Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Fight Gone Bad

REMINDER: WEDS AND THURS AM CLASSES HELD INDOORS AT NEW HOPE COMMUNITY CHURCH

PM CLASS WILL BE OUTSIDE IN THE PARK ON THE BASKETBALL COURT. DRESS WARM, BUT BE PREPARED TO SWEAT!

"Fight Gone Bad!"

This is CrossFit's famous "Fight Gone Bad" workout. It has been used extensively to prep fighters for the UFC. In this workout you move from each of five stations after a minute. This is a five-minute round from which a one-minute break is allowed before repeating. This has been in 3 and 5 round versions. Today is 3 rounds. The stations are: 

Wall-ball 20 pound ball, 10 ft target. (Reps) (Women's 16 pound ball, 8 ft target)
Sumo deadlift high-pull 75 pounds (Reps) (Women's 55 pounds)
Box Jump 20" box (Reps)
Push-press 75 pounds (Reps) (Women's 55 pounds)
Row (Calories) (Team Survival will sub burpees)



The clock does not reset or stop between exercises. On call of "rotate", the athlete/s must move to next station immediately for good score. One point is given for each rep.



Post your experience and/or thoughts to comments.

Monday, December 7, 2009

All New Nutritional Information

Excerpted from The Paleo Diet Update www.ThePaleoDiet.com
Loren Cordain, Ph.D.

December 6, 2009 Volume 2 Issue 2
(Originally published July 1, 2006)

 
"Recent Scientific Findings: Acid/Base Balance
One of the major nutritional characteristics of ancestral human diets that have been almost totally ignored in both the lay and scientific literature is acid/base balance. Pick up the latest best selling diet book, be it a reincarnation of Dr. Atkins Diet Revolution, The South Beach Diet or whatever, and I can guarantee you that it will not even touch upon this crucial concept.
Briefly, let me review the basic concept. All foods upon digestion report to the kidney as acid, base or neutral. Acid yielding foods are all cereal grains, meats, cheeses, fish and salt. The only base yielding foods are fruits and vegetables1, 2. Fats, they typically displace base yielding fruits and vegetables, they are partially responsible for the net acid load in the typical western diet3, 4. There are a number of adverse health effects either partially or wholly caused by a net acid yielding diet including: osteoporosis, hypertension, stroke, calcium kidney stones, age-related muscle wasting, asthma and exercise-induced asthma2-6. For more information visit: http://www.thepaleodiet.com/nutritional_tools/acid.shtml."

And from the other CrossFit loved nutrition guru, Dr. Barry Sears, CrossFit Video Series, December 5, 2009

Paleo VS Zone: Part 4 of the Conversation

"Dr. Barry Sears has no problem with the Paleo Diet recommendation to only eat foods that were around 10,000 years ago. The creator of the Zone Diet takes issue only with the idea that you can eat unrestricted quantities of those foods.

“Ancient foods” are more compatible with our genes, but Dr. Sears contends that balancing fat, carbohydrates and protein is still critical to reducing inflammation and improving health. The strict Zone Diet is actually a Paleo-Zone plan that balances these macronutrients in high-quality foods and spreads calorie consumption out through a series of smaller meals. It turns out low food quality isn’t the only thing that can damage your health.

“The other way to raise inflammation is to consume too many calories at each meal,” Dr. Sears says. “So what is too many calories? Anything more than 500 calories. Maybe six, max.”

If Sears had to choose between weighing and measuring quantities of any food and eating unregulated quantities of Paleo foods, he would choose the former. The best approach is to actually combine the two. 

“I think that the consistency of using the weigh-and-measure approach will give you far greater anti-inflammatory benefits than basically an unlimited, unrestricted Paleo Diet,” Sears says. “Now combine the two, well then basically it is truly synergistic.”

Post Thoughts and Comments 

 WOD
AT THE BURBANK HIGH SCHOOL TRACK AM AND PM
1 MILE SPRINT
AMRAP IN REST OF 20:
25 BURPEES
25 LUNGE STEPS
 






MONDAY NIGHT BOOT CAMP IS ON AT INSIDE LOCATION

ATTENTION:


Thanks to New Hope Community Church, we have a home for this evening's boot camp. New Hope Community Church is located at 10438 Oro Vista Ave in Sunland. If you are coming from Stonehurst Community Park, head East on Sunland Blvd (into Sunland). PASS Oro Vista Ave and turn right at the very next street, which is Eldora. There is no street sign there, but if you pass Scoville, you've gone too far. Park on Eldora. The church is right on the corner. You'll see my car parked in a driveway. The entrance is right there.


See you tonight!!


Also a big thank you to Pat and Barbara of Horsepower Golf who also offered up their space. We will definitely take you up on that next time!

Sunday, December 6, 2009

The Importance of Fitness and Its Impact on the Will

I want to remind everyone that our First Annual Christmas and Boot Camp Graduation Party will be on Friday night, December 18th at 7:30pm at Jacque's house (address released later). We will be having a gift exchange, only for those attending the party, so if you're planning to attend, you MUST let me know today, so I can put your name in a hat. Just say yes or no on the blog; that will suffice.

If you have not been to boot camp in a while, you are still warmly invited! Everyone must bring a Paleo dish or treat, as this will be a potluck style affair.

THERE WILL BE NO PM BOOT CAMP ON THAT DATE!

NEW INFORMATION
For the rest of the Winter, until further notice, AM boot camp will meet indoors on MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS (not Wednesdays as originally stated).

ONCE AGAIN, AM BOOT CAMP MEETS AT NEW HOPE COMMUNITY CHURCH ON MONDAY AND THURSDAY MORNINGS UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE. We will still meet at the park on Wednesdays and Fridays, and we will still do some sort of trail or speed work on Tuesdays, so continue to check the blog on Mondays for further details.

THIS WEEK'S TRAIL/SPEED WORK WILL BE ONCE AGAIN AT BURBANK HIGH SCHOOL FOR AM AND PM CLASSES. WE WILL BE DOING AN ASSESSMENT.

From the CrossFit Journal 23 article, "Why Fitness"?, July 2004, by Greg Glassman

"For CrossFitters, fitness is part of a distinctly human enterprise – conscious and deliberate self-actualization. Being, very deliberately, all we can be. Our various capacities certainly include many that are physical. In some circles, affecting complete disdain for physical activity and achievement, artfully suggests intellectual focus, and hopefully, superiority. For us, evidence, experience, and logic favor models that recognize a vast and often irreducible interaction of mental and physical domains. We believe that exercising is smart and makes us smarter.

Recent analysis of the profound difference in genetic expression between exercising and sedentary people and the resulting disorder in multiple body systems of the sedentary suggest to us that normal brain function in sedentary individuals may eventually be shown by disadvantage of gene expression to be impossible. http://jp.physoc.org/cgi/content/full/543/2/399


Anyone who exercises regularly can quickly speak to its impact on mood and mental function. Someday, science will show that exercise doesn’t exactly produce unnaturally ebullient or buoyant mental states as much as being sedentary induces unnaturally depressive brain chemistry environments.


There’s another nonhealth advantage to becoming fit that doesn’t require blurring conventional or colloquial distinctions between mind and body but, rather, acknowledges the distinction and uses physical experience and successes to draw effective strategies for success in non-physical domains.


At CrossFit we call this the “transference effect”. What we know is that the gym is a testing ground for improving and developing the will. Physical achievement, fitness, requires repeatedly converting thought to action or giving expression to your will. The costs to physical achievement are real, painfully tangible, measurable, and fleeting while the rewards are equally real and measurable but sweet, not painful and long lasting rather than fleeting."


WOD
IN TEAMS COMPLETE

AMRAP IN 20 OF
SUICIDES TOTALING 100M 
CONE SHUFFLE
10 SQUATS
10 SIT UPS
20' BEAR CRAWLS

 

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Okay everyone, it is set. Our Christmas Party is Friday, December 18th at 7:30pm. Bring something Paleo for a potluck dinner. We will draw names out of a hat on Monday for a gift exchange. YOU MUST BE AT THE PARTY TO PARTICIPATE IN THE GIFT EXCHANGE. A $10 maximum is allowed.



WOD
A Jackie Kind of Relay

In Teams of 2

1000m sprint
50 Squat Thrusters w/ 45# bar or DBs
30 Jumping Pull Ups

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Learning the Backsquat

From the CrossFit Journal article, "Popular Biomechanics" by Mark Rippetoe,  first published in Journal Issue 55, March 2007.


"..It is possible to identify certain aspects of any correct squat, regardless of bar position.

At the top of the squat:


• All the skeletal components that support the bar—the knees, hips, and spine—will be locked in extension so that the muscular components have to exert only enough force to maintain this resting position
• The bar will be directly over the mid-foot


At the bottom of the squat:


• The spine will be held rigid in lumbar and thoracic extension
• The bar will be directly vertical to the middle of the foot
• The feet will be flat on the ground
• The acetabulum, or hip joint, will be lower than the top of the patella"




With subscription to the CrossFit Journal, entire article is available here:

WOD
LEARN THE BACKSQUAT 

On Virtuosity

An Open Letter To CrossFit Instructors: CFJ Aug 05 Coach Glassman


“In gymnastics, completing a routine without error will not get you a perfect score, the 10.0—only a 9.7. To get the last three tenths of a point, you must demonstrate “risk, originality, and virtuosity” as well as make no mistakes in execution of the routine. Risk is simply executing a movement that is likely to be missed or botched; originality is a movement or combination of movements unique to the athlete—a move or sequence not seen before. Understandably, novice gymnasts love to demonstrate risk and originality, for both are dramatic, fun, and awe inspiring— especially among the athletes themselves, although audiences are less likely to be aware when either is demonstrated.


Virtuosity, though, is a different beast altogether. Virtuosity is defined in gymnastics as “performing the common uncommonly well.” Unlike risk and originality, virtuosity is elusive, supremely elusive. It is, however, readily recognized by audience as well as coach and athlete. But more importantly, more to my point, virtuosity is more than the requirement for that last tenth of a point; it is always the mark of true mastery (and of genius and beauty). There is a compelling tendency among novices developing any skill or art, whether learning to play the violin, write poetry, or compete in gymnastics, to quickly move past the fundamentals and on to more elaborate, more sophisticated movements, skills, or techniques. This compulsion is the novice’s curse—the rush to originality and risk. The novice’s curse is manifested as excessive adornment, silly creativity, weak fundamentals and, ultimately, a marked lack of virtuosity and delayed mastery. If you’ve ever had the opportunity to be taught by the very best in any field you’ve likely been surprised at how simple, how fundamental, how basic the instruction was. The novice’s curse afflicts learner and teacher alike.


Physical training is no different. What will inevitably doom a physical training program and dilute a coach’s efficacy is a lack of commitment to fundamentals. We see this increasingly in both programming and supervising execution. Rarely now do we see prescribed the short, intense couplets or triplets that epitomize CrossFit programming. Rarely do trainers really nitpick the mechanics of fundamental movements. I understand how this occurs. It is natural to want to teach people advanced and fancy movements. The urge to quickly move away from the basics and toward advanced movements arises out of the natural desire to entertain your client and impress him with your skills and knowledge. But make no mistake: it is a sucker’s move. Teaching a snatch where there is not yet an overhead squat, teaching an overhead squat where there is not yet an air squat, is a colossal mistake. This rush to advancement increases the chance of injury, delays advancement and progress, and blunts the client’s rate of return on his efforts. In short, it retards his fitness.
If you insist on basics, really insist on them, your clients will immediately recognize that you are a master trainer. They will not be bored; they will be awed. I promise this. They will quickly come to recognize the potency of fundamentals.
They will also advance in every measurable way past those not blessed to have a teacher so grounded and committed to basics. Training will improve, clients will advance faster, and you will appear more experienced and professional and garner more respect, if you simply recommit to the basics. There is plenty of time within an hour session to warm up, practice a basic movement or skill or pursue a new PR or max lift, discuss and critique the athletes’ efforts, and then pound out a tight little couplet or triplet utilizing these skills or just play. Play is important. Tire flipping, basketball, relay races, tag, Hooverball, and the like are essential to good programming, but they are seasoning—like salt, pepper, and oregano. They are not main courses. CrossFit trainers have the tools to be the best trainers on earth. I really believe that. But good enough never is, and we want that last tenth of a point, the whole
10.0. We want virtuosity!”


Aimee Anaya demonstrating full triple extension on a Snatch.
For more information about her and Snatching, visit www.cathletics.com

WOD
AMRAP IN 25 OF
200 M SPRINT
20 BOX JUMPS
20 BURPEES