Archive for September, 2008

Manhattan Beach Sand Dune Intervals

Yesterday, I was in Hermosa Beach for a party reuniting old friends and it was a wonderful time. Had I thought about it more, I would have, (you all remember woulda, coulda, shoulda?) gotten there earlier and drove one beach city over to Manhattan Beach to do a sand dune workout.

What prompted me that it’s time to hit the dune again was an article by John Berardi and Scot Prohaska titled “Indecent Intervals” where they outline their experiences and interval workouts with the famous sand dune.

If you can’t make it to the sand dune for the intervals, you’re not off the hook. Berardi and Prohaska share 4 more gut-wrenching interval workouts every bit as challenging as the sand dune.

Training Log, Week Ending 9/28/08

Monday, 9/22/08

Warmed up with overhead squats:
45/45/65/65, 10 reps each.

Back Squats, x 3:
135×5/135×10/185×5/
205/245/265/275/280

Front Squats, x 5:
111/131/155/175/185

Tuesday, 9/24/08

Power Snatch, x 3:
65/65/88/88/88/93/98/103/103/108/108×1 + 3 OHS/108×1 + 3/108×1 + 5.

Overhead Squats, 115, 5×5:

Thursday, 9/25/08

4 rounds,

400 meter Sandbag Carry, 80#, (back, left shoulder, right shoulder, bear hug).

25 Kettlebell Swings, 24 kg, H2H.

Sandbag Back Squats, 80#  6 x 20. The last two sets were done with 2 crossed over mini bands for greater resistance.

Friday, 9/26/08

Rest Day. I learned that my gym, Met-Rx will stay open after all under new ownership. That is great news!

Saturday, 9/27/08

Burgener Warm-ups x 3

Hang Snatch, 2 x 3:
45/65/88/100/105/110/115, 1 x 3 + 1 single.

One Hand Barbell Snatch, x 3 left and right.
45/65/75/80. A little wobbly with 80# on the left .

Sunday, 9/28/08

Kettlebell Swings, 24 kg.
25/25/25/25 (5,300 lbs)
Kettlebell Swings, 32 kg.
10 x 10 + 1 (7,070 lbs)

Val Races for the Cure

Waking up to coastal fog in Newport Beach, Val and I headed over to nearby Fashion Island for the annual Race For the Cure event for breast cancer awareness. This is a huge event, attracting 30,000 runners for all races.

This is the first race for Val for the second half of her 2008 fall road racing season and she looked as strong as ever.

The race tracked around Fashion Island Mall in Newport Beach with a smooth, rolling surface. Val finished in 22:51 in a strong finish.

Sprint to the Finish

Here is what her start looked like:

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11th Hour Bailout!

Not the financial markets bailout Congress is wrestling with, but the good news coming out of Met-Rx gym in Costa Mesa which was due to close September 30th is that my gym will remain open.

Investors, including one who is a member bought the property just days from closing will keep things running and will also make some needed facility improvements. Needless to say, we are all jubilant! There is really nothing in our area even close to what our gym as been over the years. We are all thrilled we won’t miss a rep!

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When NOT To Go To The Gym

Timing is everything and so is perception. With the US Congress against the wall to secure a deal in the current financial bailout crisis, one of the presidential candidates might have considered a more discreet way to train. Certainly not a big deal at all and while not newsworthy, may be noteworthy.

From Politico:

Obama: In town, working out
Obama, headphones, baseball hat, hitting the gym. Spotted working out this a.m. at the Washington Sports Club, near Adams Morgan/Kalorama, from 7:30a – 8:20a.

Stay tuned for more gym/Obama news…

By Anne Schroeder Mullins 08:40 AM

The comments here, as usual are entertaining, depending of course, what you find entertaining!

Back in July, while on the campaign trail, Obama hit three gyms in one day for a total of 188 minutes. This just gave me a great idea. If Obama becomes president maybe he will back a bailout for my gym, Met-Rx!

We need an advocate for gyms in the Oval Office!

How To Lift For PR’s

Keeping score is something most of like to do in sports and life. It provides a measuring stick for our progress and achievements. “Score” can mean a time in the 5K and the lower the better. In sales and weightlifting, higher of course, is better. If you know what your competitor’s score is, you know what you will have to do to beat him and that is to get the higher score!

Pretty elemental stuff and necessary for competition. But what if you don’t compete? Is “keeping score” meaningful when lifting weights? I say yes. Setting Personal Records, PR’s, is your record of achievement. You begin by setting your baseline which is the most you can do today. Your training, dedication, genes, diet and more are what determines how much over your baseline you will go. For most of us, setting these PRs is motivating and for a little while, satisfying, but not for long. We enjoyed the last victory and we want another! Just be careful not to go overboard in your quest for PR’s because it can be very stressful and puts a lot of “performance anxiety” on an athlete. There are times you will hit a plateau and as martial artist, George Leonard would say, “honor the plateau”. Keep things in balance. Improvement is assured.

So how do you nail PR’s in your lifts? Chris Cooper of Catalyst Fitness writes an interesting article on how to get PR’s for EliteFTS. Cooper says the secret is in the warm-up. In the article, he outlines specific templates for the squat, the bench press and the deadlift. I am anxious to use his guidelines for my next maximum effort.

I would be interested in knowing if this plan works for you. If you have recently gotten a personal best, tell us about it in the Comments.

Speaking of PR’s, I have added a couple of them, modest as they are to my front and back squats. I am looking to improve my deadlift single soon but my Olympic lifts are woeful and in need of a breakthrough in technique. <sigh>!

By the way, while over at EliteFTS  and after reading Cooper’s article, you might want to check out another good piece, this one written by Jason Hanisak who admonishes athletes NOT to train like bodybuilders. Here is a sample:

“Bodybuilding programs are meant for bodybuilders. Every athlete needs to train specific to his/her sport to become better at that sport”.

Train heavy!

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Underground Strength and Bosu Balls

With specialty social networking sites springing up all over the place, it shouldn’t come as a surprise there is another dedicated to fitness. (I am loathing that word more and more)!

I just found one called iSweat and while it has the usual bosu ball, swiss ball, six-pack ab and toning crowd, there is a group from Zach Even-Esh called Underground Strength Fans that looks promising. His “underground” style of powerlifting, kettlebells, sandbags, strongman and iron is the focus so I’ll hang around here for a while. Zach’s stuff never sucks!

Speaking of Zach, he addresses grip strength with a good video. I don’t even want to see your wrist straps!

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Training Log, Week Ending 9/21/08

Monday, 9/15/08

80# Sandbag Cleans, alternating with
Burpees

10/10/10/10/10/10/10/10/10/10
10/9/8/7/6/5/4/3/2/1

Tuesday, 9/16/08

Front Squats, x 3:

95×5/115×5/135×5
159/179/199/219/204

Wednesday, 9/17/08

Overhead Squats, x 10:
45/45/65/88

Squat Cleans, x 3:
88/88/115/115/135/145

Thursday, 9/18/08

Rest Day

Friday, 9/19/08

Snatch:
65×3/65×3/75×3/85×3/88×3/88×3/98/98/108/108

Cleans:
118/118/135/135/145/155/155/160f/160/165pc/170f/170pc.

Learned Met-Rx will be shutting it’s doors for good at the end of this month.

Saturday, 9/20/08

Ring Push-ups, at various heights and using 18″, 24″ & 36″ plyo boxes.

Incline: 15/20/20, 15/20/20

Decline: 10/10/10, 15/15/15

Overhead Press, x 5:

88/111/135/140×4

KB Swings, 32 kg, H2H:
10/20/20

Sandbag Squat Cleans, 80#
5/10/10

80# Sandbag Step-ups on 18″ plyo box:
10/10/10

Sunday 9/21/08

Rest Day

An era is about to end. Famous Met-Rx Fitness Center due to shut it’s doors September 30, 2008.

Fitness Has To Be Fun!

Yesterday I had a conversation with a Type-A motivated and driven runner who says running hasn’t been very much fun lately. This competitive athlete is vexed by self-imposed pressure in the drive for splits and PRs, heart rate measurements and getting in time at the track and gym.

Often, for the Type A competitive athlete, this is just burnout from overtraining, or more accurately, not getting enough recovery and sleep. It is amazing what a few days of total rest away from their primary training mode will do for these people. For all of us who train, really. Doing something else or nothing at all and staying away long enough until we are energized and rejuvenated about getting back into training and competing works wonders.

Most of the time, I think, that rest and doing something entirely different…and fun, is all that takes to put things back into a realistic perspective. The time for rest isn’t just when you are injured.

I am no longer competing at anything (and when I did, I took myself too seriously)!  I do consider myself to be a non-competitive athlete. When I am overloaded with training, which at my age, happens more often than I like, I have no problem taking the time off. Never have. Then again, I am no Type A!

In the past, I competed at inline speedskating and as much as I liked the racing, I was happier with the training. Prior to that, I too was a runner and had raced distances from the 5K to the marathon. I was a middle-of the-pack hacker and was generally fine with it, except when a had a finishing time goal I had to attain or someone I needed to “crush”.

Between reading books and magazines on training theory, I read some of George Sheehan’s work, especially “Running and Being”. Considered the “runners’ guru”, Sheehan brought a different perspective to running which included philosophical elements as well as the fun component. (I admit at the time, the philosophical aspect he wrote about was a little over the top for my twenty-something mindset). I do to this day, still recommend the book to runners and non-runners alike. George sums it up best when he said,

“Fitness has to be fun. If it is not play, there will be no fitness. Play, you see, is the process.
Fitness is merely the product.”

Right on cue with our discussion, Ross Enamait posted an excellent article on his blog titled “Training For the Fun of It”. You should take a moment and read it.

After the wins and losses, the PRs and the misses, there has to be a greater reason for training. Do you know yours?

Winning With Testosterone

Prior to an athletic competition, a man’s testosterone level will increase as they get ready to “do battle”. Interestingly, those levels increase or decrease depending on their fortunes during the game. In this video, two evenly matched rugby teams had their T levels tested before, during and after their match. (Hint, the winning team had more).

In another video, powerlifter Kieran Kidder talks about his steroid use which he believes are “widely misunderstood”. You decide. The animation on muscle growth is interesting.