Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Affiliate Roundup, Part 3: “First Impressions”




It takes more than just a Level 1 Certificate to run a successful CrossFit affiliate. In this series, learn about the various ways affiliate owners and trainers evolve and plan as they work to lead the fitness industry.



In Part 3, the conversation continues as CrossFit Inc.'s Tyson Oldroyd discusses the importance of first impressions with Pat Burke of MBS CrossFit, CrossFit Verve founders Matt and Cherie Chan, Nicole Christensen of CrossFit Roots, and David Tittle of CrossFit Low Oxygen.



First impressions matter. What potential clients see when they first walk in is just as important as sound coaching. One simple way to make a good first impression is to invest in the cleanliness of your facility, Christensen says.



“It's a care factor,” she explains.



“If it appears clean and tidy and stuff, then all of a sudden there's also a mindset of safety and caring,” Cherie says.



This isn't a new idea: CrossFit Founder and CEO Greg Glassman talked about it in the 2010 CrossFit Journal video “How Clean Is Your Bathroom?”



The more effort your put into your affiliate the more you-and your clients-will get out of it.



“The goal is excellence,” Oldroyd says.



Video by Mike Koslap.



4min 44sec



Additional reading: “New Year's Newbies” by Andréa Maria Cecil, published Feb. 22, 2016.

Monday, May 30, 2016

Actions Speak Louder Than Workouts

If you want to truly honor the fallen, take care of their surviving brothers and sisters.

This article was co-authored by Michelle Baumann and Pete Hitzeman.


 


It has become tradition for CrossFit communities to gather each Memorial Day and complete a grueling workout called “Murph.” It is arguably the most famous hero WOD and consists of 100 pull ups, 200 push ups, and 300 squats sandwiched between a pair of one-mile runs.


 


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Sunday, May 29, 2016

The CrossFit Kitchen: Thai Turkey Meatballs




In this video, Nick Massie of PaleoNick.com takes a brief respite from wall-ball shots to share his recipe for Thai turkey meatballs.



These meatballs contain ginger, cilantro and coconut milk-traditional Thai ingredients-but Massie uses cauliflower as a substitute for rice, offering a healthier option for CrossFit athletes.



After combining the turkey, vegetables and spices, he shapes the meatballs and browns them in a skillet, turning them occasionally to get good coloring and caramelization on every side.



The cauliflower is shredded in a food processor until it has a risotto-like texture. It serves as the base for the “fried rice” in the dish.



“Beautiful,” Massie says as he adds the finishing touches. “The flavor is bound to bring you to your knees.”



To download the recipe for Thai turkey meatballs, click here.



Massie is the instructor for the CrossFit Specialty Course Culinary Ninja, which is designed to give you confidence in the kitchen while you learn the basics of balanced recipe development as informed by CrossFit's nutrition principles.



Click here for more information and a list of upcoming CrossFit Culinary Ninja courses.



Video by Nick Massie.



4min 45sec



Additional reading: “Health Food/Junk Food Game” by Crisa Metzger, published June 26, 2013.

How to Master the Kettlebell Jerk

You'll never move on to the heavier kettlebells if you fail to master the basics of the jerk technique.

In my previous article, The Single Most Important Aspect of Kettlebell Sport, I spoke about the importance of efficiency in kettlebell sport and explained how to achieve a more efficient rack position. Now I would like to take a more detailed look at the jerk and how to properly execute it in kettlebell sport.


 


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Saturday, May 28, 2016

3 of the Best: This Week's Top Articles, Vol. 32

These pieces have caught your attention throughout the week. So here they are in one place for you to consume, digest, and enjoy.

Welcome to our weekend roundup, Three of the Best! Every Saturday, we'll post up Breaking Muscle's top three articles of the week. These pieces have caught your attention throughout the last seven days. So here they are in one place for you to consume, digest, and enjoy.


 


female front rack


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Friday, May 27, 2016

One Word to Eliminate From Your Coaching Vocabulary

Better coaching means better client learning. Choose your words wisely.

I love teaching. I love learning. And I love learning about teaching and learning. As coaches, we should constantly be figuring out how to improve the effectiveness of our teaching through auditory, visual, and kinaesthetic approaches. This means studying aspects of coaching such as:


 




  • How to create engaging visual inputs 


  • How to create effective kinaesthetic drills


  • How to create empowering auditory cues 


 


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Prepare for Life's Challenges: Train Martial Arts

Developing perseverance in crisis requires training and the willingness to face fear.

My Sifu grew up on the wrong side of the tracks without many opportunities or much family support. But one thing he learned is that no matter what hand you've been dealt, you always have the ability to respond. Many of his peers joined gangs to escape poverty, family dysfunction, and a decrepit school system. Sifu turned to the martial arts, and that decision saved his life.


 


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Affiliate Roundup, Part 2: “Running a Better Business”




It takes more than just a Level 1 Certificate to run a successful CrossFit affiliate. In this series, learn about the various ways affiliate owners and trainers evolve and plan as they work to lead the fitness industry.



In Part 2, the conversation continues as CrossFit Inc.'s Tyson Oldroyd discusses running a business with Pat Burke of MBS CrossFit, CrossFit Verve founders Matt and Cherie Chan, Nicole Christensen of CrossFit Roots, and David Tittle of CrossFit Low Oxygen.



“At the beginning, it was a lot about growth,” Burke says. “Everything that I did-for my purposes and also the community-was to grow, grow, grow.”



Before the ubiquity of social media and the great expansion of CrossFit, new affiliate owners put in a lot of tough hours spreading the word about their gyms.



“I met Pat in early 2008,” Matt Chan remembers. “He stopped by Station 66 at North Metro Fire, introducing CrossFit and his gym to a group of firefighters … . He went out and was the guy who was doing what he could to spread knowledge about CrossFit and get people interested, knocking door-to-door really.”



Video by Mike Koslap.



3min 51sec



Additional reading: “Social Club” by Hilary Achauer, published May 2, 2016.

The Silver Market


Affiliate owners share how they're tailoring their approaches to introduce Baby Boomers to CrossFit.



The loud music, the intimidating movements and the unbearable crash of barbells smashing the floor-none of it appealed to Lucia Bragan.



“My husband had been doing CrossFit for four and a half years, and I would go watch sometimes. I knew I wasn't capable of doing what he was doing,” said the 77-year-old from Maryland.



“And they played really loud music with that heavy beat. I guess it charges the younger folks up and gets them going, but for me it was a turn-off. I wouldn't be able to hear the coach.”



Needless to say, Bragan had no intention of ever following in her husband's footsteps by joining Rock Creek CrossFit in Kensington, Maryland-at least until coach Trina Kerns approached her in September 2015 and offered an alternative. The process would start with a face-to-face introductory session at a time when the gym was quiet and empty. No loud weights. No blaring music.



Bragan decided to take Kerns up on her offer. The two met up and discussed Bragan's health history, and then Kerns put her through a short fitness assessment.



Bragan remembers being intimidated and somewhat overwhelmed, but Kerns was with her every step of the way, which made her more comfortable, she said. Soon, Bragan realized CrossFit-and lifting weights-wasn't as scary as she thought it would be.



While Bragan said she wouldn't have joined regular classes, many masters athletes thrive in general sessions that welcome everyone from teens to those well beyond 50, and great coaches are able to modify workouts for athletes of very different levels in a group setting. Some affiliates, however, are finding success creating entire programs that are tailored to help groups of Baby Boomers use CrossFit to stay fitter in their Golden Years.

Dave Matthews, the Elliptical Machine, and the Haters

Just because an exercise or protocol isn't for you, doesn't give you license to berate everyone who does it.

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Monday, May 23, 2016

The Glassman Chipper


When a pegboard showed up in Event 12 of the 2015 Reebok CrossFit Games, a lot of people were shocked.



That's a weird reaction by any follower of a sport in which competitors sign up to face the “unknown and unknowable,” but it's even weirder when you consider CrossFit's Founder and CEO wrote about pegboards back in 2002.



In the second issue of the CrossFit Journal, Greg Glassman listed and sourced all the equipment a person would need to turn a garage into a “world-class strength and conditioning facility.” The article, “The Garage Gym,” has been sitting in our archives since September 2002, and it's the third-most-popular of our 4,000 pieces of content. Only the “Level 1 Training Guide” and “What Is Fitness?” outrank it.



Be that as it may, a great many people missed this section of “The Garage Gym”: “Pegboards can be used to develop great back and arm strength. ... Again, we've plans to install pegboards on our walls soon. This is our favorite alternative to the climbing rope.”



CFJ_Pegboard_Warkentin-2.jpg



Other early CrossFit Journal topics have influenced Games or regional events: single-speed bikes, two-person lifting, handstand walking and swimming, for example. The recent announcement of strict muscle-ups at regionals? Glassman didn't mention kipping once in “The Muscle-Up” in 2002. He was clearly detailing the strict movement.



And then there's “World-Class Fitness in 100 Words”-published October 2002 as part of “What Is Fitness?”-in which Glassman advised athletes to “regularly learn and play new sports.”



I have trouble thinking of many sports that don't involve swinging an implement or throwing something, and yet people were surprised by stake drives, sledgehammer events and ball throws at the CrossFit Games.



All this is to say the CrossFit Journal archives are rich with knowledge, but a lot of people are missing out on it.



CFJ_Pegboard_Warkentin-1.jpg



From a historical perspective, Glassman's early articles signaled a new era of fitness, just the way the first Nautilus machines changed the fitness industry in the early '70s, though many would rightly contend those machines were a step in the wrong direction.



Glassman wrote about topics all but banished by traditional fitness publications that were only too eager to obsess over Arnold Schwarzenegger's biceps yet again. By shedding new light on the disciplines of gymnastics, kettlebells, power- lifting, Olympic lifting and more-all combined in the CrossFit program-Glassman bent the fitness industry away from selectorized machines and aerobics one PDF at a time. For proof of his success, you need only look at the current widespread availability of all the once-rare equipment Glassman listed in “The Garage Gym.”



Beyond that, Glassman's articles have stood up to scrutiny over the years: They contain the first true definition of fitness, they explain exactly why and how the CrossFit program works, and they detail everything you need to know in order to become very fit. Taken together, they're like finding the formula for gunpowder.



Some of these seminal pieces are part of the “CrossFit Level 1 Training Guide” and are seen regularly, but many remain more obscure than they should be. We're well aware that the Journal's search engine isn't ideal, and a lot of gems are hidden many clicks away from our landing page, so it's high time we brought Glassman's writing to the forefront again.



To make things very CrossFit, your next workout is a chipper for time, and it will challenge your mind. Glassman did, after all, say this: “The greatest adaptation to CrossFit takes place between the ears.” Below, we've collected Glassman's earliest CrossFit Journal writings from April 2002 to March 2004-38 articles published over two years. Your challenge is to read or reread them all in order.



Attention spans are short, and it's far easier to get click-baited into a rabbit hole of top 10s and celebrity gossip, with ample distractions provided by text messages, Facebook notifications and Snapchats. Some will definitely ask “why bother?” before hitting Instagram to double-tap hearts onto a sea of slow-motion snatch videos.



I'll answer that question with another: Why do you do Fran, Grace and Helen?



CrossFit Journal Glassman Chipper



For time, read all articles listed below from start to finish in order:



“Foundations,” published April 2002.



“The Garage Gym,” published September 2002.



“What Is Fitness?” published October 2002.



“Strategies for a 7 Minute 2K on the Concept II Rower,” published November 2002.



“The Muscle-Up,” published November 2002.



“Glycemic Index,” published November 2002.



“Squat Clinic,” published December 2002.



“Ergometer Scores and Hall of Fame Workouts,” published December 2002.



“Fast Food,” published December 2002.



“A Postural Error-A Costly Biomechanical Fault: Muted Hip Function (MHF),” published January 2003.



“The Overhead Lifts,” published January 2003.



“Interview: Coach Greg Glassman,” published January 2003.



“The Odd Lifts,” published January 2003.



“Hooverball,” published February 2003.



“Theoretical Template for CrossFit's Programming,” published February 2003.



“Seniors and Kids,” published February 2003.



“The Push-Up,” published March 2003.



“Police Training,” published March 2003.



“A Better Warm-Up,” published April 2003.



“How Fit Are You?” published April 2003.



“The Pull-Up,” published April 2003.



“Two Training Aids,” published May 2003.



“Three Important Ab Exercises,” published May 2003.



“Beginners' Workout,” published May 2003.



“Metabolic Conditioning Glossary,” published June 2003.



“Interval Generator,” published June 2003.



“Metabolic Conditioning,” published June 2003.



“The Clean,” published July 2003.



“Anatomy and Physiology for Jocks,” published August 2003.



“The Deadlift,” published August 2003.



“Functionality and Wall Ball,” published August 2003.



“Benchmark Workouts,” published September 2003.



“Really Cool Homemade Parallettes,” published September 2003.



“Team Workouts,” published October 2003.



“Nutrition: Avoiding Metabolic Derangement,” published November 2003.



“Handstands,” published January 2004.



“Macroclimbing,” published February 2004.



“What Is CrossFit?” published March 2004.



Post time to comments.



About the Author: Mike Warkentin is the managing editor of the CrossFit Journal and the founder of CrossFit 204.



All photos: Mike Warkentin/CrossFit Journal

Sunday, May 22, 2016

Garrett “G-Money” Holeve: From the Box to the Cage




Garrett “G-money” Holeve is an enthusiastic MMA fighter, an avid CrossFitter and a hardworking employee at Home Depot.



At CrossFit Showdown in Davie, Florida, Holeve attends classes that are dedicated to adaptive athletes with Down syndrome.



“When Garrett was born, they came to my wife and said, 'Your son has Down syndrome,'” says Mitch Holeve, Garrett's father. “I can honestly say that from the moment he was born, I just said he was going to have a high quality of life … he was going to have a happy life.”



Despite the discrimination Mitch says his son faces in the MMA world, Garrett remains passionate about the sport, and he uses CrossFit to keep him in top condition for fighting.



“He performs better in the cage and on the mat because of CrossFit-because he's so physically fit,” Mitch says.



Joey Morgenstern, owner of CrossFit Showdown, admires Garrett's strength.



“He'll push harder than anybody else,” Morgenstern says. “He'll push past his limits … . It really goes to show that no matter what condition you're in, there's always a way to be at the top, there's always a way to progress.”



Video by Mariah Moore.



8min 45sec



Additional reading: “Lifeline to Independence” by Anna Woods with Emily Beers, published Oct. 16, 2013.

The Best Exercise for Shoulder Strength and Health

The one-arm press can't be beat for strength, power, or rehabilitation.

What is the best shoulder exercise?


 



 


Whether you're looking for performance through strength or power, or rehabilitation through patterning, the kettlebell one-arm press covers so many bases. This exercise could quite simply be the best thing you can do for your shoulder. 


 


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Saturday, May 21, 2016

The CrossFit Kitchen: Super Radical Tri-Tip With Balsamic Apple Compote




Nick Massie of PaleoNick.com is back in the kitchen, this time to share the recipe for his Super Radical tri-tip with balsamic apple compote.



Massie begins by prepping two baking sheets for the yams and tri-tip.



“Any meal that starts with two foil-lined sheet pans is a winner in my book,” he says.



He then pats a liberal amount of Super Radical Rib Rub onto both sides of the tri-tip and tosses extra spices into the pan to mingle with the juices during the cooking process.



Next he turns his attention to the compote, dicing the onions, julienning the apples and then adding everything to a hot skillet to draw out the sugars. He finishes the caramelized sauce with some balsamic vinegar and a little water to deglaze.



Massie says it's important to rest the tri-tip before slicing and to cut across the grain rather than with it. After he divides the meat and potatoes into equal “Zoned-out” servings, it's meal time.



To download the recipe for Super Radical tri-tip, click here.



Massie is the instructor for the CrossFit Specialty Course Culinary Ninja, which is designed to give you confidence in the kitchen while you learn the basics of balanced recipe development as informed by CrossFit's nutrition principles.



Click here for more information and a list of upcoming CrossFit Culinary Ninja courses.



Video by Nick Massie.



4min 42sec



Additional reading: “Between Steer and Steak” by Hilary Achauer, published Dec. 6, 2013.

3 of the Best: This Week's Top Articles, Vol. 31

These pieces have caught your attention throughout the week. So here they are in one place for you to consume, digest, and enjoy.

Welcome to our weekend roundup, Three of the Best! Every Saturday, we'll post up Breaking Muscle's top three articles of the week. These pieces have caught your attention throughout the last seven days. So here they are in one place for you to consume, digest, and enjoy.


 


man after workout


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Thursday, May 19, 2016

Might Over Mitochondrial Disease


Theresa Couture uses CrossFit to rebuild her body after suffering a stroke.



Theresa Couture fell out of her wheelchair in her kitchen, sending the chair flying across the room. As she lay there, home alone, she knew she didn't have the strength to drag herself to the chair and get back in it.



“That was the final straw for me,” said Couture, who has mitochondrial disease (mito), which manifests itself through dysautonomia, strokes, muscle weakness, and neurological and stomach issues.



She decided to give CrossFit a try in October 2015-with the goal of being able to get back in her chair from the floor.



“Now I get out of my chair and onto the floor and back into my chair without assistance,” said Couture, a founder of the nonprofit MitoAction, whose mission is to improve the quality of life for everyone who lives with mitochondrial disease.



Couture has been wheelchair-bound since March 23, 2015, after her last stroke. She has had strokes before and always recovered, but this one was different: It left her unable to move her legs because the area of the brain that helps her move took the hit.



“I could feel my legs but I couldn't make them move,” Couture said.



Couture started physical therapy right away after the last stroke. Meanwhile, her daughter, Brianna, who also has mitochondrial disease, was doing CrossFit and making wonderful strides. She encouraged her mom to give it a try, telling her she could strengthen her arms, core and back.



“You always taught me you can't live like you're waiting to die,” Brianna told her mom.



With the kitchen incident burned into her mind, Couture headed to CrossFit Wingman in Agawan, Massachusetts, for an interview. The first things she noticed were handicap parking and a handicap ramp-both great signs. One of the coaches, Aaron Zanchi, interviewed her-and she interviewed him.



“He asked me (about) my goals, what I could do from the chair, and (for) information about how my disease impacted me,” Couture said. “As a former ICU/trauma nurse, I was duly impressed. He was educated, welcoming, thoughtful, and proactive in his interview and in his approach to developing a plan.



“What was new for me was the focus on what I could do, not what I couldn't do. That's a different model. That question brought it positively forward.”



CrossFit: Infinitely Scalable



Zanchi spent two weeks working privately with Couture first to establish her baseline and see what she was capable of before she started attending group classes and working with another coach. Couture's coach, Zachary Betta, explained CrossFit is universally scalable, inclusive and adaptable to athletes of all abilities.



In December, after just two months of CrossFit three times a week, everything was different from when Couture started, Betta said. In the beginning, Couture was using 2-lb. hand weights and her movements were very, very small. She also didn't get out of her chair at all. Just two months later, she was lifting a 45-lb. barbell. And she got out of her chair, got on the floor, did adaptive sit-ups, got back in the chair and went to the next station.



She even stood up out of her wheelchair-twice-on her own power, an accomplishment chronicled in a video taken by Betta and posted on the CrossFit Wingman Facebook page. As of press time the clip had almost 900,000 views.



Previously, Couture had been unable to stand or walk, with even the smallest movements resulting in severe muscle spasms and tremors. But because she's so much stronger now, she stood up with no leg spasms at all.



“That moment was in the middle of a workout when she was tired,” Betta said. “It was an amazing moment for all of us.”



Couture admitted that some days her workout is just getting dressed, transferring to her chair, getting in and out of the car, and getting into the gym.



“On those days, I cheer on others. But I don't let it get me down,” she said.



Betta has learned to read Couture's demeanor when she comes in the gym and adapts the day's workout accordingly.



“If she has lots of energy, I know it's a good day and she can work hard and make progress,” he said. But he also knows if she works hard one class, she may be tired the next. On those days, they will work from the chair to increase her competence and strength in the chair.



Couture constantly challenges herself.



“It's easy to throw in the towel,” she said, “but the more you do, the more you can do.”



Betta agreed: “Every time she comes in, she does something new. Her adaptability is incredible. And a big piece is her attitude and unwillingness to give up. She works her (butt) off. She has never missed a day. She's been this ball of positive energy. I've never seen her be negative about anything.”



Her coach also noted Couture is close with a regular group of workout partners-something very common in CrossFit gyms.



“The power of community helps me feel engaged; it helps my body, mind and spirit. You need a community of people to lift you up when you're feeling down,” Couture said.



CrossFit, Exercise and Mito



Any endurance or fitness athlete is familiar with the term “mitochondria” because the tiny cellular component is solely responsible for all the energy we need for proper cell, organ and body function. In addition, mitochondrial adaption to high-intensity exercise training is known to be responsible for improvements in VO2 max and lactate threshold.



“The benefit of exercise for patients with any chronic disease seems logical since it may improve overall physical and cardiovascular conditioning,” said Dr. Eduardo Balcells, cardiologist with Mountain States Health Alliance; CrossFitter at Iron Mountain in Abingdon, Virginia; and father of a child with mitochondrial disease. “Patients with mito, however, have dysfunctional mitochondria and are therefore unable to effectively produce 'cellular energy,' which then affects body parts such as muscle, brain and GI tract-all of which are energy-demanding organs.



“Exercise for people with mito may then seem counterintuitive due to the limited energy production and possibility that exercise may then use up all the limited energy available.”



However, exercise is known to increase the number of mitochondria in our muscles and other organs, and in mito patients this means more healthy mitochondria-more energy. Exercise is exactly what mito patients need, Balcells said.



“In the mito world, people give up on being active,” Couture said. “The fear of something bad happening keeps people from living their life.”



Before the wheelchair, Couture said her life was very small: Fatigue would prevent her from performing everyday tasks such as going to the grocery store. Thanks to CrossFit, Couture now lives a full, strong life.



“I've become more safe (in the wheelchair). It's empowering me to have a positive life. I feel more engaged in my life,” she said.



She added: “Exercise is hard for mito patients, but little activities over time add up to big gains.”



Couture encouraged mito patients to find an activity they love and do it.



“It's counterintuitive to think that the less you do, the more you'll be able to do. You have to keep moving. Your body loves motion, even if you have mito. You have to behave (in) your life as if you're going to live. If you don't do that, you set yourself up for failure. You have to re-engage in life to become a part of life.”



She continued: “Embrace life. When life kicks you, regroup, reorganize and start again. Keep moving forward. Do what you can do and do it to the best of your ability.”



About the Author: Ginger DeShaney is director of operations and support for MitoAction, a nonprofit organization whose mission is to improve the quality of life for children, adults and families living with mitochondrial disease through support, education, outreach, advocacy and clinical research initiatives. DeShaney was a journalist for 24 years before joining the nonprofit ranks. For more information about mitochondrial disease, please visit Mitoaction.org.

How to Train for Strongman at Any Gym

The bewildering array of event possibilities in strongman competition can still be trained for in a regular gym.

Strongman events are unlike other strength sports because they don't have set movements or events. There was a time when events were unannounced prior to a strongman competition. Folks would find out what torture the event coordinator had in store for them when they arrived. These days, competitors have a general idea of the events and weights that will be used in advance of the competition. But there's no guarantee that you will be able to get your hands on the actual implements, or even a similar piece of equipment, before contest day.


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Wednesday, May 18, 2016

How Often Should I Squat?

Your goals dictate how much, how often, and how hard you lift.

Charles is here on a weekly basis to help you cut through the B.S. and get some real perspective regarding health and training. Please post feedback or questions to Charles directly in the comments below this article.


 


Last week, an online client of mine posed an interesting question: Why not do the basic lifts more than once a week?


 


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Soda Suit Fizzling Out


California federal judge denies beverage-association motion to stop San Francisco from requiring warnings on sugary-drink ads.



Should the American Beverage Association appeal a recent federal judge's order denying its preliminary-injunction motion against a San Francisco ordinance, it will have “an uphill battle,” said an attorney with the Public Health Law Center.



“The order was very detailed and the court laid out its reasoning, so it created a solid foundation for (the city),” explained Julie Ralston Aoki, a staff attorney with the Minnesota-based center at the Mitchell Hamline School of Law. Before joining the center, Aoki served as a Minnesota assistant attorney general for nine years.



The center was among more than 20 organizations that filed an unsolicited brief in support of San Francisco's ordinance requiring health-warning language on outdoor ads for sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs). The ordinance is the first of its kind in the country.



Aoki added: “A motion like this is a really good way to test the strength of their case.”



On May 17, U.S. District Judge Edward M. Chen denied the American Beverage Association (ABA) motion to stop San Francisco from enforcing the measure, saying the plaintiff's arguments that the city's ordinance violates the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment “are not likely to succeed.”



“And it is unlikely that they would suffer irreparable harm if the ordinance were to go into effect,” Chen wrote in his decision. “Even if Plaintiffs had established serious questions going to the merits, balancing of hardships does not tip sharply in their favor.”



CFJ_Injunction_Cecil_1.jpg



The ABA-the trade group that represents the country's nonalcoholic beverage industry, including the likes of The Coca-Cola Co. and PepsiCo Inc.-filed suit against the City and County of San Francisco on July 24 in the U.S. District Court, Northern District of California. They claim the ordinance violates the First Amendment, which guarantees multiple freedoms, including speech. Joining the suit are the California Retailers Association and the California State Outdoor Advertising Association.



“This is big. This is enormous. I mean it's not just a denial of the preliminary-injunction (motion). It's a judge in federal district court saying that the beverage industry's arguments against warning labels do not stand up in court,” said Harold Goldstein, executive director of the California Center for Public Health Advocacy.



He added: “That's the first time in the country that a court has weighed in on that issue.”



The ordinance, which will go into effect July 25, requires at least 20 percent of a sugary-drink ad to display the following language: “WARNING: Drinking beverages with added sugar(s) contributes to obesity, diabetes, and tooth decay. This is a message from the City and County of San Francisco.”



It is likely the city's mandated warning is factual and accurate, Chen wrote.



“The City had a reasonable basis for identifying SSBs as a cause. The City has a legitimate interest in public health and safety, and the warning that SSBs contribute to obesity and diabetes is reasonably related to the City's interest in public health and safety, particularly in light of the evidence indicating that SSBs are a significant source of calories as well as a significant source of added sugar.”



San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera praised Chen's decision.



“I'm gratified by a very strong ruling, which eviscerated plaintiffs' arguments that common sense warnings about the health risks associated with sugar-sweetened beverages-like obesity, diabetes and tooth decay-are somehow misleading. The truth is these sugary products cause many health problems,” he said via an email from press secretary Matt Dorsey.



The health warning will provide information consumers need to make informed decisions, said San Francisco Supervisor Scott Wiener, author of the warning language.



“Consumption of sodas and other sugary beverages are making people in our community sick, particularly in our low-income communities, and education is a critical part of improving our society's health,” he said via email.



CFJ_Injunction_Cecil_2.jpg



Although Chen's decision does not signal an end to the suit, Aoki called his order “a very positive development.”



“It's really gratifying-the thoughtful analysis that the court applied to the First Amendment arguments-and it's also a really important milestone for this movement around warning labels for sugary beverages and other foods, nutrients that might be of concern,” she said.



Still, the case is “high impact,” Aoki noted. She said she wouldn't be surprised if the ABA continued to pursue the case even if it lost an appeal.



“It could end up in the Supreme Court.”



Herrera expressed unconcern about an ABA appeal.



“I think a strong and thorough ruling like this bodes well for the City's position on appeal,” he said.



In a statement sent to multiple news organizations, ABA leadership said it was disappointed in the court's ruling.



“We believe that the city of San Francisco's mandate violates the constitutional rights of a select group by unfairly discriminating against one particular category of products, based on one ingredient found in many other products. We are reviewing the decision and look forward to making our case on the merits of this ordinance in court.”



The ABA has 30 days from the order's issue to file an appeal.



Goldstein welcomed such a filing.



“The longer the beverage industry fights this, the more attention is going to be brought to the facts of the case, which is that these beverages lead to obesity, diabetes, tooth decay. The more they fight it, the more the public will learn about the harms of its products. So they can keep fightin' it, for all I care.”



About the Author: Andréa Maria Cecil is assistant managing editor and head writer of the CrossFit Journal.



All photos: Dave Re/CrossFit Journal

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Affiliate Roundup, Part 1: “We Are the Product”




It takes more than a Level 1 Certificate to run a successful CrossFit affiliate. In this series, learn about the various ways thriving affiliate owners evolve when trying to keep up with the world of fitness.



In Part 1, CrossFit Inc.'s Tyson Oldroyd sits down with Pat Burke of MBS CrossFit, CrossFit Verve founders Matt and Cherie Chan, Nicole Christensen of CrossFit Roots, and David Tittle of CrossFit Low Oxygen, who share what they've learned about owning and running affiliates over the years.



“We're the product,” says Cherie Chan, who opened CrossFit Verve in 2008. “You've got to put money and attention into your product, which is your trainers.”



Other topics up for discussion include the importance of continuing education and understanding the moral obligation that comes with handling people's health and wellness.



Video by Mike Koslap.



4min 16sec



Additional reading: “Class Action” by Hilary Achauer, published May 4, 2016.

You're Not Overtraining, You're Under-Recovering

Are you doing everything you can to prepare for your next training session?

“Overtraining” is a buzzword that is tossed around the fitness community. It's the result of pushing your body past its threshold, and it causes symptoms like fatigue, apathy towards workouts, persistent muscle soreness or joint pain, lack of gains, and lowered immunity. Essentially, it leaves you out of balance.


 


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Monday, May 16, 2016

Warm and Happy


CrossFit coaches share their favorite warm-up games to get athletes laughing and moving.



“High knees, lunges and PVC pass-throughs!”



While lunging her way across the room for what feels like the millionth time, an athlete steals a jealous glance at the wildly giggling CrossFit Kids who are playing a tic-tac-toe racing game in the next room.



At CrossFit Leverage, warm-up games aren't just for kids.



“All of our members have got real jobs and real lives outside of this place,” said affiliate owner Dave Fecht, “and if they've had a long, stressful week, it's silly games like this that kind of give them a chance to play and have fun.”



Besides ending the monotony and helping athletes crack a smile, the occasional warm-up game can also break the ice for new members or athletes from different class times.



“It's a good way for people to overcome that standoffishness or nerves coming into their first main group class,” said Aaron McIlwee, co-owner of CrossFit East Auckland.



“And it'll still get the heart rate going,” said James McDermott, head coach at Albany CrossFit. “It will still prepare them for the WOD, they'll still break a light sweat, but they're gonna have fun, too. And if you have people laughing and smiling, then you already know it's going to be a good day.”

Sunday, May 15, 2016

3 of the Best: This Week's Top Articles, Vol. 30

These pieces have caught your attention throughout the week. So here they are in one place for you to consume, digest, and enjoy.

Welcome to our weekend roundup, Three of the Best! Every Sunday, we'll post up Breaking Muscle's top three articles of the week. These pieces have caught your attention throughout the last seven days. So here they are in one place for you to consume, digest, and enjoy.


 


cal poly hip flow


 


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Saturday, May 14, 2016

2 Essential Foot Functions to Upgrade Your Training

From squats to double unders, training your feet is the first step to unlocking your best performance yet.

The feet are complex beasts that powerfully support many movements in training and day-to-day life. The plethora of joints, muscles, tendons, and fascia in your feet are engineered to provide two functions for all your athletic movements: stationary support and dynamic spring.


 


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Euro Trip 2016 With Chris, Eric and Matt




Chris Spealler, Eric O'Connor and Matt Chan are friends, former CrossFit Games athletes and members of CrossFit Inc.'s Seminar Staff. In this video, follow the trio as they teach the CrossFit Competitor's Trainer Course at three locations in Europe.



The jet-lagged crew gets somewhat of a bumpy start in Geneva, Switzerland, as they try to traverse the revolving doors and parking-lot gates.



“I haven't slept in at least 36 hours,” Chan says wearily.



Undaunted, they make their way to CrossFit GVA for the first seminar. Next up is Myleo CrossFit in Berlin, Germany, and finally CrossFit Amsterdam in Amsterdam, Netherlands.



Spealler and Chan speak to how the course can benefit a variety of people, not just athletes striving for the CrossFit Games.



“Competitor's courses-they're much more valuable for a coach than most people think,” Spealler says.



Chan adds: “I think the lessons that we teach people can be applied towards a very beginner athlete to a very elite-level athlete.”



But it's not all work. The trip is filled with banter about Spealler's short stature, O'Connor's small calves and Chan's obsession with his pocket food scale.



Video by Ian Wittenber.



15min 55sec



Additional reading: “The High Road to Accreditation” by Nicole Carroll, published Nov. 9, 2015.

Friday, May 13, 2016

Life Lessons From the Weight Room

What you learn in the weight room applies everywhere else.

The growth in maturity and confidence I have seen in the young athletes I coach has led me to believe all students should have some training in lifting. As I've stated before, society should creatively and openly reexamine what we consider core curriculum in our schools, and the lessons taught in the gym should be valued by all.


 


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Move Well First: A New Path for Coaching Fitness

A shift in perspective is what the industry needs to prioritize movement for the long haul.

One of the best things about working in the fitness industry is the constant room for growth and opportunities to learn from the best minds in the industry. As fitness professionals, we hold continuing education in high regard. We aim to continually learn and evolve into better coaches and expect the same from our peers.


 


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Wednesday, May 11, 2016

The Hub and Spoke Method for Attacking Weaknesses

This scheme will help you with whatever skill you're trying to develop, while maintaining other areas.

Charles is here on a weekly basis to help you cut through the B.S. and get some real perspective regarding health and training. Please post feedback or questions to Charles directly in the comments below this article.


 


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Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Get Ready for Full Throttle: The Cal Poly Hip Flow

This 6-minute, full-body warm up and joint mobilization sequence will prime your body for whatever workout lies ahead.

In the fall quarter of 2015, Assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach Chris White designed a flow sequence for our athletes here at Cal Poly. This 5-6 minute sequence quickly became the catalyst for some incredible gains in the weight room, and a record-breaking 2016 season for our Track and Field team. We have seen such positive results from the flow that all 22 of our varsity teams now use it for their warm up prior to a lifting session. Many teams have adopted it as an integral part of their preparation before practice. 


 


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Regional Athlete Chad Blanchard: Hard Time for Time




Chad Blanchard, 30, is headed to the 2016 Atlantic Regional after putting drugs and prison behind him.



Blanchard-a member of Nepa CrossFit in Plains, Pennsylvania-spent five years in jail for selling and using cocaine. He says the conviction was tough on his family, but they always remained supportive. While in prison, Blanchard saw the CrossFit Games on ESPN, and the competition piqued his interest.



“I remember going to the gym the next day and I was like, 'I'm going to do CrossFit.' … I tried to walk on my hands, the entire gym floor-and I did it until my arms were about to fall off,” he remembers.



Blanchard says CrossFit training helped him cope with his sentence.



“I was in hell, and I was forgetting I was there because for the moment I was getting better,” he says.



Blanchard now works as a personal trainer, and he's in awe of the rivals-including 2015 Games champ Ben Smith-he'll face at the upcoming regional, set for May 20-22 in Atlanta, Georgia.



“When I started the Open, I did not expect to make regionals. … I'm still in disbelief now. I can't even fathom being around the people I'm about to be around in a few weeks. These guys are just awesome.”



Video by Mike Koslap.



11min 36sec



Additional reading: “Sweat and Sobriety” by Hilary Achauer, published March 7, 2014.

Movement Medicine: Breaking Down the Turkish Get Up

Understanding the TGU is the first step to not hating them.

“Everyone loves the Turkish get up. Except me. But they are so darn good for me I do them anyway. I do 20 per week usually with my snatch weight bell but sometimes just with a shoe… the Turkish get up is the cod liver oil of exercise lifts.”


Gary Music, StrongFirst Team Leader

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Sunday, May 8, 2016

3 of the Best: This Week's Top Articles, Vol. 29

These pieces have caught your attention throughout the week. So here they are in one place for you to consume, digest, and enjoy.

Welcome to our weekend roundup, Three of the Best! Every Sunday, we'll post up Breaking Muscle's top three articles of the week. These pieces have caught your attention throughout the last seven days. So here they are in one place for you to consume, digest, and enjoy.


 


female backsquat


 


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Friday, May 6, 2016

Do You Have Flexibility In Your Programming?

Whether you run classes or coach one-on-one, programming flexibility is a necessity.

No, I'm not talking about the ability to touch your toes. I'm referencing the ability to modify your programming based on the person you are coaching and their day-to-day circumstances. (I'm going to refer to your client as a singular person throughout the piece, but this equally applies to group coaching.)


 


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Hope for Rain


CrossFit funds construction of life-changing dam in Rabai, Kenya.



Since 2011, CrossFit Inc. and its affiliates have participated in starting and finishing school buildings, constructing pit latrines, nailing desks together, and celebrating success stories with community elders in various villages in Africa. Affiliates and CrossFitters around the world fund the projects by donating through Hope for Kenya.



This recent trip, CrossFit's 12th expedition, was different because the green light had been given to move forward on the biggest project to date: a surface dam.



Ringing in at just over US$50,000 and spanning the length and width of a few football fields put together, the 3-million-gallon surface dam literally changed the landscape of Rabai forever.



Although many areas of Kenya receive ample amounts of water throughout the year, Rabai, about 12 miles northwest of Mombasa, isn't on the list. The locals have adapted very well to the semi-arid climate and the dry months of the Kenyan calendar, but adaptation simply hasn't been enough. These people are constantly sick, and many die each year from either dehydration or contaminated water.



To remedy these problems, we plan to leverage the short April-June rainy season, catching and storing every precious drop in the manmade reservoir. Each day, about 5,500 people will benefit from the dam.



CrossFit is changing lives from the ground up-literally. This water source, along with a little hope and a can-do attitude, will alter the trajectory of the villagers' lives. Instead of struggling with disease, dehydration and poor nutrition, they'll be moving toward health, longevity and wellness.

The Best DIY Pre-Workout Shake

Why buy a bottle of engineered-to-last-a-year chocolate milk when you can make a better version at home?

This month, the coaches of Breaking Muscle UK were asked to consider strength as the focus of our articles. This is pretty easy for me to cover as a recipe contributor, as my advice for building strength is simple: fuel your workouts properly to get the best results in the gym.


 


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Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Put Your Athlete First: How to Build Rapport

Understanding human interaction is where the money is made.

My athletes are my world. It is my job to make them strong and fast, but on a fundamental level, I also care about them as people. I might not be able to reach each one of them, but it won't be from a lack of trying. I know many of you aren't college strength coaches, but your relationships with your clients is as pivotal as mine is with my athletes.


 


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Class Action


Affiliate owners share the various ways they've tailored the group-class model to create strong businesses that produce fitter clients.



Johnny DiGregorio opened CrossFit Pasadena in 2008. What started as a small community grew into a group of more than 240 members training in a 5,600-square-foot gym. Membership fees were about US$175 a month. By 2013, most classes had more than 30 people.



DiGregorio staffed each session with three coaches, but he still felt clients were falling through the cracks and weren't getting the attention they deserved. He was overworked and unhappy. This was not what he dreamed of in 2007, when he quit his job and opened the affiliate.



DiGregorio hired a consultant to help him figure out how to fix things, and the consultant told him it sounded like he didn't want to own that gym anymore. DiGregorio's heart sank. He thought it was the end, but the consultant saw a different path.



“He said the beautiful thing about being a CrossFit affiliate owner is you have the freedom to make whatever business you want,” DiGregorio said.



Instead of the end, it was the beginning of something new. DiGregorio closed CrossFit Pasadena in 2014 and opened the 900-square-foot CrossFit Alhambra in Alhambra, California, with a membership cap of 130. An unlimited membership costs $250 and no class has more than eight people. Members receive highly individualized attention, and DiGregorio rediscovered what he loved about owning an affiliate.



At the same time, Brian Alexander of CrossFit Illumine outside Chicago, Illinois, hit his groove running a 300-plus-member, 17,000-square-foot gym. He feels connected with his members and has a profitable business.



Alexander and DiGregorio are running different versions of the same basic business-a CrossFit affiliate built on the group-class model. Here, successful affiliate owners talk about the various ways they've optimized the group model for business, community building, and the overall health and wellness of their members.

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

Talent Doesn't Lift Weights, You Do: Ignite Your Motivation

Hard work is not enough. Identify your inspiration to achieve the lifting goals of a lifetime.

In the first installment of this series, we learned about myelin, the neural insulator critical to the development of skill, and examined how to stimulate its growth with deep practice in your weightlifting training. Deep practice is practicing actively, mindfully, and with awareness of your errors.


 


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与 “Fran” 的那些说不清道不明的事儿


原文首次发表于2005年三月的CrossFit期刊.



我们在这里使用“Fran”来进行测试,这是我们的基准训练之一。



首先且首要的,“Fran”的训练内容是由一组二元的杠铃火箭助推器和引体向上动作组成。更具体的说,她是由21个火箭助推器紧接21个引体向上,然后15个火箭助推器接15个引体向上,最后9个火箭助推器接9个引体向上构成的。我们将完成的时间作为训练成绩。



不间断的火箭助推器以及引体向上组合训练调动了身体所有的主要肌肉群,两个动作完美互补,其中一个动作包含的正是另一个动作所缺失的,并且通过深蹲、借力推和引体向上三大基础核心动作进行构建组合。但一个更深入的解析,能够令大家对“Fran”的特质产生更深刻的接纳与理解。

Sunday, May 1, 2016

3 of the Best: This Week's Top Articles, Vol. 28

These pieces have caught your attention throughout the week. So here they are in one place for you to consume, digest, and enjoy.

Welcome to our weekend roundup, Three of the Best! Every Sunday, we'll post up Breaking Muscle's top three articles of the week. These pieces have caught your attention throughout the last seven days. So here they are in one place for you to consume, digest, and enjoy.


 


male with atlas stone


 


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