Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Friends don't let friends train with LSD.

We all have "that" friend. The runner, swimmer, cyclist, or triathlete who seems like he/she is always training. Whether they're doing an "easy ten" or a four hour Sunday long run, they're not training efficiently. Oxidative stress, overuse injuries, decreased all-around fitness, and less time with family and friends is the price most endurance athletes pay for their addictions to going long and slow.

What's the alternative? CrossFit Endurance!! Learn your sport's technique so you don't get hurt, and then train CrossFit supplemented with sport-specific interval and stamina workouts. This is the future of endurance training; amateur and elite athletes across the country and around the world are starting to get on board. I was lucky to be part of a CrossFit Running and Endurance certification this past weekend at CrossFit BWI. Under the excellent instruction of CFE mastermind Brian Mackenzie and assistant trainers Ben Kelly and Shana Alverson, the cert participants spent two days improving our run technique and learning the ins and outs of programming for the endurance athlete from a CrossFit perspective. It was an awesome weekend, and I highly recommend this certification to anyone who wants to be a better, faster runner and more knowledgable trainer.

Below please find the answers to some of the questions you all sent to me prior to the cert...
Q: Is there/are there physical sensations that can tell you whether or not you are POSE running properly, without someone else watching you?
A: Sort of... solid POSE probably does have a feeling: ease and flow of movement. (I'm not even close to perfect running and have yet to truly feel this, though I can feel when I'm improving.) When doing it properly, you're working with the forces of nature and using your body in the most efficient way possible. But I realize that's pretty vague. Run technique is something you can almost always improve on; even B-mack still uses digital coaching and does drills for his own technique. With perhaps the exception of certain gifted athletes and indigenous tribes that barefoot run often and from an early age, pretty much everyone can and would benefit from digital coaching or someone else watching/critiquing your running. And of course, injuries or pain (not hard workout, holy shit my heart is beating really fast pain; rather ouch what's that stabbing feeling in my knee/foot/hip/etc pain) are a dead give-away for bad technique.

Q: What about endurance training's effect on strength? At a certain volume of endurance training will you see a decrease in your strength and power i.e. your ability to move explosively?
A: Poor endurance programming - read too much training in the oxidative pathway i.e. LSD - will certainly have a negative impact on your strength and power... and muscle mass, flexibility, and a variety of other components of fitness. But endurance approached from Brian's CrossFit perspective is all about strength, power, speed, and indeed all ten dimensions of fitness. If you aren't doing CrossFit, your aren't doing CrossFit endurance - simple as that. B Mac wants his athletes to gradually progress towards CrossFit 4-6x/week and endurance work 2x/week per sport. If you don't see progression in both your endurance workouts AND your CrossFit workouts, you're doing too much or not programming properly. Done right, CFE athletes should see their times for endurance workouts and events improving and their benchmark WOD's and max effort lifts improving. That said, would a world-class powerlifter or weightlifter likely see a decrease in, for example, their max back squat if they started doing CFE interval workouts? Probably... but that would beg the question of why such an athlete is doing endurance work to begin with. The endurance training is done to address a sport specific need. If your sport or job (triathlete or soldier for example) requires going long on the road, in the pool, or in the field, you need to train for that. If your goal is general fitness, you're probably better off with plain old CrossFit (but don't skip those 5K and 10K days - cardiorespiratory endurance is one of the 10 general physical skills after all!). But I think pretty much everyone can benefit from working on their running technique, even if you aren't planning on doing much interval or stamina training.

Q: And how about nutrition? Should you stick to the CF nutrition programming (meat and veggies, nuts and seeds, some fruit, little starch, no sugar; ideally in zone ratios) leading up to and during an endurance race?
A: Hell yes!!! The endurance community is hurting their performance and long-term health/wellness with high carb diets and particularly with the over-hyped pre-event "carb load." Your body is primarily a fat-burning, not a sugar/carb burning machine; fuel it that way. B-mack and his athletes have found the most success with paleo-zone, usually at anywhere from 2x-5x fat to sustain their training loads. Endurance competitors should condition their bodies to consume whole, paleo-zone foods during events. Throw out the high carb bars and gels.

If anyone has other questions, feel free to email or call me or make yourself heard in the comments section. And understand the above is my take on the weekend's lectures and information. Though I hope I've done their excellent training and instruction justice, I in no way am speaking for Brian and his staff.

Gonna be working through a lot of POSE drills and running technique training for the next few weeks, so let me know if you'd like to join in. I'll try to have a little UVAXfit run workshop sometime this summer. Keep training hard everyone!!


Your moment of [inspirational] Zen...

Brian Mackenzie, the man, the myth, the legend,
halfway thru a killer 100m. interval workout.

16 comments:

Dave Lewis said...

Scaled version of today's CF Fairfax WOD...

12-9-6 HSPU negatives + 15-12-9 HSC @40kg.
-8:37
(rx'd at 21-15-9 HSPU + 135# HSC)

I'll be scaling a lot for the next few weeks as I progress into adding two-a-days with CrossFit endurance. Gonna do my first CFE "homework" workout from the cert later tonight when it gets cooler out. Hooah!

Bin said...

"Cultural Elite"

5 rounds:
60 sec max rep 25m sprint
60 sec rest
- 10, 10, 10, 11, 10

10 min max sandbag getups (75lb)
- 58

7x3 Weighted pull-ups (40lb)
3x L-sit rope ascents
3x 1min hang

Dave Lewis said...

CFE Running Drills Week #1:
Hops w/forward lean 3x3
Wall Drill 3x20
Forward Lunge 3x10 ea. side
2x's thru of...
4x30sec @ 94-96 cadence
Drill (charlie's angels then carioca)
1x2min @ 91 cadence

Then, 4 rds for time:
Row 250m
20 Dips
20 K2E
-17:31
Local muscular endurance, not "cardio," held me back on this one; K2E's are definitely a weakness of mine. Should have pushed harder on the row to up the average power.

Bin said...

4x Tabata row
2:00 5 pull-up/5 push-up
2:00 rest
4x Tabata row
2:00 5 DL @ 185lb/ 10 PP @ 2x30lb DB
2:00 rest
4x Tabata row
2:00 5 Burpee/5 KTE

5 rounds:
2x heavy pull-up
5x glute ham raises

Bin said...

From CF football:

15 C&J @ 155lb
50 DU
10 C&J
25 DU
5 C&J
13 DU

11:53

Bin said...

3 Rounds:
6x Push Press, 155lb
2:00 Whip smash
1:00 rest

3 Rounds:
5x Deadlift, 275lb
2:00 30" seated box jump
1:00 rest

Snatch transfer exercises:
Snatch hi-pull (135lb)
Snatch-grip deadlift (225lb)
OHS (185lb)

3 rounds:
max rep strict pull-ups
40 double unders

Dave Lewis said...

(from CF Ffx) 10 20 30 rep rds for time:
burpees
box jumps
squat jumps
pull-ups
-13:27

hit me way harder than i expected. thanks to forney for pushing me thru this one.

Bin said...

Tabata thrusters (BB - 8 rounds, barbell stays in rack position during rests)

Flying burpee - 1-10
KTE - 10-1
Rope climb (1 per round)
~16 min

KB circuit:
Round the world
Figure 8
Left hand snatch
Right hand snatch
KB lunge
FS from rack (left hand)
FS from rack (right hand)

Three rounds, 1min each exercise, no rest between rounds, KB is not set down during circuit

KB TGU and windmills for cool down

Bin said...

3 rounds:
7 Clean Hi-pull (145lb)
90 sec row > 2:00 pace
2:00 rest

additional 3:00 rest
3 rounds:
7 Hang snatch & 5 OHS (115lb)
90 sec DU
2:00 rest

Dave Lewis said...

Today: front squat, triples up to 185# (failed at 190)

I was feeling really sluggish Wednesday and Thursday; didn't feel like working out, low energy even in the morning, and just didn't have that higher gear in workouts. I think the single fat Zone had taken me as far as it could.

I don't think I'm quite at the point of needing to go double fat; still have some serious leaning out to do. But I had been feeling like I was eating too many carbs and too little fat, so per one of Robb Wolf's recommendations I sub'd out some carb blocks for some more fat blocks, and feel much better today. We'll see how this goes for a while; if I feel like I'm bonking again soon, I'll go to 2x fat.

Bin said...

5 rounds:
5 Thrusters (135lb)
20 Pull-ups

11:18

@Dave, definitely go for the double fat. I've been on it for about two weeks and I'm still losing weight without performance drops.

Bin said...

6 rounds:

5 Back Squat (225lb)
Weighted tire drags (emtpy, 25lb, 50lb, seated, standing, however, 5-10 pulls)

Bin said...

3 rounds max rep strict pull-ups

Then:
Litvinov conversions:

3 rounds:
5 High hang squat clean to thruster (95lb)
Convert immediately into 15m tire drag/sprint (70lb)

2 rounds:
5 OHS (155lb)
Convert immediately into 15m tire drag/sprint (70lb)

- absolutely miserable; even one the trainers commented on how miserable it looked.

Bin said...

3 rounds:
7 PC & PP - 155lb
2:00 row > 500m pace
2:00 rest

3 rounds:
5 OHS - 135lb
2:00 Burpees
2:00 rest

4 rounds:
Max rep kipping pull-up
10 GHD sit-ups
10 Glute Ham raises

Bin said...

3 rounds:
10 snatch hi-pull (115lb)
2 min 15m burpee broad jump + 15m bearcrawl
2 min rest

3 rounds:
7 Jerk + 5 OHS (135lb)
2 min tire pull (45lb)
2 min rest

Bin said...

Tabata row

8/8 Bent-over row/Pull-up (95lb)
8/8 Bent-over row/Pull-up (115lb)
6/6 Bent-over row/Pull-up (135lb)

Work up to heavy single OHS