Day 15! We are up to 120 push-ups for our ladder challenge. So...if you are just starting do 120 to buy in. Everyone else, 15 CTD push-ups today
Workout
for time
21, 15, and 9 reps of:
70 lbs KB swings
pull-ups
Check out this link...it is Melanie Roach's USA Olympic Weightlifter blog
http://melanieroach.blogspot.com/
Are you up to the challenge?
http://www.tacticalstrengthchallenge.com/index.html
Check out our new site. www.titanfit.com
Friday 080801
Posted by TitanFit at 22:41 3 comments
Thursday 080731
Rest!
Hey it's day 14 of the push-up ladder challenge.
Make sure you get those done today. The best thing about day 14 is we've cracked the 100 push-up mark! For those that want to join do 105 today to "buy-in"/catch up. Remember you can do the push-ups throughout the day and any done as part of a workout count toward your number.
A Visitor
Yesterday we had the pleasure of hosting United Sates Marine Corps, Captain Huysman. He is a coach at CrossFit Camp Pendleton (http://www.crossfitwarehouse.com/newsite/blog/) and is a CrossFit certified trainer. Below, you'll see him hard at work and all smiles after finishing. We wish him well in his travels.
Kelin/Seth Part 2
Kelin recently returned from vacation. He walked into the gym and decided he wanted to go for the Back Squat record. During his warm-up he mentioned he had not squatted more that 135 lbs in 10+ years. When someone tells you they have not gone heavy in a decade, you take it very slowly.
Much to my surprise he got 335 without much of a problem. He could have gone heavier but it has been 10+ years so I suggested he call it a day there. After writing his name on the record board, he walked to the WOD board and left a note for Seth, the former record holder. The note said, "I'm back!"
Today, Seth came in with an eye on Kelin's dead lift record of 413. After his workout, he asked for 415 on the bar...gripped it and got it with ease. The new note on the board from Seth to Kelin reads, "Where you at!"
I can't wait for part 3!
Posted by TitanFit at 08:31 2 comments
Wednesday 080730
WOW
Work on weakness!
many of us have avoided working on things we do not do well (me-Pull-ups,MetCon). When they come up in a WOD we struggle through but never get better.
Let's get it done, for tomorrow we rest!
Posted by TitanFit at 22:35 2 comments
Labels: WOW
Tuesday 080729
We are on day 12 of the CTD (Chest-to-Deck) push-up ladder challenge. Get 12 CTD push-ups today or if you are just joining, get 78 CTD push-ups to "buy in"
Workout
Snatch - 90% x 1 x 3
Clean & jerk - 90% x 1 x 3
Back squat - 90% x 2 x 2
3 rounds for time of:
500 m row
10 KB swings - 35% BW
10 kipping pull-ups
Are you hungry? Yesterday I found the following. I need to get rid of my Internet access.
The 7 Hamburgers of the Apocalypse
by Gerald "Gerry" Pugliese
Hamburgers, next to apple pie and statins they're the ambassadors of American cuisine--for better or for worse--and these harbingers of heart disease might be the baddest of all.
Here are 7 over the top hamburgers that are guaranteed to clog your arteries by just looking that them:
1. The Quadruple Bypass Burger
The Quadruple Bypass Burger from the Heart Attack Grill; four burger patties with side orders of Jolt Cola, unfiltered Lucky Strikes cigarettes and French fries deep-fried in pure lard.
2. Big Daddy Barrick Burger
Sonya Thomas, a 5'5 99-lbs competitive eating champion, downed an 18 pound Big Daddy Barrick Burger in Las Vegas a few years ago.
3. The Hot dog Hamburger
This one hails from England. I'm not sure what it's called, but it's a hamburger with a chopped hot dog on top.
4. Mulligan's Monster
Mulligan's invented the Hamdog, one hot dog wrapped in a beef patty and cheese, then deep-fried, covered with chili and onions and served on a bun with a fried egg on top.
5. Dyer's Burgers
Dyer's Burgers are deep-fried hamburgers piled with mustard, onion and pickle and paired with a single, double or triple-order of cheese fries.
6. Whatafarm Burger
Whataburger puts the entire farm in one sandwich; bacon, cheese, fried egg, burger patty, and chicken cutlet. They affectionately call it the "Whatafarm" burger.
7. Luther Burger
Another Mulligan's creation, the Luther Burger. Named after Luther Vandross it's a bacon cheeseburger sandwiched between two glazed donuts.
Now, I hope you all find it incredibly ironic that a guy who doesn't eat meat was asked to compile a list of monstrous hamburgers. I do.
Posted by TitanFit at 11:28 3 comments
Labels: 500M Row, Back Squat, Clean and Jerk, KB Swings, Pull-ups, Snatch
Monday 080728
We are on day 11 of the CTD (Chest-to-Deck) push-up ladder challenge. Get 11 CTD push-ups today or if you are just joining, get 66 CTD push-ups to "buy in"
Workout:
Today you get a choice of workouts. Do either:
- 3M run
- 7k Row
- 800M, 2:00 rest, 400M, 2:00 rest, 800M, 2:00 rest 400M
Compare to:
TITANFIT: Sunday 080504
Posted by TitanFit at 11:13 1 comments
Labels: 3M Run, 400M Run, 800M Run, Rowing, Run - mid distance
Saturday 080726
Knock out your 9 CTD Push-ups. If today is your first day on the push-up challenge, get 45 to buy in...
Workout
"Elizabeth"
For time 21-15-9 reps of:
135 lbs Cleans
Ring dips
As always, SCALE if and when necessary. For some of us that are new to Olympic lifting, high pulls and FS will be good enough. The sub for ring dips is 4/1 bench dips, 3/1 bar dips or 2/1 jumping ring dips.
Compare to:
TITANFIT: Wednesday 080507
Posted by TitanFit at 12:58 3 comments
Friday 080725
Workout
Front Squats
85% of your 1RM x3 x7
Don't forget your 8 Push-ups today for the Push-up ladder. wouldn't hate to miss them and need to make them up tomorrow!
If you want to "buy in", knock out 36 today and you are even par with the crew.
Posted by TitanFit at 21:07 3 comments
Labels: Front Squats
Thursday 080724
Happy B-Day Sherry!
Workout
7 CTD Push-ups (I thought we should get those out of the way early)
Remember 2 days ago when we said the 1RM thruster and weighted pull-ups workout was designed to make you next "Fran" better/faster?
Drum roll please....
"Fran"
For time:
21, 15 and 9 reps of:
Thruster - M 95pounds/F 65 pounds
Pull-ups
Compare to:
TITANFIT: Saturday 080510
Posted by TitanFit at 07:42 4 comments
Wednesday 080723
Well today is day 6 of the Push-up Challenge. That being the case we need 6 CTD (Chest-To-Deck) Push-ups.
If you have not joined to 100 Push-up contest, and still want to get in, you need to do 21 today to buy-in!
REST
A few links and stuff...
Tour de France
The link below is for today's stage 17 of the Tour de France. It is likely to decide this year's winner. Take the day off work, call in sick, take a TV to work, do whatever it takes to watch this stage!
http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/1700/etape_par_etape.html
OK, here's a link for a local duathlon...race info below.
Race Date
Saturday, August 09 2008
Race Name
Blacksnake Duathlon Series Race #3
Blacksnake Duathlon #3
Run 2 miles, Bike 20 miles, Run 2.5 miles
Location
Camp Atterbury - Johnson County Park
City
Franklin
http://www.trifind.com/in.html
OK, for you crazies out there, check out this website. It is for those that need MORE than the normal CF workout.
http://www.crossfitendurance.com/index.php
Posted by TitanFit at 22:37 2 comments
Labels: Push-up Contest
Tuesday 080722
Workout
Today's workout is designed to make your next "Fran" easier.
Thruster
Find a 1RM
10, 5, 3, 1, 1, 1, 1
Weighted Pull-ups
Find a 1RM
10, 5, 3, 1, 1, 1, 1
Push-up Challenge
And last but not least 5 chest to deck push-ups. If you want to join the 100 Push-up contest/challenge but haven't started yet, 15 push-ups today will get you in.
Compare to:
TITANFIT: Monday 080428
Posted by TitanFit at 10:40 3 comments
Labels: Fran, Pull-ups, Push-up Contest, Thrusters, Weighted pull-ups
Monday 080721
4 CTD Push-ups.
Workout
Snatch Balance + OHS (complete one of each before re-racking the bar) Work to 110% of your SN 1RM
Compare to:
TITANFIT: Monday 080512
Posted by TitanFit at 07:36 2 comments
Labels: OHS, Snatch Balance
Sunday 080720
3 Push-ups Today!
Workout
3 rounds for time:
30 - Calories Rowing
30 - Squats
20 - Ring Push-ups
20 - 18 inch Box Jumps
10 - Pull-ups
10 - 65 lbs Thrusters
Recently, Men's Health published an article entitled: Muscle Myths Debunked - 7 Muscle Myths. I've pasted the contents of the article below...
Muscle Myths Debunked - 7 Muscle Myths
By: Scott Quill
Fact vs. Faction
The guy lifting beside you looks like he should write the book on muscle. Talks like it, too. He's worked out since the seventh grade, he played D-1 football, and he's big.
But that doesn't mean he knows what he's talking about. Starting now, ignore him.
The gym is infested with bad information. Lies that start with well-intentioned gym teachers trickle down to students who become coaches, trainers, or know-it-all gym-rat preachers. Lies morph into myths that endure because we don't ask questions, for fear of looking stupid.
Scientists, on the other hand, gladly look stupid--that's why they're so darn smart. Plus, they have cool human-performance laboratories where they can prove or disprove theories and myths.
Here's what top exercise scientists and expert trainers have to say about the crap that's passed around in gyms. Listen up and learn. Then go ahead, question it.
Myth #1
Lifting incredibly slowly builds incredibly big muscles. Lifting super slowly produces super long workouts--and that's it. University of Alabama researchers recently studied two groups of lifters doing a 29-minute workout. One group performed exercises using a 5-second up phase and a 10-second down phase, the other a more traditional approach of 1 second up and 1 second down. The faster group burned 71 percent more calories and lifted 250 percent more weight than the super slow lifters.
The real expert says: "The best increases in strength are achieved by doing the up phase as rapidly as possible," says Gary Hunter, Ph.D., C.S.C.S., the lead study author. "Lower the weight more slowly and under control." There's greater potential for growth during the lowering phase, and when you lower with control, there's less chance of injury.
Myth #2
If you eat more protein, you'll build more muscle. To a point, sure. But put down the shake for a sec. Protein promotes the muscle-building process, called protein synthesis, "but you don't need exorbitant amounts to do this," says John Ivy, Ph.D., coauthor of Nutrient Timing.
If you're working out hard, consuming more than 0.9 to 1.25 grams of protein per pound of body weight is a waste. Excess protein breaks down into amino acids and nitrogen, which are either excreted or converted into carbohydrates and stored.
The real expert says: More important is when you consume protein, and that you have the right balance of carbohydrates with it. Have a post workout shake of three parts carbohydrates and one part protein.
Eat a meal several hours later, and then reverse that ratio in your snack after another few hours, says Ivy. "This will keep protein synthesis going by maintaining high amino acid concentrations in the blood."
Myth #3
Leg extensions are safer for your knees than squats.And cotton swabs are dangerous when you push them too far into your ears. It's a matter of knowing what you're doing.
A recent study in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise found that "open-chain" exercises--those in which a single joint is activated, such as the leg extension--are potentially more dangerous than closed-chain moves--those that engage multiple joints, such as the squat and the leg press.
The study found that leg extensions activate your quadriceps muscles slightly independently of each other, and just a 5-millisecond difference in activation causes uneven compression between the patella (kneecap) and thighbone, says Anki Stensdotter, the lead study author.
The real expert says: "The knee joint is controlled by the quadriceps and the hamstrings. Balanced muscle activity keeps the patella in place and appears to be more easily attained in closed-chain exercises," says Stensdotter.
To squat safely, hold your back as upright as possible and lower your body until your thighs are parallel to the floor (or at least as far as you can go without discomfort in your knees).
Try front squats if you find yourself leaning forward. Although it's a more advanced move, the weight rests on the fronts of your shoulders, helping to keep your back upright, Stensdotter says.
Myth #4
Never exercise a sore muscle.Before you skip that workout, determine how sore you really are. "If your muscle is sore to the touch or the soreness limits your range of motion, it's best that you give the muscle at least another day of rest," says Alan Mikesky, Ph.D., director of the human performance and biomechanics laboratory at Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis.
In less severe instances, an "active rest" involving light aerobic activity and stretching, and even light lifting, can help alleviate some of the soreness. "Light activity stimulates blood flow through the muscles, which removes waste products to help in the repair process," says David Docherty, Ph.D., a professor of exercise science at the University of Victoria in Canada.
The real expert says: If you're not sore to the touch and you have your full range of motion, go to the gym. Start with 10 minutes of cycling, then exercise the achy muscle by performing no more than three sets of 10 to 15 repetitions using a weight that's no heavier than 30 percent of your one-rep maximum, says Docherty.
Myth #5
Stretching prevents injuries.Maybe if you're a figure skater. Researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reviewed more than 350 studies and articles examining the relationship between stretching and injuries and concluded that stretching during a warm-up has little effect on injury prevention.
"Stretching increases flexibility, but most injuries occur within the normal range of motion," says Julie Gilchrist, M.D., one of the study's researchers. "Stretching and warming up have just gone together for decades. It's simply what's done, and it hasn't been approached through rigorous science."
The real expert says: Warming up is what prevents injury, by slowly increasing your blood flow and giving your muscles a chance to prepare for the upcoming activity. To this end, Dr. Gilchrist suggests a thorough warm-up, as well as conditioning for your particular sport.
Of course, flexibility is a good thing. If you need to increase yours so it's in the normal range (touching your toes without bending your knees, for instance), do your stretching when your muscles are already warm.
Myth #6
You need a Swiss ball to build a stronger chest and shoulders. Don't abandon your trusty bench for exercises like the chest press and shoulder press if your goal is strength and size. "The reason people are using the ball and getting gains is because they're weak as kittens to begin with," says Craig Ballantyne, C.S.C.S. You have to reduce the weight in order to press on a Swiss ball, and this means you get less out of the exercise, he says.
The real expert says: A Swiss ball is great for variety, but center your chest and shoulder routines on exercises that are performed on a stable surface, Ballantyne says. Then use the ball to work your abs.
Myth #7
Always work out with free weights.Sometimes machines can build muscle better--for instance, when you need to isolate specific muscles after an injury, or when you're too inexperienced to perform a free-weight exercise.
If you can't complete a pullup, you won't build your back muscles. So do lat pull downs to develop strength in this range of motion, says Greg Haff, Ph.D., director of the strength research laboratory at Midwestern State University in Wichita Falls, Texas.
The real expert says: "Initially, novice athletes will see benefits with either machines or free weights, but as you become more trained, free weights should make up the major portion of your training program," says Haff.
Free-weight exercises mimic athletic moves and generally activate more muscle mass. If you're a seasoned lifter, free weights are your best tools to build strength or burn fat.
Posted by TitanFit at 17:48 3 comments
Labels: Box Jumps, Pull-ups, Ring Push-ups, Rowing, Squats, Thrusters
Friday 080718
CW with 70 lbs KB swings for Heavy "Helen"
Workout
DeadLift
4 x 4
80% of your 1RM for 4 sets of 4 reps
Then
5 rounds of "Cindy"
Today is day number 1 of the 100 day CTD (Chest-to-Deck) push-ups. We will do 1 today, 2 tomorrow and so on. Once we get to day 100 we will have completed 5050 push-ups.
Posted by TitanFit at 12:11 1 comments
Thursday 080717
Workout
Clean and Jerk:
Work up to 80% x1, 70% x1, 83% x1, 73% x1, 85% x1, 75% x1, 88% x1, 75% x1 notice the wave?
When complete, do FS (you are already warmed up) @ 80%-85% of your 1RM x1, x2, x3.
Compare to:
TITANFIT: Tuesday 080325
Posted by TitanFit at 21:12 0 comments
Labels: Clean and Jerk, Cleans, Front Squats
Wednesday 080716
Workout
HEAVY "Helen"
For time 3 rounds of:
400 M Run
15 - 70 lbs (M) 53 lbs (F) KB Swings
10 - BWT+20 lbs Pull-ups
I know that's a lot of weight. SCALE this one if you are unable to complete regular "Helen", but make sure you use the same weights for all 3 rounds. Remember you are competing against yourself!
If you scale do the "normal" rep scheme of 21 swings and 12 pull-ups.
Posted by TitanFit at 12:28 2 comments
Labels: 400M Run, Heavy Helen, Helen, KB Swings, Pull-ups
Sunday 080713
5 sets of for time of:
15 - 95 lbs Thrusters
15 - 95 lbs SDHP
Compare to
TITANFIT: Thursday 080214
Posted by TitanFit at 09:23 0 comments
Saturday 080712
See I will, only if NECESSARY, do burpees (yea Burpees!)
Workout
For time:
21-15-9
Clean and Jerk (M95, F65)
Pull-up
Posted by TitanFit at 15:47 2 comments
Labels: Clean and Jerk, Pull-ups
Thursday 080710
Workout
3 rounds for time:
20 - 95 lbs Snatch (take each rep from the deck)
20 - BWT Bench Press
Posted by TitanFit at 09:33 2 comments
Labels: Bench Press, Snatch
Wednesday 080709
Workout
CrossFit Total (CFT)1RM for:
Squat
Press
Dead lift
Compare to:
TITANFIT: Friday 080627
Big Fun here at TitanFit yesterday. Three different workouts, two PRs/TFRs!
KTF Dbl Unders during "Annie"
PSR Rowing like the wind
JB Handstand Push-ups during "JT"
Posted by TitanFit at 07:09 3 comments
Labels: Back Squat, CFT, Dead Lift, Press
Tuesday 080708
Workout
For time:
4 rounds of
400M Run
50 Air Squats
Posted by TitanFit at 21:59 1 comments
Monday 080707
Rest!
The new Painstorm is in:
As Many Rounds as Possible in 30 Minutes of:
100 ft Bear Crawl
5 Snatch Grip Deadlift
5 Hang Power Snatch
5 Overhead Squat
5 Behind the Neck Push Press
Men 65# / Women 45#
Posted by TitanFit at 14:52 0 comments
Labels: AMRAP, Bear Crawl, Behind The Neck Press, Dead Lift, Hang Snatch, OHS, Painstorm, Power Snatch, Push Press, Snatch Grip Dead Lift
Sunday 080706
Workout
For time:
Big Brown Bear
15 - 135 lbs DL
12 - 135 lbs Hang Power Clean
9 - 135 lbs Front Squaat
6 - 135 lbs Push Jerk
Posted by TitanFit at 08:39 2 comments
Labels: Bear, Clean and Jerk, Dead Lift, Front Squats, Hang Cleans, Power Cleans, Push Jerk
CrossFit in the Park
CrossFit In The Park!
TitanFit teamed up with Blast Fitness (http://www.blastfitindy/) for today's CrossFit in the Park workout.
The workout was:
500M Row
20 - Burpees
30 - KB Swings (M 53 Lbs, F 20 or 35 lbs)
40 - Air Squats
50 - Sit-ups
800M Run
We had two sub 10:00 times...
Check out the pics below.
Joe, Jerry and Rick on the row
Kurt, Chris and Seth rowing
Jerry mid KB swing, Megan air squatting and Joe not having fun with a KB
Posted by TitanFit at 13:12 1 comments
Labels: 500M Row, 800M Run, Burpees, CrossFit in the Park, KB Swings, Sit-ups, Squats
Saturday 080705
Workout
If it is good enough for the CrossFit Games, It's good enough for us!
5 rounds for time of:
275 pound Deadlifts, 5 reps (185 pounds for women)
10 Burpees (with clap overhead while airborne)
Posted by TitanFit at 00:08 3 comments
Labels: Burpees, CF Games WOD, Dead Lift
Friday 080704
HAPPY 4th OF JULY!
REST!
Here's some light reading...
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080701/ap_on_hi_te/tec_atm_breach
By JORDAN ROBERTSON, AP Technology Writer
Tue Jul 1, 4:39 PM ET
SAN JOSE, Calif. - Hackers broke into Citibank's network of ATMs inside 7-Eleven stores and stole customers' PIN codes, according to recent court filings that revealed a disturbing security hole in the most sensitive part of a banking record.
The scam netted the alleged identity thieves millions of dollars. But more importantly for consumers, it indicates criminals were able to access PINs — the numeric passwords that theoretically are among the most closely guarded elements of banking transactions — by attacking the back-end computers responsible for approving the cash withdrawals.
The case against three people in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York highlights a significant problem.
Hackers are targeting the ATM system's infrastructure, which is increasingly built on Microsoft Corp.'s Windows operating system and allows machines to be remotely diagnosed and repaired over the Internet. And despite industry standards that call for protecting PINs with strong encryption — which means encoding them to cloak them to outsiders — some ATM operators apparently aren't properly doing that. The PINs seem to be leaking while in transit between the automated teller machines and the computers that process the transactions.
"PINs were supposed be sacrosanct — what this shows is that PINs aren't always encrypted like they're supposed to be," said Avivah Litan, a security analyst with the Gartner research firm. "The banks need much better fraud detection systems and much better authentication."
It's unclear how many Citibank customers were affected by the breach, which extended at least from October 2007 to March of this year and was first reported by technology news Web site Wired.com. The bank has nearly 5,700 Citibank-branded ATMs inside 7-Eleven Inc. stores throughout the U.S., but it doesn't own or operate any of them.
That responsibility falls on two companies: Houston-based Cardtronics Inc., which owns all the machines but only operates some, and Brookfield, Wis.-based Fiserv Inc., which operates the others.
A critical issue in the investigation is how the hackers infiltrated the system, a question that still hasn't been answered publicly.
All that's known is they broke into the ATM network through a server at a third-party processor, which means they probably didn't have to touch the ATMs at all to pull off the heist.
They could have gained administrative access to the machines — which means they had carte blanche to grab information — through a flaw in the network or by figuring out those computers' passwords. Or it's possible they installed a piece of malicious software on a banking server to capture unencrypted PINs as they passed through.
What that means for consumers is that their PINs were stolen from machines that showed no signs of tampering they could detect. In previous PIN thefts, thieves generally took steps that might draw notice — sending "phishing" e-mails, for example, or installing false-front keypads or even tiny cameras on ATMs.
Getting the PINs is a key step for identity thieves. It lets criminals encode stolen account information onto blank ATM cards and withdraw piles of cash from compromised accounts.
Don Jackson, director of threat intelligence for SecureWorks Inc., said he has seen an "alarming" spike in the number of attacks on back-end computers for ATM networks over the past year.
"This was fairly large, but I don't think it's anything out of the ordinary — these kinds of scams go on every day," Jackson said. "What makes this case unique is the sheer luck of happening upon these guys and catching them red-handed. But there are a whole lot of other ATM and PIN compromises going on that aren't reported."
The alleged plot is outlined in court papers supporting the prosecution of three people — Yuriy Rakushchynets, Ivan Biltse and Angelina Kitaeva. They were indicted in March on two counts each of conspiracy and fraud. Prosecutors say their activities generated at least $2 million in illegal profits.
Defense lawyers for all three people did not return calls for comment, and it was not clear where they had been living. The main defendant, Rakushchynets, was described as having Michigan and Florida's driver licenses in a February FBI affidavit for an arrest warrant.
Citibank, part of Citigroup Inc., has declined to comment on the technique or how many customers' accounts were compromised. It said it notified affected customers and issued them new debit cards.
"We want our customers to know that, consistent with legal requirements, we do not hold them responsible for fraudulent activity in their accounts," the bank said in a statement.
Cardtronics said it is cooperating with authorities but otherwise declined to comment. Fiserv spokeswoman Melanie Tolley said the intrusion didn't happen on Fiserv's servers.
"Fiserv," she said, "is confident in the integrity and security of our system."
Posted by TitanFit at 23:01 1 comments
Thursday 080703
Workout
For time:
1 – Burpees
2 - 95 lbs PP
3 - 95 lbs FS
4 - 95 lbs PCLS
5 - 95 lbs DL
6 - Box Jumps
7 - Pull-ups
8 - Push-ups
9 - Ab Mat sit-ups
10 - Air Squats
11 - 53 lbs KB Swings
12 - A 500M Row
So the workout is:
1 Burpee
then 2 Push Press and 1 Burpee
then 3 Front Squats, 2 Push Press and 1 Burpee etc...
Posted by TitanFit at 08:16 4 comments
Labels: 12 Days of Christmas, 500M Row, Box Jumps, Burpees, Christmas in July, Dead Lift, Front Squats, KB Swings, Power Cleans, Pull-ups, Push Press, Push-ups, Sit-ups, Squats
Wednesday 080702
Workout
TABATA!
Perform the following exercises for 8 rounds of 20 seconds work (in any order), 10 seconds rest:
Rowing*
Air squat
Push-ups
Pull-ups
Sit-ups
After the 8th round of each exercise, rest 1 minute before proceeding to the next. The lowest number of reps achieved in any of the 8 rounds is the score for that particular exercise (calories burned in place of reps are used for rowing). The sum of the scores for all of the exercises gives the score for the entire workout.
*Those without access to a rower, do SDHP with a 45 lbs barbell for each 20 second segment.
Compare to:
TITANFIT: Saturday 080524
How Long Can Peak Performance Last?
The question "How long can peak performance last?" sounds more salacious than does the answer offered by Elizabeth Weil, in her predictably lovely profile of a 41-year-old Olympic quality swimmer Dana Torres.
Weil quotes Hirofumi Tanaka, the director of the Cardiovascular Aging Research Laboratory at the University of Texas at Austin, who found that both elite and nonelite runners and swimmers could maintain personal bests until age 35, after which performance declined in a gradual, linear fashion until about age 50 to 60 for runners and 70 for swimmers.
Deterioration was rapid from there, writes Weil. Tanaka also found that swimmers experienced more modest declines than runners and that swim sprinters, like Torres, experienced the smallest declines of all.
At Yale, Ray Fair, a runner and an economist, crunched statistics on aging and peak athletic performance and created what he calls the Fair Model. The model provides a table of coefficients that enable an athlete to take a personal-best time and compute how long he or she should expect to take to complete that same event at a specific point later in life (assuming he or she has continued to train at the same level).
According to the Fair Model, a woman who swam a personal best 24.63 seconds in the 50-meter freestyle at or before age 35 should expect to clock 25.37 seconds at age 41. “I am struck by how small the deterioration rates are,” Fair wrote in a paper titled “How Fast Do Old Men Slow Down?” “It may be that societies have been too pessimistic about losses from aging for individuals who stay healthy and fit.”Read more from Liz Weil in the New York Times Sunday Magazine.
Tuesday 080701
Workout
1.5 Mile Run
Pull-up Ladder
1.5 Mile Run
Post running splits and pull-up ladder results...
Posted by TitanFit at 07:47 1 comments
Labels: 1M Run, Pull-up ladder, Running