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NEWs, Interesting articles and further reading

Olympic Weightlifting Workshop with Michaela Breeze

24/12/2015

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Michaela Breeze will be leading an Olympic Weightlifting Workshop at CrossFit Avon on Saturday 20th February with a follow up session on Sunday 8th May.
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​Michaela was the first woman to represent Team GB in weightlifting at the Olympic Games. She finished ninth in the 58kg class at the 2004 Games in Athens and 15th in the 63kg category in 2008. She won European bronze in 2003 and has won six Commonwealth medals including two golds in 2002 and 2006 as well as a bronze at Glasgow 2014.

Cathie has previously attended a seminar run by Michaela and was very impressed by her teaching methods and the overall content of the course.
 
The seminar on Saturday 20th February will be a full day with Michaela at CrossFit Avon and will cover both the snatch and the Clean & Jerk. The cost will be £60 per person.
 
Michaela will then be coming back for a follow up session on Sunday 8th May but for a half day. This will give attendees of the first seminar the chance to put in to practice their learnings for a couple of months before having another session to refine technique. The cost for the follow up session is £30.
 
You do not need to attend both sessions and can even attend the half-day session without having done the first seminar.
 
Should you wish to attend please bring cash to the office in an envelope with your name written on it. We are limiting the numbers to 20 people per session so bring in your cash as soon as possible to reserve your place!

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How to Avoid Getting Punched In The Mouth

15/12/2015

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An article by Bryce Smith of CrossFit Invictus. View the original article here.
Have you ever thought to yourself, “I’d crush that workout!”? But then, when it comes time to actually do it, you load up the prescribed weight and about halfway through find yourself stripping weights off the bar?
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Training at high intensity is a very humbling monster and when you receive a visit from the fatigue fairy, the things that once looked super easy on paper now feel near impossible. Just like Mike Tyson used to say, “Everybody has a plan until they get punched in the mouth.” Everyone has a plan until they get so tired they are walking like a drunken sailor. Check out some of my words of wisdom concerning to how to avoid getting punched in the mouth:
  1. When attacking a workout, make sure you know and understand the time domain and the number of repetitions required so you don’t come out of the gate super strong and then die by halftime. Know your limits and then strive to go slightly beyond them.
  2. Understand that just because you can lift the prescribed load in a strength portion, it may not be the proper load for you in a conditioning session. With volume accumulation and heavy breathing, loads that sometimes feel light seem to get whole lot heavier.
  3. Make note of some of the skills that you are good at as well as the ones you struggle with. The skills you think you are proficient at may not be so good after a twenty calorie sprint on the assault bike or a fifty calorie sprint on the rower. My advice would be to practice skills in a controlled environment to start and then slowly begin adding intensity until you are able to do them while tired. Once you can do that, I recommend working on skills while fatigued or after performing cardiorespiratory movements like rowing, running, assault biking, burpee-ing, box jumping, or after isometric holds with objects or positions.
By getting yourself sweaty, uncomfortable and breathing heavy, you can really challenge your mastery of certain skills and most importantly, learn to strengthen your mindset with those movements. The things that once took a ton of thought will soon come to you like second nature. This will enable you to perform those movements at a higher intensity while fresh and with greater efficiency while fatigued. All of these things will help when you are trying to stick to your plan for any given workout. Trust in the process and know that challenge and failure lead to growth. Take note of the times you get punched in the face and try to strategize on how to avoid that in future workouts.
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Is CrossFit Safe!??

7/12/2015

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An article by Adam Shackell, coach at CrossFit Bath

I had an interesting chat with a member this morning that told me he had mates who wouldn’t do Crossfit because they would get injured, and referenced the risk of high rep olympic lifting. This came at a time where we have just teamed up with Bath University to examine the true injury risk in CrossFit. Needless to say we are pretty confident in the product we deliver so I wanted to talk about what I believe to be the biggest issue;
1. CrossFit the Fitness Programme v CrossFit the Sport

If someone says CrossFit is dangerous and does so without differentiating between Crossfit the fitness programme and Crossfit the Sport, then high five them in the face…..with a chair. For a start most CrossFit coaches I know absolutely hammer technique. The Crossfit Level 1 course is spent with nothing other than a PVC pipe, drilling movements and positions until near perfection. That doesn’t sound like a fitness movement uninterested in technique to me. Walk into your local globo gym and you will have a hard time finding anyone lifting WITH good technique.

People that do CrossFit as a SPORT account for less than 1% of an average boxes membership. Can kipping HSPU’s, high rep snatches and butterfly Pull Ups be troublesome for some, of course, but what sport is 100% safe?  The minority that do the Sport of CrossFit aren’t doing it to be “Healthy”, they are competing for points and  understand the risks, just like those that step over the white line for a game of rugby or football. The CrossFit Games are there to test the fittest people on the planet. they are the 1% of the 1%, they are not the true representation of a CF member at your local box. The guys and gals that need to be doing these “riskier” elements of CrossFit should first of earn’t the right to do so (everyone wants to run before they can walk) and once they have, will likely be doing their own individual programming or competitor classes.
Do regular gym goers need to be resting on their heads for “real life fitness”? I would strongly argue no!

The people that do Crossfit as a fitness programme should be leaving your gym fitter and healthier than when they walked in! Is any fitness programme 100% safe? Of course not, but as a coach when looking at clients across the room first ask yourself “are they safe?”. Most people walk through your door with internal rotation of the shoulders, tight hips, dodgy backs, the in-ability to put their hands above their heads without compromising in their lower back and a whole host of other issues. Now do these individuals need to be doing handstand walks, overhead squats and kipping pull ups to better their lives! No! Do we get these individuals doing kipping handstand push ups, hell no! Why? Because there are far safer ways to get these individuals fit and healthy and ultimately 99.9% of your gym come to see you because they want to look good naked and be stronger. Building a strong strength and aerobic foundation should be the first priority, not adding speed and momentum onto dysfunction.

As an example lets take Doris, she is 46 years old and is coming to you for increased fitness, added strength and to look and feel better. She doesn’t even know what the CrossFit Games is, let alone have ambitions of competing at a local level herself. She comes into the workout of the day and its 21-15-9 reps of Snatches and Kipping HSPU’s. (I highly recommend that isn’t the type of WOD you programme for your fitness group). Now what do you think Doris is going to get out of a scaling of 21-15-9 Power Snatches with a technique bar or worse a PVC pipe and kipping HSPU’s  with a 20kg disc and an abmat under her head!? I would argue, not a f***** lot! A Power Snatch is just a rapid hip hinge, what else is also a rapid hip hinge, far safer and able to give Doris a similar stimulus to the big dawgs? Russian Kettlebell Swings. A handstand push up is just an upper body pressing exercise, whats the most basic form of that? A push up of course. For a start can Doris do 10 perfectly executed push ups? If the answer is no, why the hell is she inverted doing a progression to that exercise and when will she need to do this is the real world.
Functional movements are based on real world situational bio-mechanics, or simply put, sitting down standing up (Squat), picking things off the floor (Deadlift) and putting things overhead (Presses) to name a few. I really doubt Doris has ever been in a situation in life where she thought “You know what, this task would be so much easier if I could walk on my hands”. Compare that to Froning where this certainly would be the case, and hopefully you can see the difference between Fitness and the Sport.

So, If you still believe the average client of a CrossFit box is doing CrossFit the Sport you are either uneducated and/or ignorant or you have been to a really poor box (I hope its not the latter, and if it is, I suggest you shop around for a better one). Not all plumbers are good plumbers, but the ones that are, are worth their weight in gold.

Hopefully this gives you some ammunition next time someone spouts out CrossFit is dangerous or someone is hesitant to join because they have heard all we do is high rep olympic lifting.
I will leave you with a mantra I heard Julian Pineau say that I absolutely loved. If you take nothing away from this article then take this:
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Move Safe >> Move better >> then Move Faster!
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Another great article about the rise of CrossFit

7/12/2015

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