Archive for February, 2010

March 1 2010. New Schedule

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

It’s March 1st and our new class schedule goes into effect today. I understand it may take a little time to adjust, but these changes will benefit all of us and our training. Please check the calendar on the home page and print out the new schedule.

The TEN TENdencies of a Crossfit Athlete
By: Mario Ashley

Crossfit Redline, Naples, FL


1. The stopwatch is your best friend, NOT your enemy.


2. When, dealing with injury (notice I said when, not if) stop what your doing and take care of it. Period.


3. Standards are also your best friend, NOT your enemy. Without them we would never know our true potential.


4. There is no such thing as weakness if you work at them often enough.


5. Know your strengths and keep them that way.


6. Smile: It cost nothing but means everything.


7. Once you have mastered the mechanics of a movement
it’s your duty and obligation to teach it to others. A great coach is a by-product of a great athlete.

8. If you don’t like the Zone Diet then consume 40g of Carbohydrates, 30g of Protein, and 30g of Fat with each meal.


9. Goals: We all have the same kinds of goals just different degrees.

10. Nobody is forcing you to do Crossfit so have FUN with it.
WOD:
Every minute on the minute for a max of 20 minutes perform:
2 Power clean and jerk with 70% of your 1 rep max
6 KBS (W 35#  M 53#)
The time left in the minute after you complete this is your rest. If you fall behind and are unable to complete the prescribed number of reps for the two movements within the minute, rest until the next minute starts and try again.

02-26-10

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

Rolling Thruster-Grace at CrossFit Center City - video [wmv] [mov]

The CrossFit Way in 50 words by Greg and Mallee Amundson

“Pursue virtuosity in functional movement. Believe unconditionally in yourself and the ability of others. Learn new skills—teach them to a friend. Forge an indomitable body and spirit. Apply character traits learned in the gym to life: perseverance, honesty, integrity, resilience, courage, loyalty, respect and service. Be humble. Encourage others.”

Ok gang we have been working behind the scenes to develop a new T- Shirt idea for the year. We have narrowed our designs down and with the work of Bob and his talented graphic artist at Team Worx we proudly present to you Crossfit Redline’s newest shirts….

These designs may vary slightly but you get the idea. Yes I know, these may not be appropriate to wear in the pickup line at school. The top shirt will printed olive green and the bottom will be in slate grey. We will begin taking orders immediately. Shirts will be $20 before the Sectional Competition on March 13 and $25 after. There will be ladies specific sizes available. See Anthony at the box to pay for your shirts.

The Workout of the Day

Run 5K

2/25/10

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Dear Fran,

I have to admit, it was not pleasant seeing you today. The last time I saw you was about six months ago and I thought we had a pretty good experience. To be quite frank, I don’t think things are going to work out between us, but first let me explain why.

When I first started CrossFit, I heard all about you. You were probably the most popular girl out of all the rest. I really liked some of the others like Helen and Angie and even Barbara, but you were different. I saw pictures of you on the internet with all kinds of different people from around the world. I also found pictures and videos of people “doing” your dumbbell sister and “destroying” your fat sister, but they didn’t compare to you. I was intrigued and interested to meet you.

I played it over and over again in my head. One day I would walk in the gym and there you would be on the whiteboard staring back at me with your simplistic beauty. Your perfect measurements of 21-15-9 wrapped in a 95 pound body gave me butterflies. Then the day came on a hot summer day last July. Do you remember? Our first visit was like a lucid dream (minus the midgets).

I remember getting to the gym a little early to watch other guys try to do you. You left them bruised and battered and the floor and sent others home with bloody palms. Some people tried but you could tell their heart wasn’t in it. As the hour drew near, I knew it was our destiny for us to be together.

Dane, it’s a pull-up bar not a rollercoaster

Our first meeting was a memorable one like when Daniel LaRusso meets Ali (Elizabeth Shue) for the first time on the beach. Sparks flew and the first few seconds were magical but then Johnny and the rest of the Cobra Kais come and kick Daniel Son’s ass. My thrusters were mediocre at best, but my pull-up was the thing that really won you over. It only took you 5:37 to tease me and leave me wanting more. I drove home that night drunk with lust and ran three stop signs. Don’t do Fran and drive.

The second time we met was at my level 1 certification. There were so many other people in the room and I didn’t want to look like a schmuck in front of Jolie Gentry and Jason Khalipa, so I had to step my game up. I knew this time I had to try extra hard to win your heart over. This time it took you 4:41 to leave me on the floor wondering what more I could do.

Today was different. I knew you were going to be in the gym and I was planning to avoid you. I was going to say I wasn’t feeling good or something had mysteriously come up and I couldn’t see you. Why? Well, I’ve been off my game for quite some time. Everyone else was passing me by. No longer were people surprised by your elegant sadism. This time they were ready for it and it showed as people were PRing all over your face…everyone except for me. You singled me out and decided to focus your wrath on me. It was inevitable you would force me to do you again. How could I resist? Two minutes in to you my muscles were throbbing and my chest was burning. Was my heart on fire or was it breaking? Five minutes in I couldn’t hear out of my left ear and my world became very small. Things swirled into a blur of bars and mumbled voices echoed to keep going like in some crappy made for TV movie where the protagonist does ecstasy for the first time. Except this wasn’t ecstasy, it was misery. I finished you today at 9:44 which was the slowest time in the gym. The fastest time went to Jon at 2:44 who could have done you and Karen in less time that it took for me to finish you off. You left me writhing in pain in some sort of post-coital fetal position with my head throbbing and my muscles on fire. I lay there wondering why I let you do this to me time and time again. Why do I let you fly in to my life and leave just as fast? Yes I will probably continue to stalk you on the internet and yes I did see the video of Slaughter doing your dumbbell sister on some Antarctic cruise. The next time I see you with some other guy “doing” or “destroying” you, I won’t be jealous, I’ll be happy that I won’t let you determine my value as a human being any more. The next time we meet it won’t be about lust, it will be about revenge. I hate you, Fran.

Regards,

Forrest

WOD

Deadlift   5-3-1 max efforts

rest as needed in between sets

Rest three minutes

5 Rounds Of Cindy for time

5 pullups

10 pushups

15 squats

02-24-10

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Crossfit and it’s ability to grab a hold of you makes it the perfect program for those who may have previously lacked commitment to a fitness program.  It can also lead those who are driven to over-training. Take a look back at the last 2 or 3 weeks of your training. How many days did you train? What was your intensity like in the box? How has your sleep been? How has your diet been? Did you give yourself a rest days? Take a look at the following article and apply it to yourself. Talk to your Coach for ideas on rest and recovery.

8 Signs You Are Overtraining

Exercise FatigueWhen you spend some time among the ever-growing circle ofevolutionary-based health writers, thinkers, bloggers, and doctors, you notice a curious thing happening. Conventional Wisdomis becoming turned on its head.Saturated fat is generally healthy and excessive endurance trainingis generally unhealthy become the presiding narratives. Grains are either unnecessary or have the tendency to attack the gut lining, even guts with “clinically undetectable levels of sensitivity.” You don’t need six square meals a day to keep your metabolism up and running, after all;one or two a day will do just fine.

Less is more – as far as exercise goes – is becoming another accepted truth, especially when you understand that 80% of your body composition is determined by how you eat.

If you dial the diet in (Primal Blueprint, of course), you just don’t need to “burn off” tons of excess calories with a lot of hard work. Yet many people are still tied to that assumption and ride that fine line between training enough to maximize strength and unnecessarily reaching too far. Overtraining is a very real danger for those engaged in physical culture. In fact, while the majority of this country (and of many others) suffers from a massive physical activity deficit, a sizeable portion of my readers faces the opposite danger. Understanding exactly how much to exercise can be tricky. No activity is worse than some, while too much may be worse than none at all. The ideal lies somewhere in between – though not necessarily in the middle, but rather smack dab in the “just enough” section. Can “just enough” be quantified? Perhaps it could be quantified using a battery of round-the-clock tests and measurements of anabolic and catabolic hormones, various serum concentrations, lactate build-up, cortisol:testosterone ratios, etc, but that would be expensive, unwieldy, and completely individualized. These types of objective measurements, ironically, would be more subjective than anything else; you couldn’t accurately extrapolate an overtraining threshold for the entire population from a single trainee’s results.

People are unique. Sure, nutritional requirements for human physiology adhere to a set of overarching principles, yet a single, universally specific macronutrient profile cannot be nailed down for all humans. In the end, each of us must craft his or her own identity, plan, regimen, and discover his or her own weaknesses, vulnerabilities, and sensitivities.In short, we must each become our own test subject (as well as astute observer) if we wish to optimize our health and our fitness. The concept of overtraining is similar. There’s a clinical definition – a state of chronic fatigue, depression, and underperformance that persists despite rest – and there’s a more general, working definition – a basic imbalance between work and recovery. Overtraining can also be highly personal and goal-dependent. Overtraining might describe anytime your training is working against you, and where adding more of it makes the problem worse. If you want to avoid overtraining, there are some grand, overarching principles to follow, but you’ll also want to pay attention to certain personal, entirely subjective cues.

What follows is my basic list of signs that indicate you may be overtraining. Some are objective measures, while others derive from my own personal experiences with overtraining. There are overlaps, and I’ve probably missed more than a few, but I’m confident what’s listed will be invaluable to anyone who trains, and trains hard.

1. You repeatedly fail to complete your normal workout.

I’m not talking about normal failure. Some people train to failure as a rule, and that’s fine. I’m talking failure to lift the weights you usually lift, run the hill sprints you usually run, and complete the hike you normally complete. Regression. If you’re actively getting weaker, slower, and your stamina is deteriorating despite regular exercise, you’re probably training too much. Note, though, that this isn’t the same as deloading. Pushing yourself to higher weights and failing at those is a normal part of progression, but if you’re unable to lift weights that you formerly handled with relative ease, you may be overtrained.

2. You’re losing leanness despite increased exercise.

If losing fat was as easy as burning calories by increasing work output, overtraining would never result in fat gain – but that isn’t the case. It’s about the hormones. Sometimes, working out too much can actually cause muscle wasting and fat deposition. You’re “burning calories,” probably more than ever before, but it’s predominantly glucose/glycogen and precious muscle tissue. Net effect: you’re getting less lean. The hormonal balance has been tipped. You’ve been overtraining, and the all-important testosterone:cortisol ratio is lopsided. Generally speaking, a positive T:C ratio means more muscle and less fat, while a negative ratio means you’re either training too much, sleeping too little, or some combination of the two. Either way, too much cortisol will increase insulin resistance and fat deposition, especially around the midsection. Have you been working out like a madman only to see your definition decrease? You’re probably overtraining.

3. You’re lifting/sprinting/HIITing hard every single day.

The odd genetic freak could conceivably lift heavy, sprint fast, and engage in metabolic conditioning nearly every day of the week and adequately recover, without suffering ill effects. Chances are, however, you are not a genetic freak with Wolverine’s healing factor. Most people who maintain such a hectic physical schedule will not recover (especially if they have a family and/or a job). Performance will suffer, health will deteriorate, and everything they’ve worked to achieve will be compromised. Many professional athletes can practice for hours a day every day and see incredible results (especially if they are using performance enhancing substances), but you’re not a professional, are you?

4. You’re primarily an anaerobic/power/explosive/strength athlete, and you feel restless, excitable, and unable to sleep in your down time.

When a sprinter or a power athlete overtrains, the sympathetic nervous system dominates. Symptoms include hyperexcitability, restlessness, and an inability to focus (especially on athletic performance), even while at rest or on your off day. Sleep is generally disturbed in sympathetic-dominant overtrained athletes, recovery slows, and the resting heart rate remains elevated. Simply put, the body is reacting to a chronically stressful situation by heightening the sympathetic stress system’s activity levels. Most PBers who overtrain will see their sympathetic nervous system afflicted, simply because they lean toward the high-intensity, power, strength side.

5. You’re primarily an endurance athlete, and you feel overly fatigued, sluggish, and useless.

Too much resistance training can cause sympathetic overtraining; too much endurance work can cause parasympathetic overtraining, which is characterized by decreased testosterone levels, increased cortisol levels, debilitating fatigue (both mental and physical), and a failure to lose body fat. While I tend to advise against any appreciable amount of endurance training, chronic fatigue remains an issue worthy of repeating. Being fit enough to run ten miles doesn’t mean that you now have to do it every day.

6. Your joints, bones, or limbs hurt.

I’m unaware of any clinical tests that can identify overuse injuries specifically caused by overtraining, but don’t you think that pain in your knee might be an indication that you should reassess how you exercise that knee? In the lifts, limb pain can either be DOMS (delayed onset muscle soreness) or it can indicate poor technique or improper form; DOMS is a natural response that should go away in a day or two, while poor form is more serious and can be linked to overuse or overtraining. With regard to endurance training, if you creak, you wince at every step, and you dread staircases, it may be that you’ve run too far or too hard for too long. The danger here is that your daily endorphin high has over-ridden your natural pain receptors. You should probably listen to them more acutely. I tuned them out for longer than I should have and it cost me my career as a marathoner (so I got that going for me, which is nice).

7. You’re suddenly falling ill a lot more often.

Many things can compromise your immune system. Dietary changes (especially increased sugar intake), lack of Vitamin D/sunlight, poor sleep habits, mental stress are all usual suspects, but what if those are all locked in and stable? What if you’re eating right, getting plenty of sun, and enjoying a regular eight hours of solid sleep each night, but you find yourself getting sick? Nothing too serious, mind you. A nagging cough here, a little sniffle or two there, some congestion and a headache, perhaps. These were fairly normal before you went Primal, but they’ve returned. Your immune system may be suffering from the added stress of your overtraining. It’s an easy trap to fall into, simply because it’s often the natural progression for many accomplished athletes or trainees looking to increase their work or improve their performance: work harder, work longer. If you’ve recently increased your exercise output, keep track of those early morning sore throats and sneezes. Any increases may indicate a poor immune system brought on by overtraining.

8. You feel like crap the hours and days after a big workout.

Once you get into the swing of things, one of the great benefits of exercise is the post-workout feeling of wellness. You’ve got the big, immediate, heady rush of endorphins during and right after a session, followed by that luxurious, warm glow that infuses your mind and body for hours (and even days). It’s the best feeling, isn’t it? We all love it. What if that glow never comes, though? What if instead of feeling energetic and enriched after a workout, you feel sketchy and uncomfortable? As I said before, post-workout DOMS is completely normal, but feeling like death (mentally and physically) is not. Exercise generally elevates mood; if it’s having a negative effect on your mood, it’s probably too much.

How about you, readers? Do you have any tried-and-true indicators that your body has had more than it can handle? Let me know, and check back next week for information on how to avoid, mitigate, and respond to overtraining.

THE WOD:  ” The Mean 15!! “

3 Rounds for time of:

15 Deadlifts  (W-115#  M-155#)

15 Burpees

15 Dumbbell Thrusters  (W-20#  M35#)

15 Pullups

NEWS YOU CAN USE…. A new class schedule is coming out on March 1st. Our goal is to as usual, improve the quality of your classes through excellence in instruction and give you the best possible Crossfit experience possible.

Programs? Is there a program you would like to see implemented at the box? Want to learn more about strong man lifting? Would you like to understand Kettlebell training better?  Let us know…

March 1st we will offer a PayPal payment option through Crossfit Redline.com You will be able to pay your gym tuition fees there as well as purchase T-Shirts and pay for special events and programs.

2/23/10

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Credo

posted by TheSmithFam on January 12, 2010, 11:20pm

I train in a garage gym. Not because I can’t train in a carpeted, shiny, air conditioned palace, but because I know that just being willing to train in discomfort leads to greater gains, some that you can see and some that you will never.

Some see size and think limitation. You’re too big to do this or too small to lift that,” they say. I consider size and ask, “So what?” What they cannot see is the efficiency of my strength. I am stronger than I should be, more powerful than I am supposed to be and I endure greater than I will allow you to see.

They see a momentary flash of light and expect it to flicker out, when really, it is a lasting spark. A spark is the most powerful moment of a fire’s manifestation. My spark is ready to ignite and grow.

What they don’t know is that I will bust my tail to lift more, run faster, jump higher and endure even greater. They see deficiency and assume little of me. I see deficiency and recognize a call to action.

When they say to me, “you’re just not at that level,” be sure to examine my reaction closely. You will see a smirk on my face and hop in my step. For I know what they do not. Whichever goal I have yet to attain is closer to fruition than they can imagine. What inadequacies I have are temporary. I am willing to come to terms with those and work tirelessly to dismiss them. My body will adapt to whatever strain is introduced.  I will be better than they know, not because I dream but because I will it so.

My shoulders are strong enough to carry the burdens of life and the weights in my gym but my will is even stronger.  I squat low and drive my Do-Win’s to the core of our earth. I jerk and throw a loaded-up Pendlay to the heavens. I look up and yell, “Take this weight!” Then, after this glaring moment of weakness, I thank God that it falls back to the ground. I have more P.R.’s to break and with every plate that slams on the wood and rubber platform beneath, I grow closer to that record.

Whatever the weather, I step outside and find a way to use it for my advantage. I run, I drag, I row, I sprint, and I climb. I find a way to thrive in my surroundings.

I am raw and my potential, as of yet, is unrealized.

Around the world, millions are training in their garages and warehouses, parks and strength facilities. The mentality of a person that trains their body to such an extent remains constant, over time, even though the trends come and go. Your first weight set was in your garage. When you think of strength and conditioning, you immediately picture a garage, squat rack and bench press. Most of whom you admire train in uncomfortable environments. Discomfort is comfortable to you.

Some will fail to understand why you can’t find solace in a room with mirrored walls. Not everyone is fortunate enough to train where and how hard you do. They yearn for a “raw” experience where music isn’t filtered and celebrations aren’t toned down.  They settle for pop and inside voices. The magazines just can’t capture what it is that you love about what you do.

Kettle bells, chains, platforms, bumpers, boxes, sleds, hurdles, barbells, rings, rowers, medicine balls and ropes are not universal but in our garages, they are. You know that strength inside? You sharpen it every day. That spark that I told you about? It never dies does it? When all is said and done, they will see that the garage gym mentality is shared by many. The Sic Fit will congregate here.

Web Smith
CrossFit Chronicles: The Smith Family

Lindsey and Web live in Houston, Texas. In a few weeks, the family of three will make the move to Austin, Texas. Last summer, Lindsey placed 5th at the 2009 CrossFit Games. Prior to the “Hell’s Half Acre” regional qualifier, she trained exclusively in their garage.

WOD

Part 1:

Push-ups… Amrap in 20 seconds x 7 sets…rest 2 minutes between sets

rest 10 minutes

Part 2:

for time 30 wall balls

80 double unders or 240 singles

20 kettle bell swings (53/35)

30 knees to elbows

50 walking lunges

50 pull ups

20 burpees

02-22-10

Sunday, February 21st, 2010

filfest2010_th.jpg

Enlarge Image

The post-WOD crowd at the Annual CrossFit Affiliate Gathering (”FilFest”) in South Miami Beach, FL, 19 Feb 2010.

That is our group for the beach WOD Friday night in South Beach. Yes we all look happy, it’s post WOD. Here are some pictures Alison took during the warm up and workout. Mario and I came in 3rd place out approximately 60 two man teams. In the final partner carry on the way to over head squats we were over taken by Russell Berger and his partner. Russell was the first place finisher at last year’s Southeast Regional Qualifier. In the final picture you can see 2009 Crossfit Games Champion Tonya Wagner catching a ride from her husband Josh.
Today’s WOD

Ten rounds for time of:
3 Weighted Pull-ups, 45 pounds
5 Strict Pull-ups
7 Kipping Pull-up

For weighted pull-ups place a 45 pound dumbbell between the legs above crossed ankles and jettison the dumbbell after third rep and continue with strict pull-ups and then the kipping pull-ups. Coming off the bar or going to ground constitutes termination of a set.

Post time and number of sets to completion.

Have you tried any of the recipes posted here in the blog?  If you have let other members know. Alison and I are on our second batch of the primal energy bars. We upped the honey a little, added more protein and held off on the broiler part at the end. They were too dry.

Ingredients                        Preparation                       Ta-Da!

02-18-09

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Again, just a reminder. The gym will be closed all day on Friday. Please join Rocky on Saturday at 3 for his weekly slug fest.

Today’s Workout….this little beauty was generated using an app from Apple I Tunes Store.

10 Rounds for time of:

10 Sumo Deadlift Hi Pull with Kettlebell  (W-35  M-53)

10 Ball Slams (W-14  M-20)

02/16/2010

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Remember that the Box will be closed on Friday 02/19/10….We will regroup on Saturday with Rocky!!!

Okay Redliners here she is for the day!!!

500 meter row followed by

5 rounds for time of:

10 Wall Ball Shots  20# 14#

10 Power Snatches @ 95#/ 65#

Then finish with a 500 meter row!

02-16-10 UNBROKEN

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

“Weightbelts” with Kelly Starrett - video [wmv] [mov]

Today’s WOD:

AMRAP Pullups in unbroken sets of 10 in 3 minutes

Rest 2 minutes

AMRAP Jump Rope in unbroken sets of 40 in 3 minutes 20 seconds

Rest 2 minutes

AMRAP empty bar OHS in unbroken sets of 10 in 3 minutes 40 seconds

Rest 2 minutes

AMRAP  anchored sit ups in unbroken sets of 15 in 4 minutes

for each movement you will complete the prescribed number of reps in unbroken sets, pause long enough to be able to complete that number of reps again unbroken. Any pausing or stop during the set constitutes a break and you start over at zero.

Post total numbers of sets for each movement.

The 2010 CrossFit Games Season begins! The US Midwestern Sectionals “Air Force WOD” … [wmv] [mov]

02-15-10

Monday, February 15th, 2010

Max rounds and reps in eight minutes of:
4 Handstand push-ups
2 pood Kettlebell swing, 8 reps
24 Situps   (12 GHD situps for adv. Crossfitters)

Post results to comments.

Top men’s scores from the 2009 CrossFit Games:
Patrick Burke (7 rounds plus 4 HSPU), Jason Khalipa and Mikko Salo (6 rounds plus 4 KBS).

Top women’s scores:
Kristan Clever (6 rounds plus 5 KBS), Charity Vale (6 rounds plus 4 HSPU), Jolie Gentry (4 rounds plus 3 KBS).

GarrisonBrightonFireRow_th.jpg

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Brycen Garrison, Greater Brighton Fire Protection Department.


Log Grace” at Rainier CrossFit by CrossFit Again Faster, a CrossFit Journal preview video [wmv] [mov]


Steve’s Club visits Zach Even-Esh, Part 1, by CrossFit Again Faster - video [wmv] [mov]