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Building the Base of the Strength Pyramid Many People Take the Wrong Approach to Strength Training
Building the Base of the Strength Pyramid Many people take the wrong approach to strength training. Bill Starr says the simple, focused approach is the best way to build strength quickly. By Bill Starr March 2010 Susannah Dy/CrossFit Journal Susannah Dy/CrossFit When constructing any sort of structure, from a simple shed for the back yard to a stadium that will seat 100,000 people, you need to create a solid foundation first. If this isn’t done properly, the structure will not be substantial, nor will it last for very long. 1 of 9 Copyright © 2010 CrossFit, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Subscription info at http://journal.crossfit.com CrossFit is a registered trademark ‰ of CrossFit, Inc. Feedback to [email protected] Visit CrossFit.com Strength Pyramid ... (continued) This same idea applies to the process of developing a Journal Susannah Dy/CrossFit strong body. Time and energy must be spent establishing a firm base. I like to think the pyramids of Egypt were built in this manner: they could only go as high as the foundation would support. The same goes for the human body. In the Beginning, Less Is More While most of those who embark on a mission to make their bodies functionally stronger understand the logic behind this idea, very few put together a program that will satisfy it, mostly because the real reason they started lifting weights was to obtain bigger arms and chests. So, from the onset, their focus is on their upper bodies and not the entire structure. Another mistake many coaches and beginners make in this regard is that they include far too many exercises in the routines. -
The Effects of Different Types of Strength Training for Recreational Purposes on the Body Composition and Strength Development of University Students
Asian Journal of Education and Training Vol. 5, No. 2, 381-385, 2019 ISSN(E) 2519-5387 DOI: 10.20448/journal.522.2019.52.381.385 © 2019 by the authors; licensee Asian Online Journal Publishing Group The Effects of Different Types of Strength Training for Recreational Purposes on the Body Composition and Strength Development of University Students Serhat Özbay Faculty of Sport Science, Erzurum Technical University, Erzurum, Turkey. Abstract The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of CrossFit and resistance training on maximal strength, isometric strength and strength continuity in recreational student athletes. 28 healthy male volunteer students who were doing sport for recreational purposes participated in the study. After the participants were randomly divided into two groups, strength tests were performed and body composition measurements were taken before and after the 16-week training period. Bench press and squat were applied to determine maximal force; leg and handgrip strength were applied to determine isometric force; pull-up and push-up tests were applied to determine the continuity of strength. Body composition measurements were performed with electronic scales. Statistical analyses were performed with SPSS 21.0 program. Significance level was accepted as p <0.05. The CrossFit training program included consecutive 5 pull-ups, 10 push-ups and 15 squat exercises for 20 minutes (CrossFit-Cindy). Resistance training program consisted of 3 sets of bench press, lat pull down, leg press, biceps curl and triceps extension exercises with 3 minute intervals using 70% of the weights the participants could perform with pre-determined maximum 1 repetition. The results of the study showed that body fat percentages of both groups decreased significantly, performance variables increased significantly and body weight did not change significantly. -
Comparing Forward and Backward Chaining in Teaching Olympic Weightlifting James W
The University of Southern Mississippi The Aquila Digital Community Faculty Publications Winter 1-1-2019 Comparing Forward and Backward Chaining In Teaching Olympic Weightlifting James W. Moore University of Southern Mississippi, [email protected] Laura M. Quintero University of Southern Mississippi Follow this and additional works at: https://aquila.usm.edu/fac_pubs Part of the Psychology Commons Recommended Citation Moore, J. W., Quintero, L. M. (2019). Comparing Forward and Backward Chaining In Teaching Olympic Weightlifting. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 52(1), 50-59. Available at: https://aquila.usm.edu/fac_pubs/16319 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by The Aquila Digital Community. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Publications by an authorized administrator of The Aquila Digital Community. For more information, please contact [email protected]. JOURNAL OF APPLIED BEHAVIOR ANALYSIS 2019, 52, 50–59 NUMBER 1(WINTER) COMPARING FORWARD AND BACKWARD CHAINING IN TEACHING OLYMPIC WEIGHTLIFTING JAMES W. MOORE AND LAURA M. QUINTERO UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI The popularity of Olympic-style weightlifting in fitness routines is growing, but participating in these exercises with improper technique places lifters at increased risk for injury. Fitness training professionals have developed multiple teaching strategies, but have not subjected these strategies to systematic evaluation, particularly with novice lifters. Two strategies recommended by profes- sional training organizations are akin to forward and backward chaining, which have been shown effective at teaching other novel, complex behaviors. The present study compared these forward- and backward-chaining-like strategies to teach novice lifters “the clean” and “the snatch,” two Olympic weightlifting movements frequently incorporated into high-intensity training programs. -
Individual Men Mathew Fraser
2018 ATHLETE GUIDE INDIVIDUAL MEN MATHEW FRASER AGE: 28 EXPERIENCE: 5 YEARS REGIONAL FINISH: 1ST, CENTRAL In the conversation for the men’s title, there is Mat Fraser and there is everyone else. After finishing second in his first two appearances at the Games, domination has been the hallmark of his CrossFit career. From 2016 until now, Fraser has been in the overall lead after 41 of the 47 events in which he has competed at the Regional and Games levels. With no clear weaknesses, his trajectory still looks as if it’s aimed for outer space. No one man can beat Fraser. Rather, the men’s field will have to box him out of the top five and steal enough points to keep him in striking distance if anyone is to have a chance. —Rory McKernan PATRICK VELLNER AGE: 28 EXPERIENCE: 3 YEARS REGIONAL FINISH: 1ST, EAST Patrick Vellner is in his fourth year of CrossFit Games individual competition. He has quickly become a household name in the sport with back-to-back third-place finishes in the 2016 and 2017 Reebok CrossFit Games. He has very few weaknesses in his game, and he put his talents on display when he took first in the 2018 East Regional, never finishing an event outside of the top three. Vellner also took the top spot in a cross-regional compar- ison of all athletes in all regions. There aren’t many men who can potentially dethrone Mat Fraser, but Vellner is one of them. —Dan Bailey BRENT FIKOWSKI AGE: 27 EXPERIENCE: 3 YEARS REGIONAL FINISH: 1ST, WEST In the sport of CrossFit, Brent Fikowski has made quite a name for himself. -
Bodybuilding and Fitness Doping in Transition. Historical Transformations and Contemporary Challenges
Article Bodybuilding and Fitness Doping in Transition. Historical Transformations and Contemporary Challenges Jesper Andreasson 1,* and Thomas Johansson 2 1 Department of Sport Science, Linnaeus University, 39182 Kalmar, Sweden 2 Department of Education, Learning and Communication, University of Gothenburg, 40530 Gothenburg, Sweden; [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected] Received: 16 January 2019; Accepted: 27 February 2019; Published: 4 March 2019 Abstract: This article describes and analyses the historical development of gym and fitness culture in general and doping use in this context in particular. Theoretically, the paper utilises the concept of subculture and explores how a subcultural response can be used analytically in relation to processes of cultural normalisation as well as marginalisation. The focus is on historical and symbolic negotiations that have occurred over time, between perceived expressions of extreme body cultures and sociocultural transformations in society—with a perspective on fitness doping in public discourse. Several distinct phases in the history of fitness doping are identified. First, there is an introductory phase in the mid-1950s, in which there is an optimism connected to modernity and thoughts about scientifically-engineered bodies. Secondly, in the 1960s and 70s, a distinct bodybuilding subculture is developed, cultivating previously unseen muscular male bodies. Thirdly, there is a critical phase in the 1980s and 90s, where drugs gradually become morally objectionable. The fourth phase, the fitness revolution, can be seen as a transformational phase in gym culture. The massive bodybuilding body is replaced with the well-defined and moderately muscular fitness body, but at the same time there are strong commercialised values which contribute to the development of a new doping market. -
The Success of Crossfit and Its Implications for Businesses of All Types
University of Tennessee, Knoxville TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange Supervised Undergraduate Student Research Chancellor’s Honors Program Projects and Creative Work 5-2017 The Success of CrossFit and Its Implications for Businesses of All Types Sarah Gomillion [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_chanhonoproj Part of the Business Commons, and the Sports Sciences Commons Recommended Citation Gomillion, Sarah, "The Success of CrossFit and Its Implications for Businesses of All Types" (2017). Chancellor’s Honors Program Projects. https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_chanhonoproj/2054 This Dissertation/Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Supervised Undergraduate Student Research and Creative Work at TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange. It has been accepted for inclusion in Chancellor’s Honors Program Projects by an authorized administrator of TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Success of CrossFit and Its Implicaons for Businesses of All Types Sarah Gomillion Chancellor’s Honors Thesis Faculty Advisor: Dr. Mark Collins 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduc"on #################################..######3 CrossFit 101 #############..#####################..###.3-4 (usiness Model############################.########..4-5 Value Proposi"on####################################5-7 Strate.y #############################..###########.7-8 Customers#######################################.8-10 Social -
Corporate Wellness Jeremy Thiel
CrossFit Journal Article Reprint. First Published in CrossFit Journal Issue 65 - January 2008 Corporate Wellness Jeremy Thiel “It [CrossFit Central’s corporate wellness program] was a whole new way of people relating to each other. It really was probably the best thing I ever did for morale in nearly 25 years of being in business.” –Sherry Matthews, president of Sherry Matthews Advocacy Marketing 1 of 5 ® CrossFit is a registered trademark of CrossFit, Inc. Subscription info at http://store.crossfit.com © 2008 All rights reserved. Feedback to [email protected] Corporate Wellness (continued...) As leaders in fitness it is our duty to supply individuals own businesses. This is how our corporate wellness with the skills and knowledge needed to change their programs began. lives. There is no better place to influence a large group of people than inside modern-day corporate The system America. Many of these hard-working individuals are All inquiries about our corporate wellness programs unhealthy, unhappy, overworked, and have high stress are followed up by an initial consultation with us. levels. All of these increase a person’s likelihood of In this meeting we determine the needs and goals of falling victim to illness as well as negatively affecting the the specific company. We offer three options for the corporation’s productivity, morale, and medical costs. company to choose from, varying in the degree of Employees’ most common excuses for not exercising intensity. These options are priced according to the are that they can’t find the time or the money to go number of participating employees as well as the degree to the gym. -
Crossfit-Based High-Intensity Power Training Improves Maximal Aerobic Fitness and Body Composition
CROSSFIT-BASED HIGH-INTENSITY POWER TRAINING IMPROVES MAXIMAL AEROBIC FITNESS AND BODY COMPOSITION MICHAEL M. SMITH,ALLAN J. SOMMER,BROOKE E. STARKOFF, AND STEVEN T. DEVOR Health and Exercise Science, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio ABSTRACT INTRODUCTION Smith, MM, Sommer, AJ, Starkoff, BE, and Devor, ST. Crossfit- igh-intensity interval training (HIIT) has been based high-intensity power training improves maximal aerobic used as an alternative to traditional endurance fitness and body composition. J Strength Cond Res 27(11): H training for the improvement of aerobic fitness. 3159–3172, 2013—The purpose of this study was to examine HIIT is practical for many individuals due to the the effects of a crossfit-based high-intensity power training (HIPT) minimal time commitment required when compared to tra- ditional continuous endurance training. A relatively new var- program on aerobic fitness and body composition. Healthy sub- iation of HIIT has recently become popular and incorporates jects of both genders (23 men, 20 women) spanning all levels of high-intensity resistance training using varied, multiple-joint aerobic fitness and body composition completed 10 weeks of movements. This high-intensity power training (HIPT) may HIPT consisting of lifts such as the squat, deadlift, clean, snatch, also offer improvement of aerobic fitness with minimal time and overhead press performed as quickly as possible. Additionally, commitment compared with traditional aerobic training. this crossfit-based HIPT program included skill work for the HIPT has recently become popular worldwide; however, improvement of traditional Olympic lifts and selected gymnastic proponents have made many unsubstantiated claims. exercises. Body fat percentage was estimated using whole-body HIPT differs from traditional HIIT in that it includes _ plethysmography, and maximal aerobic capacity (VO2max) was a lack of a prescribed rest period, focus on sustained high measured by analyzing expired gasses during a Bruce protocol power output and use of multiple joint movements. -
Original Article Fitness Culture in the Era of COVID-19. New Reality, New
Journal of Physical Education and Sport ®(JPES),Vol 21 (Suppl. issue 2), Art 156 pp 1225 – 1233, Apr. 2021 online ISSN: 2247 - 806X; p-ISSN: 2247 – 8051; ISSN - L = 2247 - 8051 © JPES Original Article Fitness culture in the era of COVID-19. new reality, new challenges. Perspective of personal trainers. JOANNA JANKOWSKA University of Wrocław, POLAND Published online: April 30, 2021 (Accepted for publication April 15, 2021) DOI:10.7752/jpes.2021.s2156 Abstract Sport is, without a doubt, an inherent part of our culture and social life. Changes in social reality connected with the emergence of COVID-19 and resulting introduction of particular actions aimed at prevention of spreading the danger, have not bypassed the world of sport or, widely understood, fitness culture. Colossal changes, which stopped everything for a moment, have ensued. The effect of those changes was suspension of operation of fitness facilities involved in fitness culture, including fitness clubs or gyms. The fitness world, the community of creators as well as consumers of fitness culture, collided with a new reality and new challenges. The loss of workplaces, e.g. for trainers, and the lack of spaces to be physically active have influenced immensely how sport activities look like for the subjects actively taking care of their health, physical condition, their bodies and appearance. What is Polish fitness world currently struggling with? How personal trainers are faring in the era of COVID-19? How does the collaboration of personal trainers and their clients look like? How does the fitness community find themselves in the new “coronavirus”, pandemic reality? What strategies were adopted by the personal trainers to survive and be able to function actively in their professions? I will try to answer these specific questions in this article, based on my own research, which had an exploratory character and was aimed at recognizing the experiences of personal trainers as the main representatives of the new reality connected to the emergence of COVID-19. -
Powerlifting Training Guide
POWERLIFTING TRAINING GUIDE Copyright 2015 © CrossFit, Inc. All Rights Reserved. CrossFit is a registered trademark ® of CrossFit, Inc. All content herein is Copyright © CrossFit, Inc. No content, in part or in whole, may be reproduced without prior written consent from CrossFit, Inc. V2.0_20150909.KW Powerlifting Training Guide | TABLE OF CONTENTS THE WESTSIDE CONJUGATE SYSTEM . 3 MULTI-YEAR PLAN . 8 DYNAMIC AND MAX EFFORT EXAMPLES . 11 THE PLAN: DYNAMIC SQUAT DAYS . 15 EXAMPLES OF A THREE-WEEK WAVE . 16 HOW TO CHANGE VOLUME AT THE SAME INTENSITY ZONE . 16 THE PLAN: DYNAMIC SQUAT DAYS FOR A 400- TO A 1000-LB . SQUAT . 17 CONTACT . 20 2 of 21 Copyright 2015 © CrossFit, Inc. All Rights Reserved. V2.0_20150909.KW Powerlifting Training Guide | THE WESTSIDE CONJUGATE SYSTEM Many have asked how and why Westside developed the conjugate system. I started training full time in powerlifting in late 1969 after returning from the army. I had my first power meet in 1966. What an experience! I lifted along with four future world champions: Milt McKinney; George Crawford, who gave me countless tips on squatting; Larry Pacifico; and Vince Anello, who was the deadlifting machine. I asked Vince what helped his deadlift. His reply: “Everything helps my deadlift.” It sounded vague, but Vince was using the conjugate system, although it was unnamed. George was the squat king. His training was a combination of regular squats, box squats, old Westside style (meaning Culver City, Calif., style), rack squats and good mornings, which contributed to his success. This is the conjugate system, a system of unidirectional loading that was designed to enable him to squat more. -
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Tim Chan Press@Crossfitgames
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Tim Chan [email protected] 619-944-3302 CrossFit Games website: http://games.crossfit.com/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/CrossFitGames Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CrossFitGames Fraser Poised to Repeat Win, Toomey First Among Women Madison, Wisconsin, Aug. 5, 2017—Day 3 of competition at the 2017 Reebok CrossFit Games saw the women’s Leaderboard continue to shuffle, while the same man remained in first. Mat Fraser, of the United States, stayed on top, and Tia-Clair Toomey, of Australia, was back as the leader among women with one day of competition ahead. Saturday ended around 8:15 p.m. today with individual athletes facing three tests: Strongman’s Fear, Muscle-Up Clean Ladder and Heavy 17.5. In a welcome reprieve from the previous two days of cloudy skies and rain, the weather was sunny and warm on Day 3. Fraser ended the day with a second-place finish and two first-place finishes to build a 176-point lead over Noah Ohlsen, who sits in second place overall. Brent Fikowski sits in third place; he’s 20 points behind Ohlsen. The day’s events shook up the women’s Leaderboard yet again, putting Toomey in first place, where she ended Day 1. Kara Webb is 14 points behind in second place. Sara Sigmundsdottir sits in third. Organizers have announced one event for Day 4: Madison Triplet, 5 rounds for time of a 450-meter run and 11 hay bale clean burpees with a sandbag (70/100 lb.). In the Team competition, Wasatch CrossFit built a 60-point lead over two-time Affiliate Cup champion CrossFit Mayhem. -
Crossfit® Training Strategies from the Perspective of Concurrent Training: a Systematic Review
©Journal of Sports Science and Medicine (2020) 19, 670-680 http://www.jssm.org ` Review article CrossFit® Training Strategies from the Perspective of Concurrent Training: A Systematic Review Petr Schlegel Department of Physical Education and Sport, Faculty of Education, University of Hradec Králové, Czech Republic that contain strength and endurance components (Schlegel Abstract et al., 2020). During training cycles, the combination of In the basic principles of CrossFit, the goal is to improve fitness, different types of strength and endurance is essential for related to the simultaneous development of strength and endur- CrossFit performance. Therefore, it is essential to opti- ance. This is also the main idea of concurrent training, which has mize the training process to be as efficient as potential and been researched since the 1980s. This article aimed to analyze the to avoid possible interference (adverse effect on adaptation acute and chronic effects of CrossFit and to assess the relevance mechanisms in the development of strength or endurance of using the concurrent training methodology. The findings show during concurrent training) of these modals (Berryman et that CrossFit is an intense form of exercise that affects the func- tion of the endocrine, immune, and central nervous systems. It al., 2019). One of original goals of CrossFit is to develop also has potential in the development of strength and endurance ten physical skills (Cosgrove et al., 2019), but this paper parameters. These conclusions were compared with relevant con- focuses mainly on strength and endurance. current training studies. Although the CrossFit interventions This article aims to analyze the short-term and long- (workouts of the day) have much in common with concurrent term effects of CrossFit and evaluate training strategies in training, methodological recommendations can only be partially conjunction with concurrent training.