Thursday, March 26, 2015

TWENTIETH BRO SESSION ANNOUNCEMENT

Looks like it's time to get swole if you know what we mean. This week's workout will be all strength biased. If you should choose to do the entire workout as it is laid out before you there will be a lot of volume so proceed accordingly, if not cautiously. If you should choose to, you can certainly bias your workout toward the movements you need more practice with. The choice is yours. There will be no time domain here so you can partner up, go it alone, move quickly or take your time. Just make sure you have some fun and push your limits.




Snatch

2 sets of 3 at 60%

2 sets of 3 at 70%

1 set of 3 at 75%

1 set of 3 at 80%

3 sets of 3 at 85%


Hang Snatch

2 sets of 3 at 60%

2 sets of 3 at 70%

1 set of 3 at 75%

1 set of 3 at 80%

3 sets of 2 at 85%


Snatch Pull + Snatch

2 sets of 3 at 60%

2 sets of 3 at 70%

2 sets of 2 at 75%

3 sets of 2 at 80%


Snatch Pull

2 sets of 3 at 90%

3 sets of 3 at 100%


Clean and Jerk

2 sets of 3 at 70%

2 sets of 2 at 75%

3 sets of 2 at 80%


Hang Clean

2 sets of 3 at 70%

1 set of 3 at 75%

3 sets of 3 at 80%


Power Clean + Push Press (% based on Push Press)

2 sets of 3 at 70%

1 set of 3 at 75%

1 set of 3 at 80%

1 set of 3 at 85%

3 sets of 2 at 90%


Clean Pull (%s are of your max clean)

2 sets of 3 at 90%

1 set of 3 at 100%

1 set of 3 at 105%

3 sets of 2 at 110%


Back Squat

1 set of 3 at 70%

1 set of 3 at 75%

1 set of 3 at 80%

3 sets of 3 at 85%


Front Squat

70% 2 sets of 3

75% 2 sets of 3

80% 2 sets of 3

85% 3 sets of 3





WOD DATE AND TIME: SATURDAY 3/28 @ 1PM





Thursday, March 19, 2015

NINETEENTH BRO SESSION ANNOUNCEMENT




Part #1

5 Rounds:

  • 2 Rope Climbs
  • 6 Power Cleans (185#/135#)
  • 12 Push-ups

REST 10:00

Part #2

3 Rounds:
  • Run 400m
  • 20 Power Snatches (95#/65#)

REST 10:00

Part #3

2 Rounds:
  • 20 Deadlifts (155#/105#)
  • 20 Calories Rowed
  • 15 Front Squats (155#/105#)
  • 15 Shoulder to Overhead (155#/105#)

WOD DATE AND TIME: SATURDAY 3/21 @ 1PM

Thursday, March 12, 2015

EIGHTEENTH BRO SESSION ANNOUNCEMENT


While we have done partner workouts in this forum thus far, we have not yet had a team workout. So alas here we go. Should we say it's safe to assume it will be more fun as a group? Guess you will have to join us and find out.



In Teams of 4

100 Double Unders (each…1 person does all 100 then the next and so on)
100 Front Squats 115/75 (total, break it up however)
100 Push Press 115/75 (total, break it up however)
75 Double Unders (each..same as before)
75 Front Squats (total)
75 Push Press (total)
50 Double Unders (each..same)
50 Front Squats
50 Push Press

then, immediately into:

In Teams of 4

Each Person does, one person goes at a time…
9 Burpee Box Jumps 20/20
9 Squat Cleans 155/105

Then each person does…
12 Burpee Box Jumps
12 Squat Cleans

then
15/15
18/18….

and so on until the clock hits 40 min

The clock for Part 2 starts as soon as your team finishes Part 1.



WOD DATE AND TIME: SATURDAY 3/13 @ 1PM. 

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

SQUAT YOUR WAY TO NEW PRs

Is your squat where you want it? Have you plateaued? Chances just some small adjustments to your training can help you break through your stagnation and hit some new PRs. Check out these 5 tips and get that squat moving again.



1) START JUMPING
Great squatting requires great explosive power and nothing does that better than jumping. Box jumps, squat jumps and depth jumps are all great means to improve explosive power that will carryover to your squat. When you do box jumps, make sure you land in a parallel squat or above, don’t let them turn into an exercise in how well you can pull your knees up to your ears. Squat jumps, either holding weights or with a bar on your back, are a great and specific tool to improve the squat. These can be done from different depths (quarter squat, half squat, full squat) and introducing a pause to them will also yield a great benefit. Depth jumps have tremendous strength benefits but are also very taxing to the joints and central nervous system, so they must be used strategically. The stronger you are relative to your bodyweight, the higher box you can drop from as you will be able to better overcome the inertia of the landing. Be a strength athlete, get jumping and reap the squat rewards.

2) YOU DO NOT MOVE WELL
If your hips, ankles, quads or calves are immobile/unstable, your squat is suffering. Movement deficiencies anywhere in the body can have a negative effect on your squatting technique and can leave you injured or unable to train as hard as possible. Mobility or dare I say, stability, in the legs and hips will allow you to hit depth easier, stay in better and more powerful positions and most of all, squat more. We must all do a little self evaluation here and determine what needs to be addressed daily, weekly and monthly. I know that my problematic mobility areas are tightness in my hips and lower back which causes too much forward lean and occasional lack of stability in the bottom position and tightness in the calves which limits ankle mobility making it harder to hit depth and causing knee pain. Both of these are solved for me through soft tissue work, a little stretching and just more frequent squatting. Improving movement quality doesn’t have to mean you are doing a full corrective program and never training hard but it is extremely important to your success.

3) YOU ARE NOT BREATHING PROPERLY
Say what?! Of course, I know how to breathe, I’m alive aren’t I? Well you don’t know how to breathe for maximum performance. Knowing how to properly breathe and brace your spine will make a tremendous difference to your squatting strength. For years you have been told to push your abs out into the belt or get ‘big air in your belly’, I’m guilty of cueing that myself, but it is only half of the equation. We want to create circumferential expansion of your trunk, creating 360 degrees of pressure through your low back, obliques and abs maximize tension and support in the squat. Think of breathing into your low back while flexing your glutes to create a neutral hip position to begin improving this position. Bracing a neutral spine position is stronger and healthier for maximum performance in the squat.



4) PERHAPS YOU ARE USING TOO MANY EXERCISE VARIATIONS 
I am not telling you to just do one type of squat. As we all know variation is key to progress and avoiding boredom, after all the constant variety is what many of us like about CrossFit. With that being said, the variations of exercises you do and their specificity should reflect your level as a lifter. More variations and less specific exercises are for lower qualified lifters, less variations and more specific exercises are for more qualified lifters. Specialty bars, bands and chains can all have their place in training when implemented properly. All of my squat training over the last 4 years has been comprised of high bar squats, Olympic squats, front squats, pause squats, safety squat bar squats, squats with chains, dead squats and squats of varying width stances, that’s not very much variation. Your body doesn’t know what a safety squat bar is or a cambered bar or bands or an Olympic squat or anything else, it just knows stimulus and stress and very small changes will present it with new stimulus to avoid adaptation. Relatively small changes in stance, bar placement, speed of descent, etc can present the body with new stimulus and help you address various weaknesses. Your competition squat should be the foundation of your training and nearly always present in your plan. Then pick 1-2 other movement variations with high carryover to compliment it. Stick with them for 2-3 months at a time minimum to judge their benefit and train them hard but understand that their role is to build the competitive movement.


5) MAYBE YOU’RE SCARED
Scared of the weight and scared of the work. I must admit this has been true for me on more then one occassion. Confidence under the bar when you get ready for a heavy squat is HUGE. One of the most common ways I see people missing squats is that they get to a max weight and start going down way slower than they did with lighter weights, this wastes energy, doesn’t allow you to exploit the stretch reflex as well and isn’t the same technique you’ve been practicing in all your other sets. Get under the bar knowing that you are going to own that rep and dominate it from walkout to lockout. Heavy walkouts and reverse band squats are both useful tools to help you overload your body, prepare for heavier weights and build confidence. An overload of 10% above your max is plenty to yield the desired response, beyond that will not, in my opinion, give you benefits outweighing the extra stress on the body, nervous system and recovery abilities. Over time increase your volume, increase your frequency, control your rest periods and watch your squat grow.

Squatting isn’t some great mystery, get strong all over, work hard and attack the bar. Give these 5 tips a shot and I know your squat will reap the benefits.


Thursday, March 5, 2015

SEVENTEENTH BRO SESSION ANNOUNCEMENT

Can you believe we have been at this for four months already?! Time flies when you are having fun that's for sure. The weather is almost getting nicer so we should collectively start getting ready to run more, just saying. That being said as we get further along into Spring we will start planning and organizing some longer runs on the weekends so keep an eye out for these. In the meantime here we go with this week's WOD.




Part #1

5 sets :
1 Full Clean
2 Front Squats
1 Jerk (any style)
Start at 75% of 1 RM Clean and Jerk and add if you are feeling strong


Part #2


3 Rounds:
Run 400
21 Sumo Deadlift High Pull 75/55
12 Burpees Over the Bar

Rest 5 Min

3 Rounds:
Run 400 Meters
30 Air Squats
20 Push Press 115/75

Rest 5 Min

3 Rounds for Time:
Run 400 Meters
21 Hang Power Snatch 75/55
12 Box Jumps 24"/20"

WOD DATE AND TIME: SUNDAY 3/8 WITH THE STRENGTH PORTION STARTING AT 12:30 AND THE WOD STARTING AT 1:30.

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

THE SINGLE BEST EXERCISE



One overriding question prevails in fitness: What’s the best exercise? It does not matter what the goal is or who is asking the question, everyone assumes that there must be one best exercise to get them in shape. Fitness professionals are bombarded with queries such as, “What is the best cardio to do?” or “What is the best exercise to get a six pack stomach?” The answer to all of these questions is quite simply the squat. If you want to get stronger, improve flexibility or change your body composition then squat. If you want to run faster, jump higher or just maintain the highest quality of life, then squat.

The squat can and should be officially crowned as the king of all exercises. It is fundamental and essential to everything we do in life. If you sit into a chair only to get up later on then you have done a squat. If you use the bathroom then you have done a squat. If you want to maintain your independence then you must be able to squat. If you cannot pick yourself up after you fall then you certainly cannot live by yourself.

In a nutshell the squat includes the basic ability to raise and lower one’s center of mass. It is a motion essential to all of life’s pursuits. Couple that with the simultaneous expression of posterior chain strength and flexibility and you have an incredibly functional and intense movement both with and without added weights. Include the need to stabilize the spine during execution and you have found the perfect movement to challenge all of the body’s systems.

Performing a perfect squat can be years in the making but it is worth its weight in gold. The benefits gleaned from squatting are manifold. It helps increase bone density and it trains the core muscles to eliminate unwanted movement (this is actually the intended use of the core but that is a whole other topic)) and it allows for large loads to be moved quickly. Finally, the squat prompts a strong nueroendocrine response that releases hormones essential to growth, strength and metabolism.

Start by making sure you can perform a proper body-weight squat. This will strengthen your glutes and hamstrings while stretching your hip flexors which will allow for proper range of motion. Make sure you keep your knees from buckling and use your hips to develop torque and power. Train your midsection and spinal erectors to ensure an organized midline. If these muscles are weak you will not be able to support significant loads on your spine. Train heavy some days and train for speed on others. Use different versions of the squat including high-bar, low-bar and box squats. Augment your training with Olympic Weightlifting and or plyometrics when possible. Always allow for proper recovery.

Want to get strong and ripped at the same time, all while trouncing your peers on any performance metric? Get off your chair, that’s rep number one, and start squatting.


Everyone loves to squat. This you already know. It’s not only a great reflection of your strength and power, but also serves as a measuring stick to see how far you’ve progressed in those areas. You can literally see it right in front of you by the steady increase in the bumper plates that adorn the barbell. So with squats being such a popular exercise among lifters in various disciplines (Weightlifting, Powerlifting, CrossFit, Strongman, etc.), you should not be surprised to learn that there are an abundance of squat training programs to choose from. So which one suits you best?

Russian Squat Program
This is a no-nonsense program (found in the 1976 USSR weightlifting yearbook) in which you squat three days a week, for six weeks. The first nine sessions have you progressively lift more volume while maintaining a load at 80% of your 1RM. The following nine brings the volume down while heading towards a new 1RM on your final day. The program modestly claims that a lifter should experience a 5% minimum increase to their squat total, a goal that seems attainable for most people. The volume of this program is high, but thankfully it includes “easy sessions” of 6×2 at 80% every other day, and allows you to take a rest day between workouts. Furthermore, this is not a strict six-week program—you can miss a week and make up for it the following week.

Who’s it for?
The relatively easy scheduling of the Russian Squat program allows an athlete to combine it with a general conditioning program, and the fact that it’s only 3 days of work a week means that it’s easy to plan around. This makes it a good option for a CrossFitter looking to break through a squatting plateau while still sticking to their regular box programming.

Smolov Program
You know that when a squat program is designed and named after a ‘Russian Master of Sports’ that it’s going to be seriously tough. Developed by Sergey Smolov, this particular program makes the bold claim that an athlete can increase their squat “by up to 100 lbs”. In reality, most people won’t be able to add 100lbs to their squat in the program’s timeframe (13 weeks), but this program doesn’t spare you on volume or intensity. The overall program is 13 weeks, split into five cycles. Contained within are more squats (can be used for front or back squats) at heavier loads than any other program, and as such it is designed for intermediate to advanced lifters—people who have been lifting for more than a year. The first cycle begins with two weeks of prep before heading into a four-week base mesocycle phase, which requires you to squat with very heavy loads four times a week. Following that comes a two-week “switching phase” before you launch into another four-week “intense mesocycle”, where you only squat three times a week, but you’re going to be using 81-90% of your 1RM. This particular cycle is so devastatingly intense that some people use it as a program on it’s own—fittingly dubbed Smolov Jr. You end with a week to taper, before finally testing your new 1RM. Phew.

Who’s it for?
As I mentioned, this is an incredibly tough program, so only experienced lifters with at least a year under their belt should give this a crack. The program doesn’t allow much time for recovery, and people who have done the Smolov have been so spent from squatting that they don’t feel as if they need to do any other work in the gym. Lastly, you need to have enough time in your schedule to block off 13 weeks to train and not miss lifting sessions, which can be hard to do. With that being said, the program can be tailored to better suit a CrossFitter’s schedule. There’s nothing stopping you from solely doing Smolov Jr, as it only requires you to squat three times a week while still being a tough program, and it allows for time to get in some WODs when (and if!) you feel capable.

5/3/1
Developed by former University of Arizona Football player Jim Wendler, 5/3/1 is a four-week program in which you perform one session of squat (front and back) and assistance work per week, in addition to three other sessions throughout the week that are dedicated to three other core lifts. 5/3/1 is performed in waves. How this works is as follows: In week 1 (wave 1), you will perform 3 sets of 5 repetitions at 75% of your 1RM squat, then 80%, then 85%. In week 2, you perform 3 sets of 3 repetitions at 80%, 85% and 90%. Week 3 will be 3 sets of 5 repetitions at 75%, 85% and 95%. Finally, the fourth week will be a deload wave of 3 sets at 60%, 65% and 70% of your 1RM. When you are done with this four-week mesocycle, you can begin a new one by adding 10lb to your 1RM squat and recalculating your working numbers. If you ever get stuck in this program (which Wendler says will happen), you can drop to 90% of your current working 1RM, re-calculate and continue on.

Who’s it for?
With the program only requiring you to squat one day a week, this allows for a great amount of time to recover, as well as perform any other accessory work or workout program you so desire. The intention of 5/3/1 is to have an athlete consistently break max lifts from one cycle to the next, and Wendler does not recommend ‘training’ more than two days in a row. However, he does recommend doing conditioning work whenever possible. Which means that you can tailor this program to suit your specific schedule (as well as your box’s) by performing 5/3/1 the day before a squat day at the box, then resting the following day, then jumping back into your regular programming for the rest of the week.

20-Rep Squat Routine
Introduced by John McCallum in 1968, the 20-rep squat routine (2RSR) is one of the oldest lifting programs there is. It was originally coined “Squats and Milk” because old school lifters would drink a gallon of milk a day while on it. The routine has you squat three times a week for six weeks, with one set of 20 squats each workout. And it gets better—every time you perform the 20 reps, you’re expected to add 5lbs to the bar. To figure out your starting weight for this monster, start with your 5RM and subtract 5lb from every workout you will be doing in the six-week period. So if you plan to work out 3 times per week over 6 weeks, subtract 90 lbs to start. It might sound like madness, but by the end of the 6th week your goal is to squat your 5RM twenty times—as is the program’s design. Rich Froning and his crew at CrossFit Mayhem have been using this program, albeit with a few refining tweaks. Athletes at Mayhem are expected to use 60% of their 1RM for their initial 20-rep starting weight, and perform the routine only twice a week on Mondays and Thursdays.

Who’s it for?
This program is credited with adding some serious muscle mass to any lifter, and the fact that you can play around with the frequency of the 20-rep session (as CF Mayhem has done) makes it a viable option to use within other types of full-body conditioning programing, which is common in CrossFit. Even though the original intention of the program was to perform 20-rep squats three times a week, you can tailor it to twice a week to allow for additional time to recover, as well as perform supplementary workouts at your box. If you want to get the full effect of the program, you may have to cut back on the amount of WODs that you do over a six-week period, but that’s a decision only you can make.

Westside Barbell Conjugate Method
The Westside Barbell Conjugate Method originated at the famous Westside Barbell gym and was developed by world-renowned power lifter Louie Simmons. It is touted as one of the best weight lifting programs ever created for maximal strength gains. It uses a four-day rotation per week, with two days devoted to bench press and two devoted to squats (or deadlifts). For purposes of focusing on squat programs, we will tailor this program so that the athlete will solely be squatting (or deadlifting) twice a week, at least 72 hours apart. One of these days is dedicated to maximal effort training. On this day, the athlete will select a variation of the squat or deadlift (you must use a new variation each week) and work up to a 1-3 rep max. As I mentioned, you must perform a new variation of the squat/deadlift every week, and you shouldn’t perform the same variation for at least a six-week period. Possible variations could include altering the depth of the squat, using box squats, squats with chains, front squats and so on. The second day of the program will be dedicated to dynamic effort squatting and deadlifting. On dynamic effort day an athlete will first perform any variation of the box squat, performing 10-12 sets of 2 reps at 40-60% of your 1RM. After squatting, must choose any type of Deadlift variation and perform 6-10 sets of 1-3 repetitions using 60-85% 1RM. Dynamic effort deadlifts always comes after dynamic effort squats You will perform the same box squat and deadlift variation for 3 weeks in a row while progressively increasing the weight by about 5% each week. Upon completion of the 3rd week, you simply start the wave over again, recalculating the percentages according to your new 1RM. However, the most important thing to bear in mind when performing dynamic effort squats is not to focus on the amount of weight you are lifting, but the speed and explosive power at which you perform each rep.

Who’s it for?
The beauty of this program is that there is no set end date—you simply perform the routine for as long as you desire, utilizing a new variation of the squat and deadlift when directed to do so. On top of this, the program encourages you to perform supplementary and accessory exercises after your maximal or dynamic effort training that target your weaknesses. This program is primarily a strength-building system, and prioritizes recovery through the use of dynamic training following an intense maximal effort training session. The fact that the workouts are programmed 72 hours apart is certainly helpful for a CrossFitter who wants to consistently seek steady improvements in their squatting (and strength) numbers, while simultaneously incorporating metabolic conditioning to maintain or improve their general fitness. The accessory work allows you to perform additional exercises the same day in order to build the muscle groups (posterior chain) that will assist you in the squat. Given that you only need to perform this program twice a week, it’s straightforward to model your CrossFit schedule to coincide with the conjugate method.