Thursday 092310 – Jumps and row

September 22nd, 2010 by Mike J

Max height box jump, then:

Perform 1 snatch grip deadlift and 1 snatch high-pull on the minute for 12 minutes. Choose a challenging weight, and add weight if possible. This part is done for max load, then:

Row 1000m for time (compare to 032310)

  1. Mike J Sep 23, 2010 / 8am

    Fastest 1000m row time so far is 3:33 for men (Dan N), and 4:10 for women (Jess S & Alison N).

  2. Mike J Sep 23, 2010 / 8am

    Oh and we decided that Angie isn’t going on the leaderboards this time around, too many range of motion issues for accurate scoring. We’ll have to wait until next time, hopefully we can clean things up by then…

  3. Jess S Sep 23, 2010 / 9am

    34.5” box jump
    103# with the WOD….Mike made us do 13 rounds for some reason…..
    4:10 row…I started out way too fast and died.

  4. Dan N Sep 23, 2010 / 12pm

    I am with Mike on the 13 rounds, if you quit on the 12th round, that would have only been 11:xx minutes.

  5. Mike S. Sep 23, 2010 / 12pm

    WHAT?!?! NO ANGIE SCORES?!?! I’m officially declaring shenanigans.

    I don’t know what the range of motion issues were, but I assume it’s people not doing the exercises as prescribed (i.e. Chin over the bar, chest to ground, upper leg parallel to the ground, etc.)

    I don’t really care about the accolades of having my name on a board somewhere, but I don’t like the suggestion that I do well because I’m not really doing the exercises. If the exercises aren’t being done right, shouldn’t the coaches or the community step in and correct it?

    I think that at a certain point athletes have to be trusted to do the right thing. Weather it be counting or range of motion issues. I could do a 12 minute “Angie” doing 80-80-80-80, and claiming I did 100-100-100-100. To me that’s the same as doing 100 push ups or 100 squats and not going all the way down. Either you’re doing all of the required number of repetitions correctly, or you aren’t really doing the WOD.

    That’s just my two cents.

  6. Mike J Sep 23, 2010 / 12pm

    Mike, agreed on both counts – 1) Coaches are responsible to enforce range of motion during workouts, and 2) Participants are responsible for being honest. We’ve steadily increased our expectations standardizing of our range of motion standards over the past few months, and I promise we’ll continue to do so as time goes on.

    The biggest range of motion issues we have are not getting full depth on squats, and chest not hitting the ground on pushups. Both of which were on display yesterday, were corrected, but not corrected enough. Many of the scores for the leaderboard were close enough that it’s not fair post them if we’re unsure about range of motion – basically we realized we had a problem after the fact and we can’t go back and correct yesterday so we’re treating this as a learning experience.

    Good day to you sir.

  7. Mike J Sep 23, 2010 / 1pm

    And don’t lie, you spend your days in your cubical devising ways to get on the leaderboard just like me.

  8. Jess S Sep 23, 2010 / 1pm

    Speaking for myself….I would like the coaches to let me know if my range of motion is not good enough and my reps are not counting. Sometimes it is hard to realize you are not getting in a complete squat when you are really tired because we don’t have any mirrors to check ourselves out in. :-) I think it is particularly important for the people that are making it on the leaderboard to complete the workouts without any question as to whether the correct number of reps were performed or full movements were executed.

    I’m just waiting for the perfect WOD that the all-stars don’t show up to so I can finally get my name up there.

  9. Seth Sep 23, 2010 / 6pm

    39″ box jump
    Worked up to 185 on my last round. Should have started at 135…
    3:44 row.

  10. Ian S Sep 23, 2010 / 7pm

    Oops. Wrong day.

    44.5 box jump
    185 snatch thingee
    3:11.8 500m row

    Woo!

  11. Greg Brawley Sep 23, 2010 / 8pm

    33.5″ box, 195 snatch high pull (on the last 2 reps, the rest were 185). 3:49.8 row

  12. kalen Sep 23, 2010 / 9pm

    For squats why don’t we bring back the med ball for depth check – then we know whether we are making the full movement. For most people that would be the correct depth – some exceptions.

  13. Tyler Quinn Sep 24, 2010 / 10am

    Kalen, we don’t want to become dependent on the med-ball because people have a tendency to bounce. Also, we’d like to have people increase their body awareness to the point where they can sense or feel (just look down before you stand back up) whether or not they’ve reached full depth.

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