Archive | May, 2010

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

25 May

I just wanted to note some small changes to the upcoming small group strength training that I am making available to anyone that is interested in not only getting stronger but also learning how to back squat properly, press with leverage, and dead-lift properly. I have decided to split Basic Barbell I into both Rip’s 3×5 program and my modifications to Wendler’s 5/3/1 program. So the upcoming 8 week session will be Rip’s program at 3:30PM and my take on Wendler’s program at 7:30PM. This will be in contrast to the current session which is Wendler at 3:30PM and Rip at 7:30PM.

Hopefully, this will encourage athletes to try both programs to see which is better suited to their needs and since you are required to complete two sessions of Basic Barbell I before being admitted to Basic Barbell II, this is a great opportunity to change it up a little. Both are tremendous programs that will get the novice stronger. I have adapted Wendler’s program to include more exposure to the squat since we are dealing with the novice strength athlete. Other than that, the major differences between both programs is the rep scheme, the use of percentages, the inclusion of the power clean in Rip’s program but not using it in Wendler’s, and the inclusion of assistance work in Wendler’s but not using it in Rip’s.

As we move forward, I will rotate which time slot carries 5/3/1 and which one carries 3×5 that way everyone has a chance to do both programs. Another change will be in pricing structure because I feel that as you progress through the program, you should be rewarded by paying less and less. With that being said, you will learn how to train yourself and others. You will learn how to properly execute the movements as well as learn how to teach them at the basic level. How well you teach them remains on you.

Basic Barbell II will also cover two different strength training programs. Here, I will encourage someone to choose one and stick with it until it doesn’t work but it is not a requirement. You may just want to learn more about different ways of programming. I have yet to decide on which two I will use but at the top of my list are Kenn’s tier method, Rip’s Texas method, or DeFranco’s Westside for Skinny Bastards program. I may also revert back to Wendler’s 5/3/1 and it’s orginal way of application. In any sense, we move from daily/weekly progress in the novice to weekly and/or monthly progress in intermediate trainees.

Also, how many I allow into the groups will lessen as well. Right now I am allowing 8 persons into BBI but will only allow 6 into BBII and 4 into BBIII. Spots are at a premium so I encourage you to sign up as soon as registration opens up. Emails will be sent out when registration goes live.

The changed pricing structure is as follows:

Basic Barbell I – $200 (1 week Early Bird discount – $150)

Basic Barbell I (2) – $150 (1 week EBD – $100)

Basic Barbell II – $150 (1 week EBD – $100)

Basic Barbell II (2) – $125 (1 week EBD – $75)

Basic Barbell II (3rd time or more) – $100 (1 week EBD – $50)

Basic Barbell III (invitation only) – $100 (1 week EBD – $50)

Basic Barbell III (2nd time or more) – Free

If you look over to the right, I have the dates posted for upcoming groups. Feel free to contact me with any questions.

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

13 May

The Paleo Challenge…………….

I haven’t really had time to sit down and write something of substance on this blog. I have been meaning too though ever since I got back from regional competition at the beginning of May. I have just had to get right back into the swing of running an affiliate as well as finalizing our Paleo challenge, which was a super success by the way. If you haven’t already had the chance, you should make a quick jump over to my nutrition blog, www.nutrisimple.net, and check out the before and after photos. The proof is in the pudding. I don’t claim this to be my diet. Eating Primal has been around for, well, since the beginning of time. I have my own little twists on the whole subject and I lean heavily on Robb Wolf, Dr. Kurt Harris, a bit on the man himself, Dr. Loren Cordain, and a some small stuff from a number of other scholars and everyday people with experience.

We went for seven weeks. We had a Yahoo group for support, we required the submission of weekly food logs every week, we didn’t dismiss anyone on the merits of what they ate, and I was there for question answering all the way to the end. There were a few that dropped out but for the most part, every one stuck it out and saw a change and/or learned something new about themselves. I am strict when it comes to giving out information. I want my athletes to have straight. I don’t want to beat around the bush or make them feel all good about themselves if there isn’t something to feel good about. It takes work but it isn’t at all difficult to eat ancestrally for the remainder of a lifetime. I give them scenarios of a perfect situation and explain that there isn’t ever going to be a perfect situation. I then proceed to let them know that the closer you stick to perfect the more perfect results you will get. I also let them know that at least an 80% adherence will work wonders. In this day and age, if you just skip the processed carbohydrates and stick to real, whole foods, you will already be light years ahead of the majority of the population. Then start to increase fat consumption, both saturated and mono-unsaturated, and treat vegetables as medicine. Also keep your protein intake fairly high and voila, you are on your way to being supremely healthy. And you will look and perform really well too.

In any sense, we are having another challenge starting on June 1st and I urge anyone in the area to join in on the fun. I don’t care who you are. I just want people to know how to eat and be healthy. No mumbo jumbo about eating every three hours or stuff like that. Just real, honest eating from healthy sources. I am starting an eating revolution here in Omaha and I want all to be a part of it.

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What I saw………………

Now back to what I originally wanted to talk about. The 2010 North Central CrossFit Games Regional Qualifier was a success, both for me and for everyone involved. At least in my eyes it was. I didn’t qualify, missing by only a few points but that is besides the point. I am not ashamed that I didn’t make the cut. It was a tight field and I missed by one spot. I held my own and even though this sport is gravitating toward being a larger guy’s sport, I will always have a shot to qualify. You know why? Strength for my size and TECHNIQUE…… especially in the Olympic lifts. I know my shit. I am not bragging in any sense of the word. It’s just that I know how to Olympic lift and I know how to teach people how to Olympic lift, correctly. As long as there is shoddy technique at the qualifying level, I will always have a chance. I only need to gain a few pounds (like maybe 10) and keep working on bringing up my weakness or better yet, my weaknesses in relationship to the guys qualifying and the workouts being written up. I did everything by the book leading up to this competition. My diet was elite. My training was elite (at least to the point that I needed it to be, as that is why you compete, to see where you lie and what you need to fix). I had an elite performance team of chiropractors and massage therapists helping me out with a nagging injury that miraculously healed enough to allow me to compete full tilt boogie.  No excuses. I gave it my all and my all this time around was 5th best in the North Central regional. The only uncertain things is that I don’t know how I would have fared at the games. It will always be what comes out of the hopper. That’s what is so great about the sport of CrossFit. You might not qualify for the next competition but you might be the best at the next level if the right mix of workouts comes out.

I always tell myself that this is the last year but once competition season rolls around, I fall in love all over again. You know, I am not one of those coaches who runs his affiliate like CrossFit is the end all, be all. I don’t get mad when people talk bad about CrossFit. I don’t get irritated when people refer to it as a cult. The reason is that CrossFit is not the end all, be all. There are so many ways to skin a cat that it is actually kind of crazy. Those that preach the gospel of CrossFit don’t understand it fully anyways. It is all about the right tool for the job. You want to get stronger, got get the right tool out of the toolbox. You want to become bigger, you gotta get out the right tool out of the toolbox. If the only tool you have in your toolbox is a CrossFit wrench, you are going to come across some really rough patches. I like Coach Mike Boyle. I don’t like everything he does but he has some really good shit and knows his shit too. There are a lot of guys out there that I respect and it’s their information that I go to when I find some chinks in my armor. Whether it’s mobility, flexibility, joint integrity, you name it. It’s the small stuff that counts. I love everything about human performance and improving it.

In the end, I am a die-hard CrossFitter and always will be. I think I may very well keep competing until I reach the Master’s level. Who knows. But the one thing I do know is that CrossFit will evolve and we as affiliate owners must evolve with it. We must realize that all CrossFit really is, is a methodology that gives us an opportunity to use all methodologies in our quest for supreme fitness. If you fail to realize this, you will get left in the dust. This is one of the reasons I placed 5th this year. I have dedicated myself to becoming an above average Olympic lifter, an average power-lifter (in the sense of absolute strength), and I’m small so calisthenics are a bit easier for me. Because of this, I have become an alright Crossfitter. It doesn’t work the other way around. You don’t become an above average Olympic lifter from doing CrossFit only. I saw it at the regional. Too many athletes struggled with power snatches at an intermediate weight, especially the second go round. There were guys 1.25 to almost 1.75 my size who only clean and jerked 15 to 30 pounds more than me. If I focus on clean and jerk for a bit only, I now I could get 300. The thing is, I don’t need to get 300 now. I need to keep bringing up that which kept me from qualifying.  That could have been as low as 280 or not resting for a few seconds more on one of the met-cons or practicing rowing a bit more. In any case, my point is, the right tool for the job. As long as others are trying to use a wrench to hammer in a nail, I will have a shot at qualifying. Just gotta keep my end of the deal.

Team tryouts the rest of this week. I’ll let you know how it goes.

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

5 May

BASIC BARBELL – SMALL GROUP TRAINING

I will be working on curriculum for three different types of classes:

Basic Barbell I (Beginner)
This will be your basic beginner programming. It will cover dead-lift, bench press, press, squat, and power clean technique and programming. It will have room for evolving and soon these will not only be strength development training but also instruction on how to teach and program for the beginner. This group training is open to anyone committed to becoming stronger in the core strength lifts.

Basic Barbell II (Intermediate)
This will be more advanced programming. Once an athlete no longer sees daily progress or improvement, changes to programming must occur to accommodate continuation of disruption in bodily homeostasis. Rippetoe explains that at this point, an athlete will move to weekly progress instead of daily progress. We are no longer looking to improve every workout but improve every week. Adequate time is needed to both recover from the previous workout and to force adaption. This is no longer possible with basic programming. Accessory work becomes more of a factor in intermediate programming

An athlete must show signs of stalling in order to be considered for intermediate programming. Minimum of 2 times through, or 16 weeks, of basic programming is prerequisite. Advancement in barbell training knowledge/education continues.

Basic Barbell III (advanced)

This is the last and final phase of programming. It is the most advanced. In this phase, we start to cover monthly and even yearly programming. Progress is slow but steady. Change in stimulus must occur more often to avoid stagnation. We now look at programming for singular events, athletic seasons, etc. You will no longer see weekly progress. As a matter of fact, you are no longer looking for weekly progress. Your workouts are set up to use percentages of your training maxes to help elicit recovery from workout to workout and increase strength development at certain points of the year.

Advanced programming is by invitation only. A prerequisite of at least twice through intermediate programming only qualifies you for consideration.

Here are the tentative dates for future small group strength training:

Basic Barbell I
June 22nd thru August 14th
Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays
Both 3:30PM and 7:30PM Classes (11AM and 12PM on Saturday)

Basic Barbell I
July 26th thru September 17th
Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays
Both 3:30PM and 7:30PM Classes (6:30PM on Fridays)

Basic Barbell I
August 24th thru Oct 16th
Tuesdays, Thursday, and Saturdays
3:30PM (12PM on Saturdays)

Basic Barbell II
August 24th thru October 16th
Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays
7:30PM (1PM on Saturdays)

Registration for the above classes will open 2 weeks prior to start date. The first week will always offer an early bird discount. The prices are as follows:
Basic Barbell I – $200 ($150 EBD)
Basic Barbell II – $150 ($100 EBD)
Basic Barbell III – $100 ($50 EBD)

Dates are subject to change without notice.

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

4 May

[UPDATE]: There are no spots left for the 7:30PM strength group training and only 3 spots left for the 3:30pm class. They are going quickly so if you are interested in signing up, please do so immediately or forever be regretful. Haha. Anyways, If these spots fill up, I will contemplate opening up a Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday class of 8 starting about two or three weeks after these first two classes start if there is enough interest. The time slot would be 7:30PM on Tues/Thur and 11AM on Saturday.

Post thoughts to comments.

I just wanted to post this to my blog before it goes up on the CFO blog tonight. I am going to offer two small group strength classes to anyone who is interested. The price is very cost effective for what you are getting in return.

I am offering a chance for anyone that is interested in becoming better at CrossFit the chance to do so. What does this mean for you? It can mean any number of things. Are you looking to change the way you look? Are you looking to become a possible CrossFit competitor? Are you just wanting to be the best at your class time? What ever your goal is, I have the answer: Strength!!!!!!!!!

I am offering two classes, one at 3:30PM and one at 7:30PM. Each class has only 8 spots available. There is even a discount for those that sign up by the 15th.

The classes start on May 24th and run for 8 weeks (23 sessions), Monday, Wednesday, and Friday (Friday is at 6:30PM). These classes will be basic barbell, Rip style. Very basic programming that is intended to make you stronger. I have always believed that the true way to unlocking the nasty potency of CrossFit and it’s ability to deliver real results is to first become stronger. Conditioning-speed with heavy weights and long lines of action is a very important factor in seeing results. The ability to move very quickly with prescribed weights in CrossFit style workouts is where you will see the best results. Unfortunately, most of us aren’t at our genetic potential when it comes to strength. CrossFit alone will not allow you to reach your true strength potential. Once you bring it up though, you will be a completely different person.

I have created event pages and the ability to register online. The registration for both classes will close upon the registration of 8 people for each time slot. There will be no met-con during this class. Only strength development in it’s most basic form.

Feed me your goals and I will help you achieve them. You do not have to be a part of CrossFit Omaha to take part in these small group sessions.

DO NOT SIGN UP FOR THESE SMALL GROUP SESSIONS IF YOU ARE NOT SERIOUS ABOUT STRENGTH DEVELOPMENT (I’M NOT TALKING ABOUT BULKING UP). I WANT SOMEONE WHO IS GOING TO BE THERE FOR ALL 23 SESSIONS AND IS SERIOUS ABOUT LOOKING BETTER NAKED, NOT BEING LAST IN MET-CONS EVERY TIME THEY WALK INTO THE GYM, WHO WANTS TO BE ABLE TO DO PULL UPS, HSPUS, ETC. THIS IS A SERIOUS COMMITMENT. YOU WILL GET WHAT YOU PUT INTO IT.

If you are interested please do not hesitate to sign up as the spots will go quickly. If anything, 50 dollars off on or before the 15th sounds mighty enticing. The next offering will not be available until August. Don’t be left out. This is for real.

Basic Barbell Group Training – 3:30PM (Monday, Wednesday, Friday)

Basic Barbell Group Training – 7:30PM (Monday, Wednesday, Friday)


Be on the lookout for other programs I would like to personally offer such as Olympic lifting instruction, running programs (not distance running), and CrossFit games prep (I saw so many people this weekend that could be so much better at competing with the right coach, I can offer that).

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