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Getting the Most Out Of CrossFit

Feb 1


2/1/2012 5:06 PM  RssIcon

by Charles Poliquin
 
CrossFit has great intentions. It is a socially based system that encourages camaraderie and sense of belonging to a team. A major strength of CrossFit is that it helps people in the gym who are not motivated to train alone.

I travel the world over and I see an increasing number of CrossFit teachers attending my classes. Upon first arrival, my staff and I can point out which CrossFitters have great results, and which have less than optimal results.

Here is what I like about CrossFit enthusiasts:

1. They believe in hard work and are not afraid of doing it.

2. They go for efficiency and use the most bang for your buck exercises. Why go to Tae Kwon Do when you can go to Krav Maga? I like the fact that they train women to do chin-ups, power cleans, and deadlifts.

3. They are very keen on proper nutrition. In all fairness, I would say that of all my students, CrossFitters are the best educated about how to eat for performance and body composition. A large proportion of my new BioSignature students own CrossFit operations.

4. They train exercises that you would normally avoid...or forget to do for some reason.

Here is what I see as potential concerns with CrossFit:

1. Technique is often horrendous. Competing to achieve personal records in number of reps or load at any cost kicks proper mechanics out the door.

2. Students do exercises that are completely out of their range of motor skills. For instance, novice CrossFitters doing strongman exercise such as Continental cleans with an axle puts them at very high risk of injury.

3. The sequencing of exercises will often impede progress.

4. Sometimes the exercises chosen have little return on the investment. A lot of effort is put in, but the exercise in question doesn’t elicit strength, neuromuscular, or hypertrophic gains.

Here is what I have observed in the CrossFitters who get great results:

1. The instructors know how to do the Olympic lifts and the related lifts well. Why? Because they searched for the right instruction from coaches like Pierre Roy, Mike Burgener, and John Broz, to name a few.

You are the average of the five people you spend the most time with. If you want to be the best, learn from the best.

2. They follow a periodized system, complete with variation in all loading parameters. Periodization goes against the initial dogma of CrossFit, so hardliners stay away from it.

I agree that hard work is essential for results. However, hard smart work gets you there faster. If you fail to plan, you plan to fail. Flushable toilets are not Paleolithic either, and I will continue to use them too…

3. They are well aware of the advantages of varying tempos to accelerate training response.

4. They care about orthopedic issues and they include remedial work, not just prime work, in their program design.

5. Exercise order and selection is optimal. I once had a workout at Erik Kilstrup’s CrossFit facility in Copenhagen. Only with National teams have I ever seen so many young women do pull-ups with perfect form. They weren’t doing the kipping one that mimics a penguin having a series of epileptic seizures. Kilstrup actually forbids kipping pull-ups in his facility.

I am utterly convinced that CrossFit is a great product with a huge potential to improve.
 
 

Copyright ©2012


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8 comment(s) so far...


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Re: Getting the Most Out Of CrossFit

charles,
as an overall fitness regime, would you recommend it?
i base my workout on lifting weights, but keep comeing back to look at CF.
due to the lack of CF affiliate's in northern ireland, i'll just have to keep at the weights.

good article as usual :)
cheers,
steven

By steven bell on   2/1/2012 5:38 PM
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Re: Getting the Most Out Of CrossFit

If you are going to list Great Oly Coaches, please don't forget Bob Takano. He is a Hall of Fame USAW coach and has trained the best. His studies on Long-Term Program Design and Classification system for periodized volume for lifters is genius.

We are luck to have him at our gym every day training his team and our athletes.

Sean Waxman is also an amazing Olympic Lifting Coach out of Los Angeles. Both whom have been working within the CrossFit Community.

By Johnny D CrossFit Pasadena on   2/1/2012 5:41 PM
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Re: Getting the Most Out Of CrossFit

Thanks for this Charles. I've been looking for ways of saying what I like and respect about CF and its devotees while bringing up some of my concerns. You said it way better than I ever could and with a great deal more authority. Thanks for all your work and I hope Crossftters will head from your great knowledge to evolve their dang good paradigm.

By Tim Peirce on   2/1/2012 6:25 PM
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Re: Getting the Most Out Of CrossFit

Wow, awesome article! CrossFit got me fired up about health and fitness after going from collegiate athlete to sedentary lawyer. As I got more interested in athletic performance and coaching others, I sought out as many education opportunities as possible. I read everything I could from Poliquin Institute and attended BioSignature and PICP I and II. The result is that I am comfortable integrating concepts learned through the Poliquin Insitute to make my athletes and gym members better. What does that look like . . . (1) we have always employed a full-time Olympic lifting coach at our facility (mostly with the last name of Burgener); (2) we use periodized plans for all of our athletes (mostly focusing on strength and power . . . then conditioning); (3) we use tempo prescriptions for our athletes and our group sessions; (4) we do remedial work (trap 3 raises, external rotations, etc...); (5) we use progressions for all of our exercises; and possibly most importantly, we offer different programs for members with different goals.

I am not saying that we do everything by the book as I learned it in my PICP courses; and we don't do everything by the book as we learned through CrossFit certifications, instead we use a bit of critical thinking and develop a program that we believe blends some of the best aspects of both worlds. We'll continue to learn new methods and adopt better approaches . . . through CrossFit, the Poliquin Institute, OPT and many other sources.

Thanks for the balanced assessment and for providing education opportunities for those of us in the fitness industry that have dedicated ourselves to learning and providing better coaching to our members and athletes.

C.J. Martin
Invictus - San Diego, CA

By C.J. Martin on   2/1/2012 9:00 PM
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Re: Getting the Most Out Of CrossFit

Nice honest look at crossfit. No hate or nonsense. Just information from an objective standpoint! Thanks!

By bryan bowen on   2/1/2012 10:40 PM
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Re: Getting the Most Out Of CrossFit

Fantastic article Mr Poliquin. The balance between speed and technique is essential. Good coaches should cue technique as they press the tempo. If the athlete can't make the proper adjustments, they should decrease the tempo accordingly.
I would REALLY like to see a followup article discussing in greater detail what you would consider to be effective Crossfit programming approaches.

Thank you for your articles!

By Bryan Conklin on   2/1/2012 11:40 PM
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Re: Getting the Most Out Of CrossFit

Thanks for this article, Charles. I wish more people knew about the importance of remedial work.

By Bob Johnson on   2/24/2012 1:57 PM
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Re: Getting the Most Out Of CrossFit

Mr. Poliquin,
I've got friends who do CrossFit, and we tend to argue about this same kind of stuff. While I won't do it myself, I can see some of the same benefits you have described here. I had them read your article and they responded that a Mr. Greene from CrossFit has written a response. Have you seen it?

By Darren White on   3/3/2012 11:09 PM

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