Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Workout of the Day:
Press
3-3-3-3
and then,
Rounds of 21, 15 and 9 reps for time of:
Bodyweight Bench Press
Pull-Ups
(WOD courtesy of www.crossfitfootball.com.)

Lounging at CrossFit Invictus San Diego

Post-WOD lounging is encouraged, but wouldn't it be great if even our lounging was improving athletic performance?

Go With the Flow – New Gym Routines and Procedures
Written by C.J. Martin

All gyms have a natural flow to them – a pattern by which members arrive, situate themselves and prepare to have a great workout. For some, it’s sprinting in and joining the already-in-progress group warm-up (ahem, “A”-Game), but for others it entails some pre-WOD mingling and catching up with friends. I love this, and heartily encourage it as our community is what makes CrossFit Invictus so different from other places. Nonetheless, I am proposing some new rules that will improve both your socializing and athletic performance. So next time you are in, go with the following flow of the gym:

  1. Check-In at the Front Desk - This is not optional. You all have really cool little key fabs or membership cards. Please scan them when you arrive.
  2. Gather with Friends at the Back of the Building and Roll - Some of the best tools in the gym are the black foam rollers and lacrosse balls (individual and those taped together). In my opinion, they are not being used nearly enough. Rolling some of your tight muscle groups helps get needed blood flow to them, loosens them so they will contract and relax better, and generally improves their functionality for the athletic endeavor you are about to embark upon. And the great thing is, you can roll and socialize at the same time. Yes, your conversation might be interrupted occasionally by a yelp, but that’s just good fun and provides for some comedic relief. So gather there and roll while you catch up with friends.
  3. Dynamic, Skill-Based Warm-Up with Group – Once group session begins, your coach will put you through a dynamic warm-up. Recognize that this is not only a warm-up, but also an opportunity to put your body in ideal positions. Use this time to reinforce proper mechanics. For instance, when you lunge, think about how you lunge in a split jerk or split clean. Are you grooving that ideal pattern, or are you forward on the toe and too narrow? Make the most of this time and perform each movement perfectly. 
  4. Strength/Skill Work – No ego. Nobody is impressed when you deadlift 400 lbs. and herniate two discs in the process. Strive for virtuosity here. Move well and your numbers will progressively skyrocket. Move poorly and you might get some big numbers for a while, but you also run the risk of missing valuable training sessions because you are nursing injuries. This is your chance to perfect movements without a clock pressuring you to move quickly. Take the opportunity to be perfect. Once you have been consistently perfect, then begin to be consistently perfect with big weights.
  5. Timed Workout – Go hard . . . and be damn-near perfect. I can accept slight deviations of form when you’re hitting it at high intensity, but you should be striving for perfection. (And if your coach’s interpretation of “slight deviation of form” is different from yours, you are the one who is wrong. Listen to your coach and slow down.)
  6. Clean Up - Once you have completed your workout, please give us a hand by wiping down the bars and placing everything back where you found it. There is, however, one caveat: Be respectful of those who are still working out. It’s better to cheer someone on or relax than walk right in front of them with your barbell and weights. Nobody likes to be last, particularly when everyone else is cleaning up around them. Wipe down your bar and do a little static stretching while you cheer for others, then you can put your gear away and give them a hand with theirs.
  7. Log Your Performance - If you don’t have a Performance Log, your coach will be chatting with you this week. They are essential to tracking your athletic progress. You will never know if what you are doing is effective unless you can track what you have been doing. This is the best $15 investment you will make in your fitness. 
  8. Post-WOD Recovery Work – If your coach puts you through a post-WOD recovery drill (stretching or additional skill work) please view it with the same respect you view the first portions of the workout. Recovery is instrumental to getting more fit. If you slack here, it will show. If your coach ran out of time, you’re not excused from stretching. Most of you know our protocols for post-WOD stretching, and even if you don’t, any stretching after your WOD is better than none. Get it done – your body will thank you.
  9. GHD Machines - Almost as neglected as the foam rollers are our beautiful GHD machines. End your workout the way you began it, by socializing near the back wall. Jump on the GHD and knock out 10 sit-ups and 10 hip extensions. Then let a friend on to do the same. Switch on and off until you have done somewhere between 30-50 sit-ups and extensions.
  10. Grab Your MMMM Good Meal or Invictus Shots – Invictus Shots help you recover quicker by replacing depleted glycogen stores in your muscles. Shoot one immediately after your workout and your muscles will start recovering quicker – which means you might not be as sore the next day. Grab a meal for later while you’re at it. They’re delicious, nutritionally balanced and inexpensive – plus, you didn’t have to cook it.

Tags:

11 Responses to “Tuesday, May 26, 2009”

  1. Dutch says:

    Beautiful!
    CJ, You read my mind.
    I’m gonna steal this post soon… cool?

  2. Dani says:

    Well said Martin.

  3. AT says:

    135/155/165/185

  4. Cynthia says:

    LOVE the foam roller! DO NOT LOVE the lacrosse balls. OUCH! But they work….

    Hey, Barry and I signed up for a fun event on Saturday June 20. Kind of a mini Amazing Race here in San Diego.

    http://www.citychaseusa.com/events/view/56

    Has anyone ever done it before? I think it will be a friggin blast!!

  5. M says:

    Dani and I did one of those races a couple years ago. Dani had the great idea that we should do heavy deadlift before the race. It really sucked running up to Balboa Park w/ a 30# backpack.

  6. Calvin Sun says:

    If you are scaling this WOD and you go under 6 minutes you are probably using too little weight. Scaled or not, I expect most athletes to finish this workout around 12 minutes give or take a few. If you are doing it as prescribed, it should take you no more than 15 minutes to complete. Otherwise, you might want to consider scaling the load or at least improving your bench press.

  7. CJ Martin says:

    Steal away Dutch. Glad to be in good company.

  8. AT says:

    16:17
    Used 205 as my bench weight. Very tough WOD, did my reps in sets of 1 and 2. Chest and mind were humbled. Opted to scale down as I am more like 210, too many 3 musketeers and pizza :)

  9. mike says:

    Nice post CJ. Really nothing more to add on that matter.

    Again, I’d like to congratulate POS on an outstanding showing this weekend as his regional games quals. Can’t wait to see you tear it up in a couple months.

  10. Linda says:

    great post… :)

  11. [...] what they have to say is crucial for your technique, form and/or safety. CJ put it well in a recent blog post, “Go hard . . . and be damn-near perfect. I can accept slight deviations of form when you’re [...]