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Showing posts with label Cleans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cleans. Show all posts

Monday 100104

Workout

Hang Power Cleans
Find a new 1RM

THEN

2-Person team "Mini" MetCon (each person does 1/2 of the reps/meters per round)
3x
1k Row
30 - Box Jumps
20 - Burpees

Friday 091204

Workout

On the minute:
Perform 2 Power Cleans on the minute for 15 minutes.

*Start the clock. At the top of every minute perform 2 Power Cleans.
*Use a maximal weight. 80% - 85% of 1 RM
*For every rep not completed, perform 5 Burpees at the end of the session....

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Friday 091002

TFT / DUTY WOD
Add "Seth"

for time:
21, 15, 9

Bench Press @ body weight
Pull Ups

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Wednesday 091028

Sunday 091129

Workout

"LINDA"


For time 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 reps of the triplet:
Deadlift: 1 1/2 body weight
Bench press: body weight
Clean: 3/4 body weight

Set up three bars and storm through for time - Linda is a daunting workout.

My first attempt took over an hour. SCALE this baby especially if it is your first attempt. There are several ways to scale this workout. One can do just the even reps and or lower the percentages of your body weight used for each lift.

One of the tricks I use is to remind myself that after I complete the round of 8, I am almost half way done.

Post time and weights used to the comments section.

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Thursday 081016

Tuesday 091117

Workout
Clean (no Jerk today)
All reps are started on the minute
66%* x1 x5
71% x1 x5
76% x1 x5

Rest as needed between these sets
80%* x1
85% x1
88% x1
90% x1
92% x1
*Of 1RM

"Fran" Tomorrow!

Friday 091114

Workout
For time:
21 Box Jumps
21 KB Swings
3 Push ups

18 Box Jumps
18 KB Swings
6 Push-ups

15 Box Jumps
15 KB Swings
9 Push-ups

12 Box Jumps
12 KB Swings
12 Push-ups

9 Box Jumps
9 KB Swings
15 Push ups

6 Box Jumps
6 KB Swings
18 Push ups

3 Box Jumps
3 KB Swings
21 Push-ups

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Wednesday 090909

TFT / DUTY WOD

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: Monday 090112

Wednesday 091028

Workout

On the minute:
Perform 2 Power Cleans on the minute for 15 minutes.

*Start the clock. At the top of every minute perform 2 Power Cleans.
*Use a maximal weight. 80% - 85% of 1 RM
*For every rep not completed, perform 5 Burpees at the end of the session....

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Friday 091002


TFT / DUTY WOD
Add "Seth"

for time:
21, 15, 9

Bench Press @ body weight
Pull Ups

Wednesday 091014

Workout

Clean and Jerk:
Work up to 80% x1, 70% x1, 83% x1, 73% x1, 85% x1, 75% x1, 88% x1, 75% x1


Compare to:
TITANFIT: Thursday 090326

Wednesday 091007


Workout
Clean and Jerk
All reps are started on the minute
66%* x1 x5
71% x1 x5
76% x1 x5

Rest as needed between these sets
80%* x1
85% x1
88% x1
90% x1
92% x1
*Of 1RM

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Friday 090505
Back Squats tomorrow...it is Squatober after all!

Friday 091002


JB with a great "Rack" position and KTF with a great start of a Clean


KTF's "Rack" Position and JT's Jerk...Nice work guys...


Workout

On the minute:
Perform 2 Power Cleans on the minute for 15 minutes.

*Start the clock. At the top of every minute perform 2 Power Cleans.
*Use a maximal weight. 80% - 85% of 1 RM
*For every rep not completed, perform 5 Burpees at the end of the session....

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Wednesday 090722



TFT WOD
Add "Seth"

for time:
21, 15, 9

Bench Press @ body weight
Pull Ups

Thursday 090924


How many ring pull-ups can you do?


Workout:

Snatch
90% of 1RM x1 x3

Clean and Jerk
90% of 1RM x1 x3

Add 5 lbs to:
TITANFIT: Monday 090629

Monday 090914

Workout

Clean and Jerk
find new 1RM

"Mini" MetCon
3x
400m run
20 - Sit-ups
15 - Pull-ups
10 - Push-ups

Friday 090814

Workout

Work up to:
Clean & Jerk - 80% (of 1RM) x1 x6

THEN

"Mini" MetCon

15-10-5 reps for time:
Pull-ups
Box jump (Tall)

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_med_breast_cancer_weightlifting/print

Study: Weightlifting helps breast cancer survivors
By MARILYNN MARCHIONE, AP Medical Writer Marilynn Marchione, Ap Medical Writer
Thu Aug 13, 2:08 am ET

Breast cancer survivors have been getting bum advice. For decades, many doctors warned that lifting weights or even heavy groceries could cause painful arm swelling. New research shows that weight training actually helps prevent this problem.

"How many generations of women have been told to avoid lifting heavy objects?" Dr. Eric Winer, breast cancer chief at the Dana-Farber Cancer Center in Boston, lamented after seeing the surprising results of the new study. "Women who were doing the lifting actually had fewer arm problems because they had better muscle tone."

The study was led by Kathryn Schmitz, an exercise scientist at the University of Pennsylvania, and funded by the federal government. Results are in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine.

More than 2.4 million Americans are breast cancer survivors, and the study could mean a big difference in their quality of life. Cancer treatment-related arm swelling now appears to be one of many ailments made better by exercise — not worse, Schmitz said.

"Fifty years ago we told people who had a heart attack not to exercise anymore," and people with sore backs to heal with bed rest, Schmitz said. "It was well-meaning advice but it was polar opposite of the truth."

Women who have had radiation to the armpit, or lymph nodes removed to check for cancer, can suffer lymphedema — a buildup of fluids that causes painful and unsightly swelling of the arms or hands.

To avoid it, doctors have advised women to avoid using the affected arm to lift toddlers, carry a heavy purse or scrub floors. Even activities like golf and tennis raised concern.

Women think, "Oh, my God, I need to baby the arm," Schmitz said.

Lifting weights — which boosts mood, muscle mass, bone strength and weight control — was thought to be a bad idea for women prone to lymphedema.

Schmitz challenged that notion with a small study several years ago, finding that weight training did not make lymphedema worse. Her new study is the first one large and long enough to give clear proof that this is so, and even suggests that weightlifting can help.

It involved 141 breast cancer survivors who had suffered lymphedema. Half were told not to change their exercise habits. The rest were given 90-minute weightlifting classes twice a week for 13 weeks at community gyms, mostly YMCAs.

They wore a custom-fitted compression garment on the affected arm and gradually worked up to more challenging weights and repetitions. For the next 39 weeks, they continued these exercises on their own.

The women's arms were measured monthly. After one year, fewer weightlifters had suffered lymphedema flare-ups — 14 percent versus 29 percent of the others. Weightlifters reported fewer symptoms and greater strength. Rates of change in arm size due to swelling were similar in both groups.

"I found it was really very effective. It not only gave me strength and mobility but it improved my balance and coordination," said one participant, Clare Faber, 66, of suburban Philadelphia. "It really does offer women hope."

Another participant, Gay McArthur, 56, of Smithfield, N.J., has continued weightlifting on her own since the study ended.

"When I first got diagnosed with lymphedema, they said I couldn't lift more than five pounds," she said. But weight training caused no problems and has made her feel better, she said.

It also should save money, though the study did not measure this, Wendy Demark-Wahnefried, of the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, wrote in an editorial in the medical journal. In the study, the group of weightlifters made only 77 visits to doctors or physical therapists for lymphedema flare-ups versus 195 visits for the others, she noted.

Another part of the study is evaluating whether weight training can prevent a first case of lymphedema in breast cancer survivors; results are expected soon, Schmitz said.

Breast cancer survivors should not rush into weight training — that could trigger problems. Schmitz suggests:

_Have a certified fitness professional teach you how to do the exercises properly.

_Start slow, with a program that gradually progresses.

_Wear a well-fitting compression garment during workouts.

On the Net:

New England Journal: http://www.nejm.org

Lymphedema advice: http://tinyurl.com/l9lgga

Wednesday 090722



Workout

On the minute:
Perform 2 Power Cleans on the minute for 15 minutes.

*Start the clock. At the top of every minute perform 2 Power Cleans.
*Use a maximal weight. 80% - 85% of 1 RM
*For every rep not completed, perform 5 Burpees during rest time.


Compare to:
TITANFIT: Monday 090601

Monday 090629

Workout:

Snatch
90% of 1RM x1 x3

Clean and Jerk
90% of 1RM x1 x3

A interesting read...

http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/06/24/can-you-get-fit-in-six-minutes-a-week/?emc=eta1

June 24, 2009, 12:26 pm

Can You Get Fit in Six Minutes a Week?
By Gretchen Reynolds

Getty Images
A few years ago, researchers at the National Institute of Health and Nutrition in Japan put rats through a series of swim tests with surprising results. They had one group of rodents paddle in a small pool for six hours, this long workout broken into two sessions of three hours each. A second group of rats were made to stroke furiously through short, intense bouts of swimming, while carrying ballast to increase their workload. After 20 seconds, the weighted rats were scooped out of the water and allowed to rest for 10 seconds, before being placed back in the pool for another 20 seconds of exertion. The scientists had the rats repeat these brief, strenuous swims 14 times, for a total of about four-and-a-half minutes of swimming. Afterward, the researchers tested each rat’s muscle fibers and found that, as expected, the rats that had gone for the six-hour swim showed preliminary molecular changes that would increase endurance. But the second rodent group, which exercised for less than five minutes also showed the same molecular changes.

The potency of interval training is nothing new. Many athletes have been straining through interval sessions once or twice a week along with their regular workout for years. But what researchers have been looking at recently is whether humans, like that second group of rats, can increase endurance with only a few minutes of strenuous exercise, instead of hours? Could it be that most of us are spending more time than we need to trying to get fit?

The answer, a growing number of these sports scientists believe, may be yes.

“There was a time when the scientific literature suggested that the only way to achieve endurance was through endurance-type activities,” such as long runs or bike rides or, perhaps, six-hour swims, says Martin Gibala, PhD, chairman of the Department of Kinesiology at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada. But ongoing research from Gibala’s lab is turning that idea on its head. In one of the group’s recent studies, Gibala and his colleagues had a group of college students, who were healthy but not athletes, ride a stationary bike at a sustainable pace for between 90 and 120 minutes. Another set of students grunted through a series of short, strenuous intervals: 20 to 30 seconds of cycling at the highest intensity the riders could stand. After resting for four minutes, the students pedaled hard again for another 20 to 30 seconds, repeating the cycle four to six times (depending on how much each person could stand), “for a total of two to three minutes of very intense exercise per training session,” Gibala says.

Each of the two groups exercised three times a week. After two weeks, both groups showed almost identical increases in their endurance (as measured in a stationary bicycle time trial), even though the one group had exercised for six to nine minutes per week, and the other about five hours. Additionally, molecular changes that signal increased fitness were evident equally in both groups. “The number and size of the mitochondria within the muscles” of the students had increased significantly, Gibala says, a change that, before this work, had been associated almost exclusively with prolonged endurance training. Since mitochondria enable muscle cells to use oxygen to create energy, “changes in the volume of the mitochondria can have a big impact on endurance performance.” In other words, six minutes or so a week of hard exercise (plus the time spent warming up, cooling down, and resting between the bouts of intense work) had proven to be as good as multiple hours of working out for achieving fitness. The short, intense workouts aided in weight loss, too, although Gibala hadn’t been studying that effect. “The rate of energy expenditure remains higher longer into recovery” after brief, high-intensity exercise than after longer, easier workouts, Gibala says. Other researchers have found that similar, intense, brief sessions of exercise improve cardiac health, even among people with heart disease.

There’s a catch, though. Those six minutes, if they’re to be effective, must hurt. “We describe it as an ‘all-out’ effort,” Gibala says. You’ll be straying “well out of your comfort zone.” That level of discomfort makes some activities better-suited to intense training than others. “We haven’t studied runners,” Gibala says. The pounding involved in repeated sprinting could lead to injuries, depending on a runner’s experience and stride mechanics. But cycling and swimming work well. “I’m a terrible swimmer,” Gibala says, “so every session for me is intense, just because my technique is so awful.”
Meanwhile, his lab is studying whether people could telescope their workouts into even less time. Could a single, two- to three-minute bout of intense exercise confer the same endurance and health benefits as those six minutes of multiple intervals? Gibala is hopeful. “I’m 41, with two young children,” he says. “I don’t have time to go out and exercise for hours.” The results should be available this fall.

The Phys Ed column will appear here in Well every Wednesday and also in print once a month, in the Sunday magazine. In it, Gretchen Reynolds, who is working on a book about the frontiers of fitness, will write about what the latest science can tell us about how to make ourselves stronger, more flexible, less prone to pain and generally fitter and healthier. We want to hear what you think, so stay tuned and offer your comments and questions.

Monday 090615

Workout
"Elizabeth" with a wheel
For time 21-15-9 reps of:
135 lbs Cleans
Ring dips
Ab-Wheel Rolls

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. Can't AB-Wheel, try 3x sit-ups.

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Monday 090112

Friday 090505

Warm-up
using 45 lbs bar
Clean Drops x3 x3
Over Head Lunges x3 x3

Workout
Clean and Jerk
All reps are started on the minute
66%* x1 x5
71% x1 x5
76% x1 x5

Rest as needed between these sets
80%* x1
85% x1
88% x1
90% x1
92% x1
*Of 1RM

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Tuesday 080311

Thursday 090504

Warm-up
Work on rack position and high hang cleans...for tomorrow's workout is Cleans!

Workout
3 Rounds
10 - Dead Lift 275 lbs (or 50% of your 1RM)
50 - Double Unders*
*Can't do DUs, try 200M run or 250M row as a sub


What Chain-Food Favorites Cost in Exercise
Posted Mon, Jun 01, 2009, 12:42 pm PDT

My "two scoops won't hurt and neither will these french fries" approach to eating doesn't lend itself well to swimsuit season. Although the beach treks may have begun, there is time to make change. So, let me have it. What's that ice cream going to cost me in workout minutes? To tell us is Charles Stuart Platkin, also known as the Diet Detective. He is the author of five books and and host of WE TV's I Want To Save Your Life. Here is his report on what some of our chain-food favorites should cost us in time spent doing common exercises...

Note: Calorie content of foods are based on official website information at the time of publication. Minutes of exercise are averages based on a 155-pound person. The greater the weight of the person the more calories burned per minute.

DONUT

Dunkin Donuts Chocolate Frosted Donut (230 calories)
59 minutes of walking (3 mph).

BREAKFAST SANDWICH

McDonald's Egg McMuffin (300 calories)
32 minutes of running (5 mph).

CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIE

Panera Chocolate Chipper (440 calories)
62 minutes of biking (10-11.9 mph).

PIZZA

Pizza Hut Large Hand-Tossed Style Cheese Pizza (1 slice; 320 calories)
39 minutes of swimming (slow to moderate laps).

CINNAMON ROLL

Starbucks Cinnamon Roll (500 calories, varies by location)
85 minutes of dancing.

HAMBURGER

Burger King Original Whopper With Cheese (770 calories)
94 minutes of swimming (slow to moderate laps).

BROWNIE

Au Bon Pain Chocolate Chip Brownie (380 calories).
129 minutes of yoga (Hatha style).

FRIES

Wendy's Large French Fries (540 calories)
77 minutes of biking (10-11.9 mph).

ICE CREAM

Häagen-Dazs Vanilla Ice Cream (0.5 cup; 270 calories)
29 minutes of running (5 mph).

BURRITO

Taco Bell Burrito Supreme, Beef (410 calories)
70 minutes of dancing.

Monday 090601


Dr. Rick Coaching during our Man Overboard session

From he CrossFit Football Site
On the minute:
Perform 2 Power Cleans on the minute for 15 minutes.

*Start the clock. At the top of every minute perform 2 Power Cleans.
*Use a maximal weight. 80% - 85% of 1 RM
*For every rep not completed, perform 5 Burpees during rest time.

After

RDLs
work up to 110% of your Clean 1RM for 3 sets of 3 reps...KEEP A FLAT BACK!

Monday 090504

Workout
Clean and Jerk
Do 1 Clean (from the deck) and 2 Jerks before returning the weight to the starting position. Rest as needed. work up to 85% of your 1RM

Thursday 090326

Workout

Clean and Jerk:
Work up to 80% x1, 70% x1, 83% x1, 73% x1, 85% x1, 75% x1, 88% x1, 75% x1

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Sunday 090301