“Barbara” 11-19-2012 WOD

CrossFit

“Barbara”

Five Rounds for time:
20 Pull-ups
30 Push-ups
40 Sit-ups
50 Squats

*3-minute rest after each round*

Result Type: Time

THANKSGIVING CLASS SCHEDULE

Wednesday 11/21 Classes at 6:30AM & 5:30PM (No class at 6:30PM)

Thursday 11/22 Class at 9AM

Friday 11/23 Class at 9AM

Saturday 11/24 Class at 10AM


9/12/12 WOD

CrossFit

Strength

Exercise: Shoulder Press/lbs
Reps: 2-2-2-2-2

Metcon

“Nasty Girls”
3 Rounds for Time
50 Squats
7 Muscle Ups
10 Hang Cleans

Result Type: Time
Male Rx: 135 lbs
Female Rx: 95 lbs

There is a good chance that when you originally googled CrossFit, this video came up.  Train Hard, Train Smart and Have Fun!

8-24-2012 WOD

CrossFit

Strength

Push Jerk
2-2-2-2-2-2

Metcon

10 Rounds of “Cindy”
5 Pull Ups
10 Push Ups
15 Squats

Do it and push through because you can…

8-9-2012 WOD

CrossFit

No big deal just a perfect OHSQT 2nd Class – Get it Darcy!

Strength

Back Squat
5-5-5-5-5

Metcon

Run 800M
50 KB Swings 1.5/1 Pood
50 Box Jumps 24″/20″
Run 800M

6/13/2012 WOD

Strength:

Power Clean

1-1-1-1-1

WOD:

“The Chief”

5 Rounds

3 Minute AMRAP

3 Power Cleans (135/95)

6 Hand Release Push Ups

9 Air Squats

1 Minute Rest

Intensity, as we define it, is exactly equal to average power (force x distance / time). In other words, how much real work did you do and in what time period? The greater the average power, the greater the intensity. This makes it a measurable fact, not a debatable opinion. Intensity and average power are the variables most commonly associated with optimizing favorable results. Whatever you want from exercise comes faster with intensity. It’s not volume or duration or heart rate or even discomfort. Do more work in less time (without overdoing it), and you’ll get fitter faster.

Pat Sherwood CFHQ

Get Your Burpees In!  We’re within the last 30 days!

On another note, start writing your scores/times or any other unit of measurement on the board.  Maybe you don’t care about your score (you should, that is how you can measure progress) but somebody else might.  Maybe your score helps them push just a little harder to beat yours and in turn gets them in better shape.  Write your scores down, keep track, get a notebook or something.  If you are not keeping track of your progress you will never know how much better you have become.

6/1/2012 WOD

Strength:

Back Squats

Spend 15 Minutes to get a Heavy Set of 5

WOD:

5 Burpees – 10 Deadlifts (245/165) – 15 V Ups – Sprint 50 Yards

5 Burpees – 10 Deadlifts (245/165) – 15 V Ups – Sprint 100 Yards

5 Burpees – 10 Deadlifts (245/165) – 15 V Ups – Sprint 150 Yards

5 Burpees – 10 Deadlifts (245/165) – 15 V Ups – Sprint 200 Yards

5/25/2012 WOD

*Make Up Day*

If you were unable to attend either Monday or Wednesday’s classes you can make up your 1 Rep Max attempts at Front Squat & Push Press.  If you plan on doing this, please hit your Power Cleans first then continue on to your FS & PP.  Try to spend no more than 15 minutes on each exercise.

Strength:

15 Minutes to find 1 Rep Max Power Clean

WOD:

“Bear Complex”

7 Sets of the following sequence:
1 Power Clean
1 Front Squat
1 Push Press
1 Back Squat
1 Push Press

(then down to a touch and go to start the next power clean)

This is not for time – you can rest wherever just not on the ground.  Try to work up to a heavy load.

 

Get Strong, Get Fit!

5/9/2012 WOD

Strength:

Push Press

75% X 5, 85% X 3, 95% X 1+

WOD:

 CrossFit Games Regionals

Individual Event 4 (minus the pull ups)

For time:
50 Back squats (135 / 95 lbs)
30 Shoulder-to-overhead (135 / 95 lbs)
50 Front squats (85 / 65 lbs)
30 Shoulder-to-overhead (85 / 65 lbs)
50 Overhead squats (65 / 45 lbs)
30 Shoulder-to-overhead (65 / 45 lbs)

We will be removing the pull up from this WOD and we will scale the weight accordingly.  Keep in mind we will be using 1 bar so load the bar with plates easy to strip down to the next weight. If you plan on using 135 then you would have 2 10s on with a 25 to make it easier to strip to the next weight.

Download: Low SD HD

How it goes down (including pull ups):

The athlete begins standing behind the barbell. At the call of “3-2-1 … Go!” he or she may reach down, place the barbell on his or her back and begin the set of back squats. After the 50th back squat, the athlete moves to the pull-up bar and completes 40 pull-ups. Then, the athlete returns to his or her barbell and completes 30 shoulder-to-overheads. After the 30th repetition, the athlete lowers the bar to the ground, removes the 25-pound bumpers (15-pound bumpers for women), and carries the bar to the next station where he or she will begin front squatting.

After the 50th front squat is complete, the athlete moves to the pull-up bar and completes 40 pull-ups. The athlete then returns to the barbell and completes 30 shoulder-to-overheads. After the 30th repetition, they lower the bar to the ground, remove the metal plates (10-pound bumpers for women), and carry the bar to the next station where they will begin overhead squatting.

After all 50 overhead squats are completed, the athlete moves to the pull-up bar and completes 40 pull-ups. The athlete then returns to the barbell and completes 30 shoulder-to-overheads. After the 30th repetition, the athlete moves to the designated finish area and the workout is complete.

Time cap: 22 minutes

Scoring

The athlete’s score is his or her total time for completing the workout. If they do not finish the entire workout within the 22-minute time cap, the score is 22:00, plus a one second penalty for each rep not completed.

Movement Standards

Back squat:
In the back squat, the barbell must be held behind the neck on the athlete’s shoulders or back. At the bottom, the crease of the hips must pass below the height of the kneecap. At the top, the knees and hips must be completely open with the barbell in control.


Back squat, bottom position


Back squat, top position

Front squat:
In the front squat, the barbell must be held in the front rack position. At the bottom, the crease of the hips must pass below the height of the kneecap. At the top, the knees and hips must be completely open with the barbell in control. A full squat clean will count as a repetition as long as all the above requirements are met.


Front squat, bottom position


Front squat, top position

Overhead squat:
In the overhead squat, the barbell must be kept overhead with the arms locked. At the bottom, the crease of the hips must pass below the height of the kneecap. At the top, the knees and hips must be completely open with the barbell in control and over the heels. A full squat snatch will count as a repetition as long as all the above requirements are met.


Overhead squat, bottom position


Overhead squat, top position

Pull-up:
This is a standard pull-up. Dead-hang, kipping or butterfly pull-ups are all allowed, as long as all the requirements are met. At the bottom, the arms must be fully extended. At the top, the chin must break the horizontal plane of the bar.


Pull-up, bottom position


Pull-up, top position

Shoulder-to-overhead:
Each repetition begins with the barbell on the shoulders and finishes with the weight fully locked out overhead. A shoulder press, push press, push jerk or split jerk may be used, as long as the elbow, shoulder, hips and knees fully extend, and the bar finishes directly over the heels with the feet together. If a split jerk is used, the feet must be brought back together with the hips, knees and elbows fully extended before the repetition is completed.


Shoulder-to-overhead, bottom position


Shoulder-to-overhead, top position

We were reminded the other night of how great it feels to accomplish something.  One of our newer athletes was struggling through the workout but kept pushing through it.  Not once complaining of range of motion or lack there of.  Not once complaining of the pain they were enduring.  They kept their head down and finished the WOD.  All 4 rounds of it.  At the end of this athlete’s workout we were reminded of the amazing feeling of accomplishment as they gave a subtle double fist pump.  Something that they probably thought went unnoticed.  It is that feeling right there that keeps you coming back and growing as an athlete and as a person.  The ability to grind through the uncomfortable feelings knowing the end is in sight. Keep up the good work everyone!  Be proud of your accomplishments and celebrate your victories, however it is that you do that.