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Showing posts with label Double-Unders. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Double-Unders. Show all posts

Wednesday 090923

06:30 WOD
5x

Body weight bench press
Pull-ups
Body weight back squat

Let's take 3:00 rest between sets, a la "Barbara"...

post total number of reps, per round

Workout
Tabata

TFT / DUTY WOD
Front Squats...your choice

Then "Mini" MetCon
For time:
25 - Wall Ball (Men - 20lbs 10 feet; Women - 20lbs 8 feet)
20 - Push-ups
15 - Double-unders (4 to 1 single unders)
10 - Knees - Elbows
5 - BCTs

Monday 090810

Warm-up!

Skills
Tuttle recommends Handstands and Double Unders...

Workout
(No Rain)

3x
200M Farmers Walk
10 - Burpees

50M Lunges
10 - Burpees

10 - Box Jumps
10 - Burpees

(Rain)
"Karen"
150 - Wall Ball Shots

Monday 090727

Workout
For time:
50 Box jump, 24 inch box
50 Jumping pull-ups
50 Kettlebell swings, 1 pood
Walking Lunge, 50 steps
50 Knees to elbows
50 Push press, 45 pounds
50 Back extensions
50 Wall ball shots, 20 pound ball
50 Burpees
50 Double unders


Compare to:
TITANFIT: Tuesday 080115

Wednesday 070809

Workout
OHS - find your 1RM

THEN

"Mini" MetCon
3x
15 Ring Dips
25 - Double Unders*

Can't do Double Unders? Sub Tuck Jumps of Lateral Hops

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Tuesday 081028

From "The Mighty Mix"...one of my favorite reads.

http://mightymix.blogspot.com/2009/06/six-tips-for-overhead-squat.html

Six tips for the overhead squat

The Overhead Squat (OHS) sits at the royal round table of the most efficient and rewarding weightlifting exercises. It works the entire body, increases strength, power, flexibility, coordination, and develops postural lean mass, which should be a priority for any intelligent bipedal.

The OHS appears deceptively simple; yet learning it can be very challenging. Even though it is designed, as all the Olympic-style weightlifting exercises are, to put the entire body through its most ergonomically engineered paces, it is nevertheless an unnatural movement. This article is both for the novice and the lifter already performing the lift who seeks some nitty-gritty details on form and technique, to give the thinking lifter some explanation and keys to executing this successfully.

1. Stick your butt out. It goes against everything you've striven for in general decency, but it's going to go out - way out. Focus on moving your backside backwards, away from your mid-line, and then focus on curling your lumbar up into extension, like a scorpion raising its tail. What this does is set your center of gravity, so you don't end up tipping forward or backward. Do it sideways in a mirror and try to keep your knees in line with/in the same plane with your toes; don't allow them to move in front of them.

2. Press into the bar. This is one of the biggest things that can improve your performance. One reason the OHS can be so counter intuitive is that the body wants to move as a unit through the dynamics of physics - in this case gravity - which means that as you descend, the muscle groups involved in keeping the bar raised tend to relax, hold, and depress. So the scapular group try to switch from elevation to depression. The upper traps try to switch from concentric contraction to bigger balance with eccentric, to brace the body to catch the overhead falling weight. Use the cue to be constantly lifting/pushing the weight, never just holding it.

Furthermore, there are far greater instances in work history that a person, if descending with an overhead object, needs to buffet it away in order to keep it from crashing onto oneself, than to catch it and return with it overhead with arms extended. So there is a certain amount of instinctive response and primal muscle memory that must be overcome.

To learn to press into the bar continually, focus on it through auxiliary overhead work - overhead presses, the Jerk Support and Recovery, etc. - whatever exercises you're doing to assist in developing overhead strength. This means focusing on fully contracting every muscle involved in keeping a load overhead, at every moment. Thought cue: be constantly lifting/pushing the weight, never just holding it. This allows more muscles to support the overhead position. It won't look like a shrug, but it will feel like you're trying to perform one.

3. Keep your chest, neck and head up, while bending over. Building on the reasoning above, it's easy to let the chest and head fall slightly forward on the way up. Actively focus on keeping these up throughout the movement, especially when hitting bottom and beginning ascent. Fix your eyes on something straight ahead or slightly higher. Be aware of what your neck is doing. In order to keep everything tight, retract and elevate the scapula.

Now, don't confuse this with trying to maintain a vertical posture. It's not like a ball squat, where you try to keep your spine ramrod straight, like a chair back. If you do that, you'll fall down. You will fold a bit on the descent, basically bending over, but at the hip joint. So allow the angle of your torso to change, just don't round your back, droop your neck, unlock your shoulders, or look down.

4. Bounce out of the hole. "When you master that bounce, you'll really take off in gains," Olympic silver medalist and coach Tom Hirtz told me. This applies in varying degrees to all squats and the snatch. It means learning where to stop on the descent and begin the ascent. Stop too soon, and you will perform only a partial squat, emphasizing upper glutes and hamstrings, and a legitimate OHS will be impossible. Stop too far down, and the squatting mechanism is completed, so major muscles will lose tension, and it's much more difficult to initiate the ascent. The goal is to stop descending when tension is still tight.

Focus on feeling it in your thighs, especially quadriceps, and think of your hip flexors as spring loaded. By shifting your focus from taking your cue from the glutes to the hip flexors, you'll get a faster cue from your nervous system and be better able to detect the "bounce" point. You'll also consciously engage your anterior muscles. This is important because most people are trained to focus on engaging their posterior muscles in learning the basic (back) squat, but the OHS is more of a front squat exercise than back, so by focusing on the glutes instead of the hip flexors, your body is more likely to follow the neuromuscular pathways you've set up for the back squat than to engage the bio mechanics necessary to maintain an overhead press while executing a squat. This means that you're likely to naturally fall into the pattern of leaning forward, which is what you do with a bar lying across your shoulders, and flex your elbows, which will lead to you tipping forward and possibly dumping the bar.

5. Use your wrists and hands. It takes every muscle involved in the OHS to maintain the proper trajectory of the bar for balance. The bar should be situated in line with a point just behind the ears. As the body moves through the vertical plane, each joint must make slight adjustments to maintain this fixed point. Be actively aware of what your wrists and hands are doing, for they are primarily responsible for holding and positioning the bar, so hold onto it! The fine-tuning points on this grip may mean adjusting throughout the movement, so that the fingers extend slightly and the bar rolls out toward the fingertips as the body becomes closer to the ground. This is the opposite of what would happen if you were buffeting or catching an object overhead when you hit the bottom.

6. Push with your feet. Your feet are your foundation. Assume your starting position by positioning your feet first. Your stance should be slightly wider than your shoulders, toes angled out. Note that if you're tall, and your stance is too narrow, you're going to have balance problems, so experiment until you find a secure width that you don't struggle in. Be sure your shoes have firm soles and allow the foot bed to fully extend. Throughout the movement, be actively aware of the load on your feet, and when you transfer into the bounce, push your feet "into the floor."

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.

Wednesday 090211

Workout

For time:
45 Double-unders
135 pound Squat clean, 45 reps
45 Ring Dips
45 Double-unders

Sub for double unders are:
Tuck Jumps
Lateral Hops
Butt Kickers

Scale to your current level of fitness. Remember we are trying to keep the power quotation high. As such if you are taking a great deal of time with the double unders, switch to one of the subs.

Thursday 090205

Workout

"AMRAP" in 20:00 of:
5 - 53 lbs KB Swings
10 -20 lbs Wall Balls Shots
15 - Double Unders or 12 inch Lateral Hops or Tuck Jumps

Tuesday 081125

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

Workout
For time:
"Cold Sore"
5x
10 - Burpees
10 – 65 lbs Thrusters
Then
50 - Double Unders

Unable to perform double unders? Sub Butt Kickers, Tuck Jumps or 3 to 1 Single unders

Here's the story behind the name. We had a new member that did Burpees (yea Burpees) for the first time. At the end of the workout, wanting to say, Herb, I hate Burpees, she said, "I hate Herpes". Cold Sore seems a bit more PC, so there you have it.

Saturday 080920


Workout
For time:
50 Box jump, 24 inch box
50 Jumping pull-ups
50 Kettlebell swings, 1 pood
Walking Lunge, 50 steps
50 Knees to elbows
50 Push press, 45 pounds
50 Back extensions
50 Wall ball shots, 20 pound ball
50 Burpees
50 Double unders

Compare to:
TITANFIT: Tuesday 080115
count the burpee push ups in your 65 push ups needed for today...

Monday 080616


KM all smiles after setting a new TitanFit record for DL

Workout
For time:
50 Sit-ups
50 Double-unders
50 Sit-ups
50 Steps Walking Lunge
50 Sit-ups
50 Burpees
50 Sit-ups
Unable to do double-unders? Sub 1:1 Tuck Jumps or 1:1 Butt Kickers or 4:1 Single-unders