Fast, Faster, Fastest

DSC02109 Leif loving the thruster.

This week we ran a workout given to us by Ronnie from CFNSC. It consisted of a couplet of thruster and rowing. The repercussions were noticeable. Most athletes that tackled the WOD finished in a pile of sweat, with shaking legs. Some athletes had to step outside in hopes of preventing uncle pukie from showing up. Luckily we all made it out unscathed. The weights on the dumbbells varied as well as the times. Most of us were in the 7-10 minute range. The standouts were Pat with an amazing 4:20 and Olivia with a 8:20. The bar was set high but was not high enough. A day late Cave Dave came in and finished in 4:03. We didn't get Dave's attempt on video unfortunately, but we did happen to get Pat and Boz going head to head.
_____________
WOD Video
Thruster/Row
_____________
Workout 5 rounds of:
225 pound Deadlift, max reps
Push-up, max reps
Rest 3 minutes.

Nice

DSC02184 Chris working hard.

Getting better at CrossFit takes two very important things, intensity and technique. We want to see you move faster, and we want to see you move well. Which one do we want first, speed or virtuosity? The answer is both. Check out Coach Glassman in this video.

The Right Place & On Time...[wmv][mov]
____________________
REST DAY
 ____________________
 Man the Hunter
 ____________________

Stabilize This

CIMG1873 Kelly finding new ways to train.

This Saturday a lucky few are going to see Kelly Starrett in action. The rest of us will have to wait until March 14 for "Training the Injured Athlete". This event is for both trainers and athletes. If you have been injured, know someone with an injury or think you may get injured some day, this event is for you. The information will be in depth and relevant.

Last November when Kelly came to CFSC we learned new ways to prepare for the rigors of a CrossFit WOD with better movement prep and some hip opening drills. We learned how to maintain our bodies after our workouts with PNF and Isometric shutdown. We learned tennis balls are actually torture devices. This new event is going to be just as, if not more valuable
_____________________
Have you ever wondered why we talk about Kelly all the time?
Don't just take our word for it. Check out a new feature on our site.
WHO IS KELLY STARRETT?
_____________________

Workout: (CFNSC WOD)
21-15-9
50 pound dumbbell thrusters
Row (for Calories)

Who is Kelly Starrett

Coach Kelly Starrett founded San Francisco CrossFit with his wife andfellow athlete Juliet. Since opening its doors in 2005 as one of the first fifty CrossFit Affiliates, this athletic training center has become the prime coaching resource for reigning Olympians, national and world champions, tri-athletes, runners, and recreational athletes alike. Kelly's focused coaching and warm personality brings his professional training as a strength coach and a doctor of physical therapy to life for brilliant coaching in a positive environment. Kelly is an inspiration to nearly everyone he meets, causing even superior athletes to re-examine their physical capacities and reach higher levels, and motivating beginners to believe in their natural ability to excel.

Kelly received his Doctor of Physical Therapy in 2007 from Samuel Merritt College in Oakland, California. World-Class extreme skiers and X-Games medalists, dancers with Smuin, San Francisco, and Sacramento Ballet Companies, military personnel, and competitive age-division athletes from all sports have seen effective rehabilitative results from Kelly's progressive blend of manual therapy and strength training.

Kelly is also in his third year of serving as strength and conditioning coach for the Marin Rowing Association high school rowing program where he helped lead the varsity girls to a national title in 2008. He is also proud to have served as strength coach to reigning rowing Olympic Gold Medalist Erin Cafaro, in preparation for her success in the 2008 Beijing Olympiad.

Kelly's background as an athlete and coach includes paddling whitewater slalom canoe on the US Canoe and Kayak Teams, and leading the Men's Whitewater Rafting Team to two national titles and competition in two World Championships. In his free time Kelly enjoys spending time with his two daughters, Georgia and Caroline, surfing, paddling, Olympic lifting, and dancing.

Still Not sure who Kelly is watch these videos:

Kelly as a coach:
The Setup Part I, Kelly Starrett...
[wmv][mov]
The Setup Part II, Kelly Starrett...[wmv][mov]
The Setup Part III, Kelly Starrett...[wmv][mov

Kelly as a Teacher:
Midline Stability, Kelly Starrett, Pt I ...[wmv][mov]
Midline Stability, Kelly Starrett, Pt II...[wmv][mov]
Midline Stability, Kelly Starrett, Pt III ...[wmv][mov]
Midline Stability, Kelly Starrett, Pt IV ...[wmv][mov]
Hamstring Assessment with Kelly Starrett  [wmv] [mov]
"Stretching is Dead" by Kelly Starrett [wmv] [mov]
Trunk Strength, Kelly Starrett...[wmv][mov]

Kelly as KStar:
Fight Gone Bad with Kelly Starrett ...[wmv][mov]

Kelly the Athelete:
Back Squat/Ring Dip WOD (Kelly Starrett)...[wmv][mov]
Bag o' Grace, San Francisco CF (Kelly Starrett)...[wmv][mov]

Quest for 300# Overhead...[wmv][mov]

Sotts Press (at Olympic Lifting Cert)...[wmv][mov]

Throwing Grace, San Francisco CrossFit ...[wmv][mov]

CrossFit SF Plays With Overhead Strength...[wmv][mov]

Cali

DSC01495Cindy finish a wall ball shot

CrossFit has its origins here in Santa Cruz, however from the beginning the community has always been a much larger entity. It has quickly attracted people from every corner of the athletic arena. Skiers, Bikers, Fighters, Law enforcement, etc... all found a reason to get involved. Some of the best Coaches in the nation are now part of the CrossFit community. Mike Burgener, Mark Rippetoe, Kelly Starrett, Robb Wolf too name a few. Each from a different field. Each with so much information to share. As the community grows expect the caliber of athlete to increase as well as the caliber of coach.

Guts

DSC02030Steve determined.

What strategies do you use to get motivated before a workout? How do you commit to a heavy lift? How do you prepare yourself for Fran or Helen? These question are often asked of the worlds greatest athletes. The answers are often different in description but similar in content. They all believe they can do it.

Workout: Complete as many rounds as you can in 15 minutes
15 Kettlebell Swings
15 Lunges
30 DBl unders
15 Box Jump
200 meter run
2 rope ascent

BIG BREATH! HOLD IT! EXHALE!

DSC02038Pat working on his ROM

“When you hold your breath, you can’t breathe.” I saw that written once on a CrossFit white board. Of course, I thought it was so silly as to be hilariously funny and I’m still laughing. However, it made me wonder if all of us who have internalized the commands of: “Big breath! Hold it! Exhale!” know precisely why those commands are important. It may be that we only know half of why they are important. That “half” would clearly be: “Strengthen your core!” Expanding our lungs and holding it--in tandem with seriously engaging the abs—support a solid body core and protect us from injury. The other half is cardiovascular and has to do with blood pressure, heart rate, cardiac contractility, and conduction velocity between atria and ventricles. This well known lifting ritual—inhale-hold-exhale—benefits you, the weightlifter, not only by enhancing your core strength, but also by helping to keep you from feeling wiffy at the end of the lift.
---Mary Boudreau Conover
Read the rest of Mary's Article BIG BREATH! HOLD IT! EXHALE!
 _______________
Workout by Pat B: 4 rounds of:
7 Handstand Push Ups (Full ROM see photo)
135 pound Overhead Squat, 6 reps
315 pound Deadlift, 5 reps

CAUTION: This workout should be scaled. The deadlift weight should be 70% of your 1 rep max. The overhead squat should be 50% of your 1 rep max.

BIG BREATH! HOLD IT! EXHALE!

BIG BREATH!  HOLD IT!  EXHALE! 

Mary Boudreau Conover BSNed 

“When you hold your breath, you can’t breathe.”   I saw that written once on a CrossFit white board. Of course, I thought it was so silly as to be hilariously funny and I’m still laughing.   

However, it made me wonder if all of us who have internalized the commands of: “Big breath! Hold it! Exhale!”  know precisely why those commands are important.  It may be that we only know half of why they are important.  That “half” would clearly be: “Strengthen your core!”  Expanding our lungs and holding it--in tandem with seriously engaging the abs—supports a solid body core and protects us from injury.   

The other half is cardiovascular and has to do with blood pressure (BP), heart rate, cardiac contractility, and conduction velocity between atria and ventricles.  For the squat it is a little different.   

This well known lifting ritual—inhale-hold-exhale—benefits you, the weightlifter, not only by enhancing your core strength, but also by helping to keep you from feeling wiffy at the end of the lift. 

 The big held breath.  Holding the breath with expanded lungs abruptly places pressure on sensitive receptors, known as baroreceptors, located mainly in the walls of the carotid sinus and the aortic arch.  This pressure causes sympathetic deactivation and vagal activation, which in turn sends an urgent message to the brain and from there to the heart and peripheral arteries to lower the BP, slow the heart rate, and decrease cardiac contractility--NOW.  

The blood pressure is lowered by vasodilatation and a decrease in ventricular contractility. The heart rate is slowed because of vagal stimulation to the sinus node, a group of cells located at the top of the right atrium that serves as the natural pacemaker of the heart.   

The exhale.  But what about when you exhale and stop fooling those sensitive pressure-receptors?  When you exhale, the pressure on the baroreceptors abruptly ends and they instantly swing into action to lower your BP and heart rate.  They do this by slowing their firing rate and thus allowing the sympathetic nerves to dominate.  Your heart increases its rate and contractility and your peripheral arterial system contracts, returning your blood pressure to normal, ready for the next rep.   

Are you making too many demands on the responsiveness of your nervous system?  Certainly not. You were made for this.  

Squat.  A different thing happens with a deep squat.  When you’re deep in the hole, the blood is squeezed out of your legs and butt, sending more blood to the heart and brain and blood pressure rises.  As you rise out of the squat, the venous pool of blood in your butt and legs returns and your BP goes down—predictably.  Should that ever be a problem (feeling wiffy---light-headed, tiny faeries floating around) when squatting, standing up quickly, or at the sight of blood, etc just cross your legs at the ankles and tighten the leg, butt and ab muscles, or of course—squat again!  No one will know.  Or at CrossFit, flop on the floor; no one will notice!    

Full bore WOD.  When CrossFitters finish an intense WOD they are usually laid out on their backs, one bent leg, arms flung east and west, not talking, mouth open and gasping.  That’s exactly the right thing to do.  During intense exercise your BP is high, but post-exercise BP drops significantly and syncope can result if you are standing.  If you must stand post WO use the leg cross and muscle tightening maneuver.   

Everyday activity.  When you are not requiring dynamic responses from your baroreceptors because of abrupt changes in blood pressure, they are still working for you, over-powering sympathetic nerve activity and maintaining a prevailing steady state of vagal efferent activity (messages sent from the brain to target organs, in this case--the heart and peripheral arteries).  This elegant system quietly takes care of you throughout all of your varied daily activities.  For example, when you rise from a sitting or lying down position gravity would demand that the blood pressure in your upper body decrease, but the reflexes of the baroreceptors maintain a relatively constant arterial pressure for most people.  However, some will need to do the ankle cross, tight legs, butt, ab maneuver. 

Summary.  We have complicated bodies, but we can be satisfied with our basic understanding of the simple physiological truth that our baroreceptors will efficiently manage our blood pressure, heart rate, and cardiac contractility when we are lifting heavy as long as we help it along.  Big breath!  Hold it!  Exhale! 
 

                                                mc/Feb’09

Mentality

DSC01764 The finish line

-by Hannah
The body is easily fooled by the mind so it’s crucial to be able to channel thoughts positively when pushing physical limits and attaining personal goals. We think “light weight!” or “I’ve got this” but here’s a little trick that may help you believe your mental pep talks even more - The Little Black Book. A friend of mine works in sales, and his performance is tracked and measured just like ours is at CrossFit. Whenever I congratulate him on a work related accomplishment he says, “I cheated, I wrote it in my black book” Every week my neighbor writes down his goals as if he has already achieved them. Rather than “I will” or “I want” trick yourself and say “I can” or “I have.” If you date and/or mark goals as you reach them you have another form of measurable data. Skim through and look at all your accomplishments. Might be something worth trying….I have already reached 2 goals in my book!

________________
WOD Video
 Push Jerk/Squat
 ________________
________________
Athlete Achievement
Jesse's 200 pound squat clean
________________
 Workout:
 Rest Day or Make up Day.

Bravo

DSC01849 Annabelle getting strong.

Making progress takes two very important qualities in and athlete. Patience and Humility. Admitting that we need to learn a new skill or get better at another means checking our egos. Annabelle has made some amazing gains since starting with CrossFit. In the photo above we can see she is using a band to assist her pull ups. She started with jumping pull up and has now moved on to a the bands. Fairly soon you will see her kipping her way through a wod without the bands. Her steady methodical approach is one that we see in many of our successful athletes, and will pay off soon enough.

One of our athletes that has been hunting down her muscle up since the beginning of the year has reached the promised land. She was so committed to getting her first she bought a has shirt claiming she will get her muscle up by March of 2009.
 ________________
Athelete Achievement
Cara's Muscle Up
________________

Workout: 21 Rep Back Squat then,
(040218 from CrossFit.com)
4 Rounds of
Run 400 meters
50 abmat sit ups