On Competition

I came across a great blog post on competition by Tommy Hackenbruck of Ute CrossFit in Salt Lake City, UT.  Coming off of our recent competition I am personally fired up to improve myself for the next one, but also just for the next workout – can I do better than my last one?  Can I compete with my own inner-voice that is telling me to stop, to rest for a few more seconds?
I hope you all find this as inspiring as I did.  Find a competition, whether it’s an actual event, a training partner, or within yourself, to keep the fire stoked!
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As the weekend approaches and a few of us trainers prepare for a CrossFit competition in Orange County, I want to share with everybody my reflections on why competition is not only an integral part of your development as an athlete, but also as a person.  First of all, we make great efforts at our gym and within our community to keep the CrossFit Games competition in perspective.  It is ONE competition that many of us get excited about, and train for, but it is not the only competition that our members take part in and certainly not the most important.  The most important competition at Ute CrossFit is EVERY competition that is entered by any one of our athletes.  The focus and goal of this gym is to help each person achieve and exceed their fitness goals, and to help create a culture that makes us better in every aspect of life.  We put tons of time and effort creating programs like kids camp and daycare classes so that you can be stronger families, just as we put effort into writing specialized programs so that you can be stronger athletes.  Just as competing in CrossFit Games is an important part of some of our lives, we feel that each and every client needs to find a competitive outlet in some way.  This can be a 5k run, the dirty dash, or simply competing against somebody else’s time on the whiteboard.  Competition builds character, pushes us to do our best, helps us achieve higher goals, and teaches us more about ourselves (good or bad) than we could learn otherwise.  In order to grow as a person or athlete, you need to compete at some level.  It is healthy, it is what you were made to do.
A ship in harbour is safe, but that is not what ships are built for.”  ~William Shedd
We understand that each person is different, and some of you may even claim, “I don’t like beating other people, I would rather them do well.”  (That’s a direct quote from my wonderful sister Jenny).  If you feel bad beating somebody, or claim you don’t like competing, you just need to change your perspective.  Competing doesn’t mean you want to see others fail.  When you work extremely hard in a workout, or on your mountain bike, and you barely beat the person next to you, chances are both of you are better because of it.  If you didn’t give your best effort, the other person wouldn’t have worked as hard to try to keep up with you.  Now the person next to you on the mountain bike isn’t mad because you beat them, they are happily thinking “wow, that was the hardest and fastest I’ve every ridden on my bike!”  By giving your best efforts, both people benefit.  We strongly believe that good healthy competition, with the right mindset and perspective, will always leave us better than if we had sat on the sidelines.  It not only teaches us to push a little harder, give a little extra effort, but it pushes those next to us (our teammates), inspires those watching us (our kids), and rewards those pulling for us (our coaches and friends).
Adversity causes some men to break, others to break records.”  ~William A. Ward
If you are a member at Ute CrossFit then you better have goals.  Hopefully those goals are achievable, measurable, and you have a timeline to accomplish them.  By competing daily, with yourself or with others, you will get closer to those goals.  As a Football Player at the University of Utah we had signs in the locker room that read: “compete every day”.  When we lifted we were paired with other guys that were the same strength as us, so we would compete to be stronger than them.  In warm-up and conditioning drills we were lined up with the other guys at our position so we could race them in every single drill.  By giving our best effort on EVERY SINGLE DRILL we grew and progressed into elite athletes.  Without the daily competition our progress would have slowed or stagnated.  Because of the competition, the fastest guy on the team constantly had someone right behind him about to catch him.  He gave his best effort to stay ahead.  On that same token the second fastest guy on the team was motivated each and every day to take over the top spot, his goal was to be the fastest.  Goals keep things in perspective, they remind us why we work hard, what’s important to us, and also let us know when we are making progress toward achieving success.
So remember to compete.  Compete with yourself and beat your old PR, compete with a friend and make each other better, or sign up for a race or an event and start training with a little more fire and a little more purpose.  Do it for yourself, you will be better for it!
It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat.”  ~Theodore Roosevelt

Nancy

Big weight being thrown around the gym tonight, with more PRs breaking through and great tech65nique being developed in the Push Jerk especially.  That one takes alot of practice to get the true feeling of jumping the bar up and then ducking down beneath to extend the arms completely.
And then to the jump rope!  Craig tore up the Double-Unders as we knew he would, completing 317 reps (I think?) in 10 mins, as Andrea broke over the thousand mark with 1,070 Single-Unders in 10 mins.  Sweet!!
Tomorrow we’ll transfer our newfound comfort with big weights overhead into the Overhead Squat, working on technique for a bit and then jumping back in time to one of the first workouts we did in the gym 4 months ago, “Nancy”.  Just as with “Cindy”, I can’t wait to see the gains that everyone has made here, it’s going to be ridiculous.
Nancy
5 Rounds for time:
15 Overhead Squats, 95/65 lbs
Run 400M

October 1st, 2012

Wow, October already!  This is the start of our 5th month, and again we find ourselves at the beginning.  This week we will refocus on overhead strength, speed and coordination, using lifts like the Press and Overhead Squat and gymnastics movements like handstands.
On Monday we will get a pure strength workout in, followed by some conditioning work with the jump rope.  Hope everyone had a great weekend!
10012012.1
Press 3-3-3
Push Press 3-3-3
Push Jerk 3-3-3
Try to increase in weight on each set
10012012.2
Max Double-Unders in 10 mins

Bradshaw

Athena, Heather and Craig posing with their new besties

Great job navigating your way through Med Ball Hell today, folks!  A 20 min+ workout where you never let go of a medicine ball is never going to be easy, but you all pushed through it with a smile… well at least you were smiling afterwards.  Check out the Eversole fam posing with their instruments of sweat!
Craig took two cracks at the WOD today, I think that is a first.  After not being happy with a 23:37 in the 7am class, he came in at 21 minutes flat in the evening!  It takes some real brass ones to come back at this WOD and go even harder.  Amazing job, Craig!
 
Tomorrow we’ll pay tribute to U.S. Army First Lieutenant Brian Bradshaw, 24, of Steilacoom, Washington, assigned to the 1st Battalion, 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment, 4th Airborne Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, based in Fort Richardson, Alaska.  LT Bradshaw died in Kheyl, Afghanistan, on June 25th, 2009, from wounds suffered when insurgents detonated a roadside bomb near his vehicle. He is survived by his parents, Paul and Mary, and brother Robert.


Bradshaw
10 rounds for time of:
3 HSPUs
6 Deadlifts, 225/155 lbs
12 Pullups
24 Double-unders

September 28th, 2012

You all were really throwin some ‘bows out there today (check your Ludacris lyrics, kids)!  Some great form being developed on the Squat as well, check out some of these action shots – can’t find much wrong here!

09282012
5 Rounds for time:
20 Walking Lunges with a Med Ball
20 Med Ball Pushups
20 Med Ball Situps
20 Wall Balls
Run 200M with a Med Ball
Use one Med Ball for all exercises (Rx men 20lbs, Rx women 10lbs)
 

Bear Complex

Ahhhhh wall balls… probably not on anyone’s “bucket list” to get 50 in a row, but that was on the table today and you guys all smoked it.  Awesome job with that, and also with taking on my new challenge of getting right into the next exercise with no rest – that seems to take valuable seconds off of your final time.  Good tactic to get into your WOD repertoire for the next competition!
Craig put us all to shame with a time of 15:12 on today’s WOD, followed by Chris at 22:00 and Shawn at 22:35.  Craig is a master at pushing through the pain and getting that next rep, and it showed today!
Bear Complex
Without letting go of the bar or resting it on the ground, complete 7 reps of the following sequence for 1 round.
Do 5 rounds increasing the load per round:
-Power Clean
-Front Squat
-Push Press
-Back Squat
-Push Press

September 26th, 2012

After a great technique day on the Air Squat on Monday, today we focused on the Back Squat, going heavy and then light and fast.  The Back Squat is indirectly transferrable to so many squatting movements like Wall Balls, Box Jumps, and Burpees.  Developing strength in the Back Squat will directly relate to big lifts in the Front Squat and Overhead Squat — you get more comfortable squatting with heavy loads and you don’t have to worry about your legs in those more technical lifts.  And we all know what happens with bigger Front and Overhead Squats — new PRs in the Clean and Snatch!!  It all comes down to this – if you squat more and squat heavy, you will develop in all of your other lifts and become a more powerful athlete.
Today’s WOD Killers:  Alyssa (6 rds + 23 squats), Craig (5 rds + 9 squats), Cory (4 rds + 25 squats + 200M run), Michelle (4 rds + 25 squats + 200M Run @ 45 lbs)
09262012
50-35-20 reps for time:
Wall Balls
Pullups
Double-Unders

September 25th, 2012

YEAHHH SQUATS!  We’re back to basics this week with the mother of all CrossFit movements, and today was a great showing of squat technique with some good drills to get ourselves in the right positions, a 1 min endurance test, and of course who could forget Cindy.  Everyone that got “Cindy’d” today was for the first time so we can’t compare to a previous score, but I have to say the round scores were impressive compared to our first batch in June.  Check out some of these sweet scores:
Athena: 15 rds + 27 reps (scaled, CFKI Record!),  Andrea: 15 rds (scaled),  Heather:  11 rds + 15 reps (scaled),  Craig: 16 rds + 5 reps (CFKI Record!), Byron 12 rds + 15 reps,  Ryan M: 12 rds + 1 rep
Thanks to Chad for visiting us from CrossFit Brandywine in the Philly area and dominating Cindy at 15 rds + 5 reps!  Come back anytime, Chad.
09252012.1
Back Squat 3-3-3-3-3 reps
20 min time limit
09252012.2
AMRAP in 20 mins:
25 Back Squats, 95/65 lbs
Run 400M

Cindy

This week we’ll be focused on the most fundamental movement in CrossFit – the Squat!  On Monday specifically we’ll work on our air squat technique and use a few pointers to correct common faults in the squat.  From there, we’ll build on the Air Squat to work the rest of the week on the Back Squat and Front Squat.
Cindy
As many rounds as possible in 20 mins:
5 Pullups
10 Pushups
15 Squats

Eastern Shore Affiliate Challenge

The Snatch Ladder event

The CFKI team at the Challenge!

We did it!  Yesterday Andy, Alyssa, Athena, Chris, Craig, Heather, Kenny and myself competed in the 3rd annual Eastern Shore Affiilate Challenge and had an awesome time.  It was the first CrossFit competition for any of us, and so there was a lot to be experienced for the first time:  the adrenaline-fueled bug-eyed feeling before your heat of each WOD, the thrill of finishing a workout and reporting your time to the judges, and the disappointment of not winning the whole damn thing!
I think every one of our competitors got at least one new personal record in the individual WODs at the Challenge, too!  Personally, I hit a PR in the mile run (6:14) and was disappointed in my finish in the Snatch Ladder (135lbs).  If you got a new PR in the Mile or Snatch, post a comment- it’s not bragging, we all want to know!
After the Individual WODs were complete, we had two athletes in the top 10: Alyssa was the #3 Female and Andy was the #8 Male!  Woohoo!!
In the final portion of the Challenge, we were eliminated in the first round of three, and CF Salisbury (starring Alyssa’s sister Lisa) won for the second straight year.  Great job to Lisa, Adam, Cam and the CF Salisbury team!
Denee and the kids were along as cheerleaders and logistical officers, and got a couple sweet pics, check ’em out.
Overall, I can’t wait for next year’s ESAC, but I can’t wait that long to get another competition under my belt.  This experience has lit a fire in my belly again to reach the peak of my athleticism and compete to win these things.  I hope that some of you are with me in wanting to compete, and fully understand that some might not be.  Either way, we will continue to focus on getting work done at CFKI and making each other better every day!