Home Blog Page 351

Monday 100719

0

Back squat 5, 5, 5 reps @ 40%, 50%, 60%

Then, for 20 minutes:
Run 400m

Rest precisely the time of the previous run. 

Post distance to comments. 

6a010534c79eb6970c0115721a6652970b-500wi 

Zac's going to this weekend's swimming WOD – are you? 

Are you living up to your genetic potential??? By Domoni Alexander

The limits of human performance continue to be debated. Until 1954 when Roger Bannister completed the first 4 minute mile, it was thought to be unattainable. Today this has been achieved time and time again. The limits on human performance continue to be challenged. Athletes and Sport continue to evolve.  Physiologists research the correlation between genetics and human performance. Physiologists agree that there are genetic limitations which ultimately curtail athletic performance, specifically cardiovascular endurance, flexibility, anaerobic threshold, and muscle fiber distribution (number or ratio of slow and fast twitch fibers). However, it has been proven that variables including nutrition, motivation, and training modalities can significantly impact and enhance ones athletic performance beyond the limitations of genetic potential.

Genetics have a direct impact on one’s athletic capacity, but consistent training and diet can greatly hinder or enhance this potential. For instance, you may have the capacity to be an elite athlete but if you’re living a lifestyle of overeating, making poor macronutrient food choices, and inconsistently training you’re unlikely to achieve this potential (or any potential for that matter). On the other hand, if your challenged by genetic limitations, there are ways to compensate through healthy eating, proper rest and stress management, and training approach. Bottom line, your genetics contribute to the rate and degree of physiologic adaptation in response to exercise.

The question is not validating that there exists a genetic predisposition to our performance potential, but rather, are you living up to yours?  How hard are you willing to work to maximize your potential?  Ask yourself the following:

Are you weighing and measuring quality foods?
Are you consistently training and giving yourself adequate rest and recovery time?
Are you tracking your progress by logging workouts?
Are you devoting time to improving your deficiencies?
Are you committed to virtuosity in the mechanics of the foundational movements?

Post thoughts to comments.

Sunday 1000718

0

As a team of two, complete the following for max reps:

5:00 minutes of rowing, (calories)

4:00 Pull-ups

3:00 Pull-over sit-ups, 8#/6#

2:00 Goblet squats, 24kg/16kg

1:00 Burpees

At each station, only one partner is allowed to accumulate reps at a time.  For each station, each partner must take a turn accumulating reps towards the total score.

Post team and score to comments.   

DSCN4709 

Alan Anderson: firefighter, paramedic, ski patroller, halloween enthusiast, and Verve member #2 (we consider his better half #1).

Saturday 100717

0

"Dumbell Block"

20 Maneaters
Lunge to corner
15 maneaters
Farmer's walk to corner
10 maneaters
Lunge to corner
5 maneaters
Farmer's walk back to starting point

Starting on the corner of King and 38th (corner #1) go clockwise around our block. Through the whole workout you must keep the dumbells in your hands. If you have to put them down, you are awarded 5 burpees on the spot without the dumbells.  Gents use 30# dumbells, ladies use 20# dumbells.


DSCN4707
Midline stability in swimming is critical to a good stroke. 

We are animals in the sense that when we worry or experience stress, we turn on the same physiological response. But we usually don’t turn off the stress-response in the same way – through fighting, fleeing, or other quick actions.  Over time if we are unable to get rid of the chronic activation of the stress-response and our bodies will eventually become sick. 

Robert Sapolsky a professor of biology and neurology at Stanford University wrote an amazing book: "Why Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers" on what happens physiologically when we encounter stress.  It is a hard read, but allows you to look at life’s stresses and what they can actually do on our bodies and minds.  Sapolsky talks about long-term building projects that go on in the body.  When life gets crazy those projects have to be shifted to fighting to survive against another 3pm hailstorm or 5pm traffic.  If the storm lasts too long, the body will keep putting its energy into surviving, which takes away from those long term wellness and weakens the immune system, raising the risk of heart disease, slaps libido, triggers depression, and decreases your quality of life.

One of the RADDEST points is that a great way to de-stress is exercise, if you like to exercise!  Thank god we all liked to get a good licking from the CrossFit Verve trainers.  I know for me the gym settles my mind when I leave. I cant breath, I am going on the last round and Cherie’s voice is the only thing making it to my brain. I don’t stop to think about the laundry, the dog, my boss, or what I have to do today.  I take that breath and focus on the task that needs to be completed and execute it with excellent form.  Holy shit it never gets easier, but I am getting better.  All the stresses at least left my mind for the last hour and probably for the next hour while I am trying to recover.

Friday 100716

0

Press 5, 3, 1+ reps @ 75%, 85%, 95% 
Please download and print out your worksheet!

Then, for time:

25 Push press, 95#/65#
20 AbMat Sit-up
5  Ring push-up

20 Push press, 95#/65#
20 AbMat Sit-up 
10 Ring push-up

15 Push press, 95#/65#
20 AbMat Sit-up
15 Ring push-up

10 Push press, 95#/65#
20 AbMat Sit-up 
20 Ring push-up

5 Push press, 95#/65#
20 AbMat Sit-up 
25 Ring push-up

Post time to comments.

DSCN4758

Why Red Wine? By Zac Pine

The benefits of red wine (in moderation) for health have been known for ages. In an effort to understand the 'French Paradox' (why French people can indulge in fatty foods but not develop heart disease) red wine came into focus in 1991 on an episode of '60 Minutes'. Since then, scientists have been feeding components of red wine to mice and other animals in an attempt to understand the full health benefits. Here's what we know so far:

Flavanoids and Antioxidants:
Red wine is high in flavonoids (a type of polyphenol), which are antioxidants. One of the most studied antioxidants is resveratrol, which comes from grape skins and seeds. Antioxidants help prevent certain molecules, known as free radicals, from damaging cells.

Does red wine prevent cancer?:
Resveratrol helps prevent cancer by limiting tumor growth.

How much should I drink?:
To receive the benefits of red wine, it must be drunk in moderation (1-2 glasses maximum per day) and regularly.

Does the alcohol help?:
The alcohol in wine may help produce more good cholesterol.

What if I am a yeast cell?:
Good news: Research in yeast cells has shown that red wine can increase life span by 80%.

But can it cure the common cold?:
Red wine has also been shown to help prevent the common cold.

There are a bunch of mad scientists out there finding what will allow us to perform better and live longer.  Who knew the skin of a grape could be so helpful to our longevity?  Any attempt allowing ourselves to de-stress from a hard physical or mental event (work) gives our body a chance to rebuild what we have broken down.  Make sure to have a glass of wine, get good sleep, and eat good food!!!

Thursday 100715

0

Three rounds for time:

10 Chest to bar pull-ups
10 Front squats, 165#/115#
10 Burpees

Post time to comments.

The History of the CrossFit Games by Dave Castro

In four years, the CrossFit Games have grown from a small event—“the Woodstock of fitness”—to a huge competition featuring elite athletes from all corners of the world.

In this video series, Dave Castro recounts the history of the Games, which were held at his parents’ ranch until permitting requirements necessitated a move to a different location in 2010.

In 2007, the Games featured three events: a run, a triplet and a strength event. About 70 competitors and 150 fans showed up for the first competition that started a new sport.

In 2008, the Games exploded, with close to 300 competitors registering to compete. All of a sudden, CrossFit HQ had to figure out how to put that many competitors through a test of elite fitness. When the event wrapped up, it was clear that a yearly tradition had been created.

The third edition of the CrossFit Games required a full year of planning and a bottleneck that came in the form of regional qualifiers. Top athletes had to earn a spot in the Games by besting their peers in one of the regionals held all over the world. The competition season produced a field of elite athletes who were tested by eight epic WODs in Aromas.

Finally, Castro offers a few words of advice to athletes preparing for the fourth edition of the CrossFit Games in Carson, Calif.

Article courtesy of the CrossFit JournalCheck out the videos here.

Wednesday 100714

0

"2009 CrossFit Games Couplet"

Three rounds for time:

30 Wall ball shots, 20#/14#

30 Hang squat snatch, 75#/45#

Wall ball target is 11' high.  Hang squat snatches must start below the knees on every rep.

Post time to comments.

16879550 

It's going to be an exciting week.  This is the week of THE CrossFit games, in Carson, CA.  Every year athletes from all over the globe gather to test their fitness against the best of the best.  The test is unknown and unknowable and the only way to win is to do more work, faster.  Fifty men and fifty women, from all over the world qualified at sectionals and regionals to get their spot at the title "The Fittest".

Once again in 2010, Verve will be making the trek to cheer on our very own.  This will be Matt's third year at the games, he finished 8th in 2008 and 18th in 2009.  The competition is getting tougher, but Matt is stronger and more focused the ever before.  Matt has had a defining year of training with numerous PR's including 250# snatch balanced with a :60 sec 400m run.  He has been unwaivering in his discipline to diet and his training is off the hook.

Matt and a merry band of ninjas, will be headed out to CA this Thursday.  The competition starts Friday night, and will be live streamed to the internet.  That's right the CrossFit Games will be live and online.  Streaming starts Thursday night at 6pm PDT.  The webcast will feature over 30 hours of Live HD coverage and analysis, with 13 cameras, Booyah!  Matt we are so proud and can't wait to cheer you on.   

History of the Games

CrossFit Games Live

Sandbag 

 

 

Tuesday 100713

0

For time:

20 Jerks 155#, 105#

40 Toes to bar

60 Kettlebell swings 32Kg, 24Kg

Post time to comments.

161 DSCN4721 
Cat just getting off the "crack", Cat one year later on a low carbohydrate diet.
 

Experts from – Good Calories, Bad Calories, Gary Taubes (My new favorite book)

Though out the world, incidences of obesity and diabetes is increasing at an alarming rate.  Obesity levels in the United States remained relatively constant from the early 1960's through 1980, at 12% to 14% of the population; over the next twenty-five years, coincident with the official recommendations to eat less fat and so more carbohydrates, it surged to over 30 percent.  By 2004, one in three Americans was considered clinically obese. 

So why this drastic change?  Here is one anecdotal piece to the puzzle as to why our society believes in a low-fat, high carb diet.

The Eisenhower Paradox
PRESIDENT DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER SUFFERED his first heart attack at the age of sixty-four.
It took place in Denver, Colorado, where he kept a second home. It may have started on Friday, September 23, 1955. Eisenhower had spent that morning playing golf and lunched on a hamburger with onions, which gave him what appeared to be indigestion. He was asleep by nine-thirty at night but awoke five hours later with "increasingly severe low substernal nonradiating pain," as described by Dr. Howard Snyder, his personal physician, who arrived on the scene and injected Eisenhower with two doses of morphine. When it was clear by Saturday afternoon that his condition hadn't improved, he was taken to the hospital. By midday Sunday, Dr. Paul Dudley White, the world-renowned Harvard cardiologist, had been flown in to consult.

For most Americans, Eisenhower's heart attack constituted a learning experience on coronary heart disease. At a press conference that Monday morning, Dr. White gave a lucid and authoritative description of the disease itself. Over the next six weeks, twice-daily press conferences were held on the president's condition. By the time Eisenhower's health had returned, Americans, particularly middle-aged men, had learned to attend to their cholesterol and the fat in their diets. Eisenhower had learned the same lesson, albeit with counterintuitive results.

Eisenhower was assuredly among the best-chronicled heart-attack survivors in history. We know that he had no family history of heart disease, and no obvious risk factors after he quit smoking in 1949. He exercised regularly; his weight remained close to the 172 pounds considered optimal for his height. His blood pressure was only occasionally elevated. His cholesterol was below normal: his last measurement before the attack, according to George Mann, who worked with White at Harvard, was 165 mg/dl (milligrams/deciliter), a level that heart-disease specialists today consider safe.

After his heart attack, Eisenhower dieted religiously and had his cholesterol measured ten times a year. He ate little fat and less cholesterol; his meals were cooked in either soybean oil or a newly developed polyunsaturated margarine, which appeared on the market in 1958 as a nutritional palliative for high cholesterol.

The more Eisenhower dieted, however, the greater his frustration (meticulously documented by Dr. Snyder). In November 1958, when the president's weight had floated upward to 176, he renounced his breakfast of oatmeal and skimmed milk and switched to melba toast and fruit. When his weight remained high, he renounced breakfast altogether. Snyder was mystified how a man could eat so little, exercise regularly, and not lose weight. In March 1959, Eisenhower read about a group of middle-aged New Yorkers attempting to lower their cholesterol by renouncing butter, margarine, lard, and cream and replacing them with corn oil. Eisenhower did the same. His cholesterol continued to rise. Eisenhower managed to stabilize his weight, but not happily. "He eats nothing for breakfast, nothing for lunch, and therefore is irritable during the noon hour," Snyder wrote in February 1960.

By April 1960, Snyder was lying to Eisenhower about his cholesterol. "He was fussing like the devil about cholesterol," Snyder wrote. "I told him it was 217 on yesterday's [test] (actually it was 223). He has eaten only one egg in the last four weeks; only one piece of cheese. For breakfast he has skim milk, fruit and Sanka. Lunch is practically without cholesterol, unless it would be a piece of cold meat occasionally." Eisenhower's last cholesterol test as president came January 19, 1961, his final day in office. "I told him that the cholesterol was 209," Snyder noted, "when it actually was 259," a level that physicians would come to consider dangerously high.

Eisenhower's cholesterol hit 259 just six days after University of Minnesota physiologist Ancel Keys made the cover of Time magazine, championing precisely the kind of supposedly heart-healthy diet on which Eisenhower had been losing his battle with cholesterol for five years. It was two weeks later that the American Heart Association—prompted by Keys's force of will—published its first official endorsement of low-fat, low-cholesterol diets as a means to prevent heart disease. Only on such a diet, Keys insisted, could we lower our cholesterol and our weight and forestall a premature death. "People should know the facts," Keys told Time. "Then if they want to eat themselves to death, let them."

Scientists justifiably dislike anecdotal evidence—the experience of a single individual like Eisenhower. Nonetheless, such cases can raise interesting issues. Eisenhower died of heart disease in 1969, age seventy-eight. By then, he'd had another half-dozen heart attacks or, technically speaking, myocardial infarction's. Whether his diet extended his life will never be known. It certainly didn't lower his cholesterol, and so Eisenhower's experience raises important questions.

Establishing the dangers of cholesterol in our blood and the benefits of low-fat diets has always been portrayed as a struggle between science and corporate interests. And although it's true that corporate interests have been potent forces in the public debates over the definition of a healthy diet, the essence of the diet-heart controversy has always been scientific. It took the AHA ten years to give public support to Keys's hypothesis that heart disease was caused by dietary fat, and closer to thirty years for the rest of the world to follow. There was a time lag because the evidence in support of the hypothesis was ambiguous, and the researchers in the field adamantly disagreed about how to interpret it.

From the inception of the diet-heart hypothesis in the early 1950s, those who argued that dietary fat caused heart disease accumulated the evidential equivalent of a mythology to support their belief. These myths are still passed on faithfully to the present day. Two in particular provided the foundation on which the national policy of low-fat diets was constructed. One was Paul Dudley White's declaration that a "great epidemic" of heart disease had ravaged the country since World War II. The other could be called the story of the changing American diet. Together they told of how a nation turned away from cereals and grains to fat and red meat and paid the price in heart disease. The facts did not support these claims, but the myths served a purpose, and so they remained unquestioned.

Copyright © 2007 by Gary Taubes.

Monday 100712

0

Back squat 5, 3, 1+ reps @ 75%, 85%, 95% 
Please download and print your worksheet!

Complete five rounds of the interval :40 seconds of work/:20 seconds of rest of:
Row (calories)
Deadlift, 100% BW
Weighted box jumps, 24"/20"

This is to be done "mash-up" style where you complete a row, deadlift, and box jump to complete a round.  For the box jumps, choose dumbells that you can confidently jump off of the box while holding.

Post score to comments.

015
Zac – need we say more

So why no sugar substitutes?  Take for instance the dilemma of the diet soda.  Most diet sodas are calorie and carb free, caffinated, sweet and totally delicious (this can be debated).  At first glance, this sounds Zone perfect and a great alternative to that nasty water-stuff. 

Let's start with a very basic principle of the Zone - hormone regulation.  One of the primary benefits of Zoning is the hormone regulation that results from eating a low-glycemic balanced meal.  By controlling your carbohydrate intake and monitoring the glycemic impact of your carb choices, you limit the amount of insulin released by your pancreas.  This maintains a neutral to favorable insulin sensitivity (as opposed to insulin resistance) and circumvents excess carb storage as fat.

Enter the sweetner.  Sweetners are just that – sweet.  When your tongue tastes something sweet entering the mouth, it talks to the brain (specifically the hypothalamus) and says "Hey, here comes energy!"  The brain then says to the pancreas "Yo, dump some insulin because here comes glucose!"  And there it is – a big insulin dump, but all for nothing.  The body is now very confused and unable to effectively regulate insulin and all because of artificial sweetners. 

Be sure to read the blog entries for Saturday and Sunday and post thoughts to comments.

Sunday 100711

0

As a team of 4, complete as many reps as possible in 12 minutes:

Swim 50yds

Dumbell thrusters, 40#/25#

Burpees

There will be four stations: swim, thrusters, burpees, and rest.  The pace is set by the athlete that is swimming, the others will be accumulating a running count of burpees and thrusters. One ortunate soul at a time is afforded rest.

Post team's total rep count to comments.

070 

"Hands up if you love changing environments…"

The Colorado Open

The Colorado Open will take place in Denver, Colorado from August 27-29, 2010 at Front Range CrossFit. The Open will include both individual and affiliate team competitions.  These events are a blast!  We encourage everyone to compete at this awesome CrossFit community competition.

Individual ($65)
The individual competition will take place Saturday and Sunday with 2 workouts on the first day and 1 workout on the second day. For the individual workouts, athletes will have the ability to scale to any ability level.

Affiliate Team ($50/person)
The Affiliate Team Competition consists of 2 men and 2 women.  There will be one affiliate team workout each day (Friday, Saturday, and Sunday).  There is no substitutions so Affiliate Team athletes must be able to attend all three days.  In general, the Affiliate Team workouts will be heavier and require more skill.  From the Colorado Open website: All Affiliate Team members will need to be able to do muscle-ups and handstand push-ups. The Affiliate Team workouts will not be scaled.

Read this next bit carefully: The scoring for the Affiliate Team Competition will be the total scores from each Team Workout, plus the top male and female score from your Affiliate in each individual workout.  So every athlete that you bring to compete has the potential to help your Affiliate Team’s result.

To clarify that last bit, anyone who competes as an individual has the potential to help our affiliate team.  For example, if an athlete scores 1st place in the first individual workout, her score is added to our affiliate team score.  In short, individual competitors have the ability to better the affiliate team score as well as compete for an individual title.  Whoa!

If there is interest, CrossFit Verve will take an affiliate team to the competition.  Who's in?

Saturday 1000710

0

For time:

50 Power snatches, 115#/75#

After one minute, on the minute you must complete 5 burpees until completion.

Post time to comments.

131 
Now's your chance to tan your pale bodies – sign up for tomorrow's pool WOD!  

Inaugural CrossFit / USA Weightlifting Open Comes to Colorado Springs, Oct. 1-3

Nicole Jomantas July 08, 2010

Usaw_crossfit

(Colorado SpringsColo.) – USA Weightlifting is pleased to announce that the inaugural CrossFit / USA Weightlifting Open will be held from Oct. 1-3 at the Cheyenne Mountain Resort in Colorado Springs.

 

The event will join weightlifting – one of the oldest Olympic sports – with CrossFit – one of the most popular strength and conditioning programs in the nation that combines weightlifting, sprinting and gymnastics.

 

“We’re excited to partner with our friends in the CrossFit community to host this event,” said USA Weightlifting CEO Rick Adams (Colorado SpringsColo.)  “USAW is committed to broadening our relationships throughout our industry and partnering with a first-class organization like CrossFit is a tremendous step in that direction as we promote the great sport of Olympic weightlifting.”

 

The Crossfit / USA Weightlifting Open will feature athletes competing in three disciplines: the Olympic-style snatch and clean & jerk as well as a third CrossFit event called the Triplet. The Triplet will be as many rounds as possible in 10 minutes of six squat cleans (55kg men / 30kg women), 12 pull-ups and 24 double unders.

 

Athletes will compete in the seven women’s and eight men’s Olympic weight divisions as they vie for titles.

 

"We're very pleased to offer this unique competition with USA Weightlifting. Athletes will now be able to compete in a multi-modal event that includes both weightlifting using standard international competition rules and a 10-minute CrossFit Triplet. Not only will the winners of each division have to demonstrate outstanding strength, power and weightlifting technique, but also the additional fitness required for the CrossFit Triplet," said Dave Castro, CrossFit's Director of Training. "A huge thanks toRick Adams and USAW for hosting the event."

 

Schedule and registration information will be posted soon on both the USA Weightlifting Web site (www.usaweightlifting.org) as well as the CrossFit Web site (www.crossfit.com).  For additional information, contact Courtney Kulick, USA Weightlifting Event and Operations Manager, at Courtney.Kulick@usaweightlifting.org.