Showing posts with label workouts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label workouts. Show all posts

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Learn Something New, TacFit, Gracie Jui Jitsu

Its the off season and you are looking for something different, get out of the comfort zone and really push yourself. There is nothing like trying something new let alone something that might save your life. 


Gracie Jiu Jitsu is the best. 



When the days of the Samurai came to an end, the gun replaced the sword, and new sportive ways to practice martial arts were developed. Eventually, in Japan many different variations of Jiu-Jitsu took shape, including Karate, Aikido, and Judo. But these arts were missing essential pieces of what the complete art of Jiu-Jitsu originally held.
This lack of reality created years of confusion in the martial arts community, a confusion that legendary Bruce Lee would later refer to as the 'classical mess'. Bruce Lee was actually a student of Judo and did many studies on grappling while he was alive. He criticized traditional martial arts as being ineffective. The more traditional combat schools were simply practicing techniques no longer suitable for modern day combat, and with no way to safely test them, practicing these arts became like swimming without water.
It wasn't until the sport art of Judo and the combat art of Jiu-Jitsu were introduced to the Gracie family in Brazil that the real art of Jiu-Jitsu would be brought to life again. Japanese Jiu-Jitsu (practiced as Judo) was introduced to the Gracie family in Brazil around 1914 by Esai Maeda, who was also known as Conde Koma. Maeda was a champion of Jiu-Jitsu and a direct student of Kano, at the Kodokan in Japan. He was born in 1878, and became a student of Judo (Kano’s Jiu-Jitsu) in 1897.
In 1914, Maeda was given the opportunity to travel to Brazil as part of a large Japanese immigration colony. In Brazil, in the northern state of Para, he befriended Gastão Gracie, an influential businessman, who helped Maeda get established. To show his gratitude, Maeda offered to teach traditional Japanese Jiu-Jitsu to Gastão's oldest son, Carlos Gracie. Carlos learned for a few years and eventually passed his knowledge to his brothers.
Helio Gracie, the youngest son of Gastão and Cesalina Gracie's eight children (three were girls), was always a very physically frail child. He would run up a flight of stairs and have fainting spells, and no one could figure out why.
At age fourteen, he moved in with his older brothers who lived and taught Jiu-Jitsu in a house in Botafogo, a borough of Rio de Janeiro. Following doctor’s recommendations, Helio would spend the next few years limited to only watching his brothers teach.
One day, when Helio was 16 years old, a student showed up for class when Carlos was not around. Helio, who had memorized all the techniques from watching his brothers teach, offered to start the class. When the class was over, Carlos showed up and apologized for his delay. The student answered, "No problem. I enjoyed the class with Helio very much and, if you don't mind, I'd like to continue learning from him." Carlos agreed, and Helio became an instructor.

Helio soon realized that due to his frail physique, most of the techniques he had learned from watching Carlos teach were particularly difficult for him to execute. Eager to make the techniques work for him, he began modifying them to accommodate his weak body. Emphasizing the use of leverage and timing over strength and speed, Helio modified virtually all of the techniques and, through trial and error, created Gracie/Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.
In order to prove the effectiveness of his new system, Helio openly challenged all the reputable martial artists in Brazil. He fought 18 times, including matches against onetime world heavyweight wrestling champion, Wladek Zbyszko and the #2-ranked Judoka in the world at the time, Kato, whom Helio choked unconscious in six minutes. His victory against Kato qualified him to enter the ring with the world champion, Masahiko Kimura, the best Jiu-Jitsu fighter Japan has ever produced, and who outweighed Helio by almost 80 pounds. Kimura won the match but was so impressed with Helio’s techniques that he asked Helio to go teach in Japan claiming the techniques Helio presented during their bout did not exist in Japan. It was the recognition by the world’s best to Helio’s dedication to the refinement of the art.
At 43 years old, Helio and former student, Waldemar Santana, set the world record for the longest uninterrupted no-holds-barred fight in history when they fought for an incredible 3 hours and 40 minutes!
Widely regarded as the first sports hero in Brazilian history, Helio also challenged boxing icons Primo Carnera, Joe Louis, and Ezzard Charles. They all declined.
A dedicated family man who exemplified a healthy life-style he was the epitome of courage, discipline, determination, and an inspiration to people everywhere. A modern-day legend, Helio Gracie gained international acclaim for his dedication to the dissemination of the art and is recognized as the creator of Gracie/Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

When Daniel Craig stepped out of the surf on a Bahamas beach, he melted women around the world and spiked browser searches from guys looking for that incredible James Bond physique. Fitness marketers capitalized on the moment by offering the usual bodybuilding-style workouts and labeling them Bond. But anyone who knows anything about tactical ops wasn’t fooled.
A guy like Bond needs more than show muscle to save the world — he needs serious go muscle — because it isn’t enough to look pretty when Blofeld comes calling. And when real life secret agents need go muscle, they turn to TACFIT Commando.
The entire TACFIT Commando program is bodyweight-only and can be completed in about the same amount of space you’d need to lie down in. It only takes 20 minutes, but we’ve packed it with an intensity and fat melting power most athletes don’t even tap in a full hour of training — because real-world tactical operators don’t have time to piss around.
As if that weren’t enough, TACFIT will also teach you a few of the slick moves used by real life spies in the field. You’ll be able to run, jump and slide like Bond in that crazy opening parkour sequence and you’ll floor the ladies just like he did when you walk up the beach.
Life doesn’t get any cooler than that.


Thursday, November 10, 2011

TRX, Get Stronger & Balanced



The more you use the TRX the more you wonder why did it take so long to get to this point. Every workout you can see something new in yourself, your balance improves, muscles get stronger, then you try another position, BAM, right back to the basics. This is what its all about, finding weak points and making them stronger. 

Benefits

Versatile for All Athletes and Sports
The versatility of the TRX Suspension Trainer allows for hundreds of functional exercises to be combined to create unique and challenging training programs that meet the performance enhancement goals of all athletes and competitive events.
Improved Conditioning
The TRX Suspension Trainer is adjustable for any fitness level and because the mechanics of Suspension Training are based upon three planes of motion, muscles work together in groups to safely build strength, balance, flexibility and core stability in a more efficient manner.
Portable and Effective Workouts
The TRX Suspension Trainer™ is lightweight, portable and easy to set up, so athletes can get a total body workout in the gym, on the field or at home.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Ice It Down, 110% Play Harder Compression Shorts



Year after year we see new ways to help us recover and go faster, well 110% Play Harder has come up with a way to insert ice into the short with sticking down our shorts.

Compression with cold therapy that targets quadriceps, hamstrings, hip, lumbar and knees.
  • Designed for Athletes - Core athletes understand that faster recovery leads to better performance.
  • Two Simple Therapies, One Garment – The gradient compression enhances circulation while cold therapy reduces pain and prevents soreness.
  • Better Compression & Fit – Advanced EC3D garment technology and a 360-degree stretch knit with 50% more spandex than competitors and higher levels of compression for optimal support, circulation and mobility.
  • Wear During Training and After – Simply wear during training then slide the frozen ice sheets in afterwards.
      Knickers come complete with ice sheets and thermal bag.
    • Friday, March 4, 2011

      iProp




      This is great, been stuck inside all winter on the trainer, need some way to prop up your iPad, well the iProp has the solution. the stand seems very sturdy and practicable.


      Product Features
      We are excited to announce the release of the iProp™, our one of a kind accessory for the Apple iPad®. The iProp™ will allow you to further enjoy your tablet in ways you have only imagined, enabling you to experience reading, movies, videos, tweets and apps all hands-free in nearly every situation.


      Features include:

      This model compatible with original iPad® only (model for iPad® 2 coming soon)
      Full 360° rotation of iPad®
      Ball and socket connector allows tilt and swivel in all directions
      Heavy duty, V-shaped base
      Easy to insert and remove iPad® from ABS plastic holder

      Product Specifications:

      Full stand height - 36" (12" rigid, 24" flexible) - 90cm (30cm rigid, 60cm flexible)
      Base weight - 3 lb. 13 oz. (1.75 kg)
      Total weight - 6 lb. (2.75 kg)
      V-base dimension - 10.5" x 22.7" (267mm x 577mm)

      Monday, February 21, 2011

      Killer Hill Workout



      Kettlebells + Hill = Killer Workout

      Published: Feb 18th 2011 5:30 PM EST by Jene Shaw

      These hill repeats incorporate kettlebell swings that’ll get your hamstrings and glutes firing.

      It’s a short, fast-paced workout awesome for increasing flexibility and building core strength while also reaping the power-gaining benefits of hill running. USAT coach Jessica Herschberg, of FTP Coaching in Nashville, Tenn. says her athletes can barely make the 10 rounds.

      Kettlebell Hill Repeats

      - Start at the bottom of a short, steep hill (roughly 150 yards)
      - Perform 20 kettlebell swings (12-16kg for women, 16-20kg for men)
      - Immediately sprint up the hill
      - Walk back to start
      - Repeat 10 times.

      (If you don’t have a kettlebell, a dumbbell is a fine alternative.)

      Proper kettlebell form:

      Place the kettlebell between your feet. Hinge at the hips as if you are about to sit in a chair and bend the knees until your hands can grasp the handle. Start the swing by popping the hips forward until your knees are locked out, glutes tight and kettlebell reaches chest height. Let the kettlebell swing back between your legs, hinging again at the hips, and letting your wrists hit the sides of your groin so the kettlebell is tucked right underneath the buttocks. Immediately and explosively pop your hips forward again to perform the next rep. “You should feel this in your hamstrings,” Herschberg says. “Make sure you are looking forward so your shoulders aren’t rounded.”

      Monday, February 7, 2011

      Cross Fit Endurance, Workouts To Kick You Into Gear!


      So you are feeling a little burnt out from the traditional triathlon training. Well change it up, you have read the article in Triathlete Magazine and you are wondering can it work. Look at it this way, you have to do core workouts and you have to do your normal training, why not mix. You can only get stronger and if Sprints are your distance, Cross Fit Endurance is a perfect fit. You will push yourself every single workout.

      Have Fun!

      Chose ONE of The Following Sports:

      All sports do: 30:20 x 12 rounds, 30 seconds on 20 seconds off, all out efforts!

      Swim: Use pool or open water
      Bike: Use a Monarch ERG, stationary bike with wattage tool or something similar that can hold a load of 200+ watts
      Run: Use a treadmill, set at 12% grade at 0-30 sec slower pace per mile than best 5k pace. Do not reduce the speed!
      C2:Row 30:20×12

      Thursday, January 27, 2011

      MovNat, Is There Something To This!



      Getting outside is what we all want to do, ok maybe not all of us but the few that read this blog do. Well MovNat is about working outside with what is around you, not what you purchase. The video gives you a glimpse of what to expect and I am sure you can devise a great workout running up and down any mountain. Heck go outside today (if you live in the tri state area NY, NJ, PA) and you can shovel snow, run down the block, shovel more snow, do some push-ups, more snow, sit-ups and yes you guessed it shovel more snow. MovNat is not new it is just returning you to how we all used to stay in shape.

      Thursday, January 20, 2011

      It's To Cold Outside to Swim!




      For the East Coast winter is here with a vengeance. So what do you do when it to cold, frozen, snow covered to get into your car, well try this workout from Rock Star Triathlete Academy.

      Time: ~45-60 minutes
      Warm-Up - get the heart rate churning and pre-activate the core:
      100 Jumping Jacks
      50 Crunches
      25 Side Crunches per side
      Main Set - 5x through the following exercises:
      25 Flutter Kicks per Side
      25 Alternating Band Chest Press per Side (kneeling or standing)
      25 Alternating Band Rows per Side (kneeling or standing)
      15 Superman
      15 High Elbow Band Pulls (standing, bent over)
      Core Set - 5x through the following exercises:
      50 Jumping Jacks or 25 High Knee Skips (standing in one place) per side
      10 Stability Ball Pikes
      10 Push-Up Position Corkscrew Twists per side
      Metabolic Set: 5x through the following exercises
      20 Speed Squats
      10 Squat Thrust Jumps
      25 Mountain Climbers
      25 High Knee Skips (standing in one place)

      Thursday, December 30, 2010

      Climbing a DAM


      Now this is a workout. USA should do more of this to many of their public parks and areas.

      Tuesday, November 23, 2010

      Work Out or Sleep In


      Do you feel like a slacker on the mornings you snoozed through your workout and
      missed it altogether? You’ve heard sayings like, “while you’re sleeping, someone
      else is training and getting better” touting those that drag out of bed at
      ridiculous hours to train and deprive themselves of sleep. They may be getting
      more training time in, but are they really improving their fitness and health?

      via http://www.everymantri.com/everyman_triathlon/2010/11/the-ultimate-triathlete-training-dilemma-work-out-or-sleep-in.html

      Wednesday, November 3, 2010

      Learning the Handstand Push-Up

      One of the most brilliant ways to learn how to do a handstand and handstand Push-Ups.

      Join gymnast Carl Paoli, Kim Bozman and HQ trainer Adrian (Boz) Bozman as they teach handstand fundamentals by applying gymnastics to elite CrossFit skills.

      In Part 1, learn how to stabilize your handstand through the hollow-body position. According to Paoli, one of the misconceptions with the hollow-body position is that it is “closed down.” Paoli says: “It’s actually the most neutral position that we can possibly find in our body.” Find out how to challenge yourself with the hollow-body position and develop midline stability.

      In Part 2, Paoli focuses on the headstand to develop head and hand position for a handstand. “In order to set ourselves up for success in the handstand push-up, we need to have that headstand down solid,” Paoli says. Using a stable triangular set-up, athletes will be able to develop control and balance.

      In Part 3, Paoli scales the handstand push-up for different skill levels. The first step to getting inverted is a handstand push-up with your feet on the ground, working the distance between feet and hands and stance. The next step is elevating the feet to increase the difficulty, scaling elevation and stance. With smart progressions, you can make the handstand push-up accessible for any athlete.

      Cradle Walk



      One of the best exercises to help with hip mobility.

      Monday, May 10, 2010

      Slushi to Boost Performance.


      From the NYTimes

      The reasons are also no surprise. Blood is directed to the skin for cooling, which means it is diverted from working muscles. The hotter it is, and the harder the effort, the harder exercise becomes. Eventually, you slow down or stop, unable to go on. Exercise physiologists debate why. It could be that muscles are starved for blood. It could be that the brain gets too hot. It could be that the heart eventually can’t beat fast enough to satisfy all the demands for blood. But even without knowing why, researchers have found they can delay the time to utter exhaustion by getting people a bit chilled before they start. more..

      CrossFit Endurance


      Anaerobic Endurance Strength and Conditioning  Rest Day
      Choose ONE Of The Following Sports
      Swim: 1000m/y total: at 85% for first 500m/y then pick it up to 95% on the last 500m/y
      Bike: 20 miles total: at 85% for first 10 miles then pick it up to 95% on the last 10 miles
      Run: 10k total: at 85% for first 5k then pick it up to 95% on the last 5k
      C2: 3000m total: at 85% first 1500m recover 1min, then 95% for second 1500m 

      CrossFit Endurance was created with the belief that you have taken the time to learn the skill of your sport. If you have not, you have no business here, or competing in this sport. This website is to be used with the Anaerobic Endurance WOD, Main Site WOD, your affiliate, or your own CrossFit Programming (Beware, poor programming will come at your cost in fitness and sport). Follow the directions as indicated on each day's WOD. If you aren't recovering and hitting times that you should hit, take a day or two off... Recovery is why you get better, not more training!
      With Progression!!! CrossFit 4-6 times per week. The most successful athletes will be able to follow a 3:1 CrossFit/Strength and Conditioining cycle. Choose ONE sport per day on this site. Single sport athletes should only be following this site 2-3 times a week. Typically, 1 cycle, which is 1 interval, 1 tempo/stamina workout, and 1 more interval workout... This should be spaced accordingly throughout the week. Multisport athletes should train no more than 2 workouts per week per sport on this site. PERIOD! Follow anything else and you are not following this site correctly.

      Monday, February 8, 2010

      You say Blizzard I say Snowshoeing!


      Hey we are all in some sort of build cycle getting ready for the season, well get some snowshoes and hit the trail. Don't let snow keep you on a treadmill or going outside thinking you could slip. Snowshoes are fun and at the same time, challenging. You will get your heart rate up in the first 100 yards simply by walking, now through a steady jog, BAM up it goes, now hills, BAM, even hire. Accomplishing what you might have in 8 miles is now five to six of the hardest miles you will every put in.

      There is no better way to begin snowshoeing than just going and doing it. Take a risk, rent or buy a pair of snowshoes, dress for the elements and enjoy. However, that's just a start - there is more to it than just taking a refreshing plunge in some snow.

      Snowshoeing has been around for thousands of years. And, obviously, the art of snowshoeing has become more sophisticated over time - now it's considered a winter sport. From the early wood-frame to the aluminum-frame models, snowshoeing has garnered quite a following throughout the world. Modern day snowshoeing is made up of casual snowshoers who hike trails for pleasure, the snowshoeing enthusiasts who trek through the backcountry, and the competitors who race.

      Tuesday, January 5, 2010

      Men's and Women's Chipper Workout


      The chipper format is a classic CrossFit structure. You have a large number of tasks that you complete in order. They are designed so that as you fatigue in one task, you switch up the demands and keep going. There is a cumulative effect of course, but the variety allows for incredible metabolic demand.

      The variety also becomes a great equalizer. Everyone has strengths and weaknesses, and when the workout has ten elements, both are likely to be featured.
      Crossfit 2009 Games
      Men's Chipper Workout
      15 reps 155lb BB squat clean
      30 Toes to bar
      30 Box jumps 24" box
      15 Muscle ups
      30 PushPress /PushJerk 40lb DBs
      30 Double Unders
      15 reps 135lb Thruster
      30 Pullups
      30 Burpees
      300' OH Walking lunge with 45lb plate

      Women's Chipper Workout
      15 barbell squat cleans (100 lb.)
      30 toes to bar
      30 box jumps (20” box)
      10 muscle-ups
      30 push presses/push jerks (25-lb. dumbbells)
      30 double-unders
      15 thrusters (95 lb.)
      30 pull-ups
      30 burpees
      300’ overhead walking lunges (25-lb. plate)

      Friday, October 30, 2009

      Workout for the off season


      Want to get stronger in a real way, not the muscles that make you look funny and are completely useless unless you want to pose. This workout is based on 3 minutes routine with a 2 minutes off. It will be tough but will build explosive power.
      Welcome to The Freak

      The Freak Workout 25 seconds per station total 3 minutes 2 minutes rest. (7 stations without a wall or partner)
      * If you have a partner do all 8
      ** if you have a wall do 8
      1. Spiderman pushups
      2. Plyometrics pushups
      3. Hand Switch (on a ball push ups)
      4. Recline pull ups
      5. Rope Body weight pull ups
      6. Jumping Pull ups
      7. ** Medicine ball through into a pushups **
      8. Medicine ball Jump ups
      9. * (Partner) Medicine ball through between partner *

      Monday, August 31, 2009

      Open Water Swims


      Getting out into the open water is one of the best workouts that you can do, the more you do it the more you are calm in the water. Swim parallel to the shore just outside the break, swim out around a buoy and back. Do runs down the beach and into the water to simulate starts.
      There is more to swimming than just doing lap after lap, turning when you reach the wall at the end of the pool. You can swim in places with no walls - open water. Lakes, oceans, and rivers offer a great change of scenery - go to your local beach for today's workout instead of more laps in the pool. Depending on the reasons you swim, you may find it more psychologically rewarding; it can certainly be just as productive for building your fitness.

      This from About.com
      A few of the things to remember if you are going to swim in open water:
      • There are no lines on the bottom - look for landmarks to aid navigation, but find the balance between looking too often and not looking enough.
      • Put on your sunscreen - and don't forget your lips.
      • Drink plenty of fluids before you begin.
      • Make sure you follow the buddy system - if you are at a guarded beach, tell the lifeguards what you are doing.
      • You can do any type of workout - long straight swims, intervals where you vary the intensity level, even short sprints then tread or float in place.
      • It will be easier to count strokes compared to doing efforts for time or distance; 50 strokes at a high effort, 50 strokes easy, etc.
      • Base your workout on time spent swimming, not how far you think you have gone.
      • Stay on the safe side of distance from shore - DON'T GO OUT TOO FAR.
      • If you are in a race, watch out for the flailing arms and legs of those around you - getting hit or scratched hurts, and can knock off your goggles.
      • Learn to use the waves to help you ride up and slide down.
      • Time your stroke so you can breath without getting splashed in the face.
      • If they are allowed, wetsuits designed for swimming work - you will be amazed at the extra warmth and the additional speed with no additional effort.