he does not have the shoulder ROM to pull the weight back over his mid-foot he is pulled forward by the weight and is not able to OHS much more than half of his body weight. The guys that I typically see in this scenario are easily strong enough to overhead squat the weight but are limited by range of motion issues (mainly in the shoulder but sometimes the hips and ankles as well).
I am not going to go into all of the tests and trick that we use to identify issues at Koda. If you do not know yours get with your local trainer to help you identify the ones you need to work on. I should take the time to say that there are a few people who have been gifted with genetic flexibility or where dancers for the past dozen years.
After you have identified your tight joints you need to develop a daily strategy to slowly correct the issue and, in doing so, avoid future impingement. I recommend setting up a quick warm-up and cool-down that includes some fascia manipulation followed by some ROM work under tension/load. "Fascia manipulation" is anything that digs into a relaxed muscle and breaks apart the sticky fascia that is holding individual muscle fiber together. When your muscles are tight the individual fibers are glued together by the fascia and resemble clumps of clay. Ideally, our muscle fibers should be supple and move past each other like silk on silk. Fascia manipulation greatly resembles a deep tissue massage and uses tools like a foam roller and lacrosse ball. "ROM work under tension/load" refers to placing the joint into its end range of motion and allowing some external force to push past it. This could be as simple as getting into a deep squat with the barbell in the racked position and allowing the weight of the BB to force a deeper squat than would be achieved by and ordinary air squat. By doing the fascia manipulation first you will allow your joints to be in a better position for the ROM work. I know that this sounds a little confusing so here is an example of what I am talking about.
Braden is a jacked, 25 year old beefcake that can squat the house and curl a ¾ ton Ford. He has huge traps and reminds all the girls in the gym of a real life Ken doll. On the surface Braden looks like a killer CrossFit competitor. That is, until you get him to squat while holding weight overhead. At that point he looks like he had never lifted before and loses all his previously mentioned sex appeal. In order to get Braden the shoulder ROM to have a respectable OHS we need to follow the 2 steps discussed earlier.
First, I will get Braden to work the muscles around his scapula by lying on the ground and rolling out with a lacrosse ball. This is the "fascia manipulation" step of the process and will create more available length in the muscles that were previously holding his scapula down (without scapula rotation the shoulder joint is not able to direct upwards and a stable overhead position is not achieved). After he worked one scapula for 2-3 minutes I would have him stand and place his arms overhead so that we could see if his treated side was able to get into a better position than his untreated side. Braden could also use the lacrosse ball to work his pecks and the roller to work his lats and t-spine as each of these will create space within the shoulder joint.
Now that Braden has finished his fascia manipulation step I would have him move on to ROM work under tension. My go-to move would be the "Dolf Stretch" (named after the famed, Kristen Dolf) using a stretch band to apply tension. We want to focus on creating good external rotation of the shoulder while adding pressure at the limits of his current ROM. Over time he will be able to see his ROM slowly increase as his overhead position gets better and better. There are other alternatives to the Dolf Stretch and I would have Braden rotate between a few of those for his warm-up and cool down.
By adding these two techniques into his warm up and cool down routine Braden begin to see marked progress in his shoulder ROM and his ability to control weight in the overhead squat. I follow this same process for my shoulders, hips, and ankles almost every day and vary the focus depending on the movements that will be in that specific workout. Devise your own warm-up and cool-down routine that targets your tight joints and you might see your chance of injury decrease while your performance increases.
-Brice
P.S. Get signed up for Steve dMiller's Olympic Lifting Seminar
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