Wednesday 23rd December

"Comepetitors"

a) Rest Day / Swim

"Crossfit"

a) "12 days of Christmas"

1 Clean & Jerk @ 225/150# 
2 Muscle-Ups
3 Box Jumps 36/30″
4 Hang Squat Snatch @ 115/75#
5 Bar Facing Burpees
6 Push Press @ 115/75#
7 Pistols (alternating)
8 T2B
9 Wall Ball 20/14#
10 C2B Pullups
11 HSPU
12 Front Squats @ 225/150# (no racks)

Official Guinness World Record set on 9/10/10 in Sydney - on national TV Show "Australia Smashes Guinness World Records" 

Distance climbed: 27.8 metres in 60 secs time limit. No feet allowed, no sliding down rope allowed. The previous WR was 19.2 metres. 

This record has been attempted and held by Olympic gymnasts, Chinese acrobats, elite mountain climbers and special forces units around the world. 



Tuesday 22nd December

"Competitors"

a) Strict Press to 5 x 5

b) DB Shoulder Press to 3 x 8

c) 5 Rounds
1 x Legless Rope Climb
400m Run
1 x L Sit Rope Climb
2 Mins Rest Between Rounds

"Crossfit"

a) Every 2 Mins for 10 Rounds
3 x Power Snatches

b) 5 Rounds
1 x Legless Rope Climb
400m Run
1 x L Sit Rope Climb
2 Mins Rest Between Rounds

By Sally Tamarkin

Ever do a burpee? Or 30? Ever tackled a circuit that requires, say, five rounds of 15 burpees? If so, you might want someone to blame for bringing this uniquely punishing movement into the world and to the attention of coaches, trainers and fitness enthusiasts. So at whom can we shake our sweaty, exhausted fists?

It's difficult to know exactly who's responsible for today's burpee, which is often programmed to be done in multiple hi-rep sets (though it's fun to picture an old-timey villain twisting his mustache and laughing uproariously as legions of exhausted exercisers drag themselves through each rep). We can, however, identify the one person who is most certainly not to blame for the movement as we know it today: the exercise's inventor and namesake, Royal Huddleston Burpee.

 

Photo: Popular Science, Feb 1944

Thanks, Royal H. Burpee
Royal H. Burpee was a physiologist in New York City who invented a much milder (and less tormenting) version of the movement, intending it to be done just four times in a row as part of a fitness test. In fact, he even spoke out against his movement being done in high volumes. Although there are only two remaining copies of Burpee's thesis, we were able to get the low down on the origins on the burpee from the granddaughter of Burpee himself -- Sheryl Burpee Dluginski.

Burpee Dluginski explained that her grandfather was a "fitness fanatic before Jack Lalanne" himself. At a time when exercise science was mostly concerned with measuring the fitness of already fit people, Burpee wanted a simple way to assess the fitness of everyday folks (starting with the new members of the YMCA in the Bronx, where Burpee worked). So in 1939, when Burpee was a Ph.D. candidate in applied physiology at Teacher's College, Columbia University, he invented an as-yet-unnamed, four-count movement that would provide a quick and accurate way to evaluate fitness. Only later would it evolve into the six-count beast we know today.

Burpee Dluginski says that the movement her grandfather invented has been known as a squat thrust, a four-count burpee, a front-leaning rest and a military burpee over time. The original exercise was simple:

  • Squat down and place both hands on the floor in front of you.
  • Jump feet back into plank position
  • Jump feet forward.
  • Return to standing.

To administer the fitness test, Burpee Dluginksi says that her grandfather took five different heart rate measurements before and after four burpees were performed and came up with an equation that accurately assessed the heart's efficiency at pumping blood -- a good measure of overall fitness.

From Fitness Test To Fitness Torture
Nowadays we know the burpee as a six-count bodyweight movement -- that is, a single exercise that requires the athlete to move through six different positions as quickly as possible. Though movement standards vary from gym to gym and trainer to trainer, the burpee most of us know and love (to hate) is most commonly performed like this:

  • Bend over or squat down and place both hands on the floor in front of you, just outside of your feet.
  • Jump both feet back into plank position.
  • Drop to a pushup -- your chest should touch the floor.
  • Push or snake up to return to plank position.
  • Jump feet back in toward hands.
  • Explosively jump up into the air, reaching arms straight overhead.

When you consider that burpees are often done in high-rep sets (say, seven minutes of burpees or a 100-burpee workout), you can imagine how quickly the misery accumulates. After all, a single burpee demands that your entire body work to perform six bodyweight movements in a row (including three separate jumps) that take you from vertical to horizontal, back to vertical again. The fact that the burpee is used as a punishment -- as in Spartan Races, which require participants to do 30 in a row if they fail to take on an obstacle, or at CrossFit gyms that assess a burpee penaltyfor arriving late to class -- tells you pretty much everything you need to know about this killer movement as we now know it. Three separate jumps and a pushup (or some variation of it): It puts the hurt on you, and it does it good and fast.

Drop And Give Me Burpees
Although the original burpee was far less punishing than the move we know today, it was nevertheless considered especially taxing, so much so that the military adopted it in 1942 as part of its fitness test for men enlisting in the armed services during World War II. As part of the overall test, soldiers were required to perform "squat thrusts" (as Burpee's burpee was known at the time) for 20 seconds straight. By 1946, however, the military required burpees for one full minute -- performing 41 reps in that time was considered excellent, while fewer than 27 was considered poor.

WWRHBD?
But Burpee never intended his movement to be performed in such high volumes. In fact, Burpee Dluginski says that her grandfather rewrote the foreword to the 1946 edition of his book to explain that he believed that the military's modification to his fitness test is strenuous and suitable only for those already in good cardiovascular health. According to Burpee Dluginski, her grandfather didn't like how burpees came to be used -- he believed that high reps of the movement could be bad for knees or dangerous to the back, especially for anyone who lacked core strength.

In short, Burpee never intended his modest, four-count move to be used as a particularly hard-core way to get in shape. But thanks to the popularity of high-intensity strength and conditioning programs like CrossFit and boot camps, and events like Spartan Races and Civilian Military Combines, it's a little late to be asking "WWRHBD?" Not only is the six-count burpee probably here to stay, it's brought along its even more challenging friends -- variations like burpee box jumps, thedumbbell burpee, the (ouch) burpee pull-up and countless other varieties.

Basically, at this point in time, the easiest burpee we can hope for is one that is way more taxing than the one Burpee himself thought was already too strenuous. Next time you're burpee-ing, just keep in mind that even though you're struggling, and going against Dr. (Burpee)'s orders, you're not suffering alone.

Saturday 19th December

"Competitors"

a) Hang Power Clean to 5 x 5
Strict Deficit HSPU 8 x 5 

b) 12 Min AMRAP
400m Run
5 x Deadlifts (405, 265)

20 Mins Rest

6 Rounds
Min 1 - 6 x Bench Press (185, 115)
Min 2 - 6 x Bar Muscle Ups
Min 3 - 60 x Double Unders 

"Crossfit"

a) Every 90 Seconds for 10 Rounds
3 x Back Squats

b) Every 2 Mins for 10 Rounds
2 x Split Jerks

Both Class WODs

a) Open WOD 11.5

7 Mins Rest

10 x Burpees to Target
1 x Rope Climb

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Tuesday 15th December

"Competitors"

a) Every 2 Mins for 10 Rounds
3 x Pause Front Squats

b) EMOM for 18 Mins
Min 1 - 8 x Overhead Lunges (155 105)
Min 2 - 21/16 x Calorie Row
Min 3 - Rest

c) EMOM for 18 Mins
Min 1 - 20m Handstand Walk
Min 2 - 21/16 x Calorie Assault Bike
Min 3 - Rest

"Crossfit"

a) 12  9  6
Power Clean (165, 115)
Push Jerks (165, 115)

b) Back Squat to 5RM
Strict Press to 5 x 5RM

DON'T FORGET!

Our Christmas Party for 2015 is this Saturday!

After a big year of training, make sure to join us at OneSixOne (161 High Street, Prahran) on Saturday 19th December from 7pm onwards!

Monday 14th December

"Competitors"

a) Back Squat to 9RM

b) 3 Rounds each for time - 5 Mins Rest Between Each Round
100 x Double Unders
30 x Pistols (15 left then 15 right)
3 x Legless Rope Climbs

c) Every 2 Mins for 10 Rounds
3 x Power Snatches

"Crossfit"

a) EMOM for 20 Mins
1 x Full Snatch
1 x Hang Snatch

b) Thruster Open WOD 2013

c) EMOM for 12 Mins
Min 1 - 10 x Alternate KB Front Rack Lunge
Min 2 - 17/12 x Calorie Row

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Saturday 12th December

"Competitors"

a) Every 90 seconds for 15 Rounds
1 x Power Clean
1 x Full Clean
1 x Split Jerk

"Competitors & Crossfit WOD"

b) Every 2 Mins for 10 Rounds or as long as you can
8 x Power Clean & Jerks
8 x Bar Facing Burpees

c) EMOM for 20 Mins
Min 1 - 6 x Bar Facing Burpees
Min 2 - 8 x Front Rack Lunges Axle Bar (165, 115)
Min 3 - 2 x Legless Rope Climbs
Min 4 - Rest


Friday 11th December

"Competitors"

a) Back Squat to 3RM
Then 4 x 3 @92.5%

b) 3 Rounds
500m Row
25 x Toes to Bar

7 Mins Rest

3 Rounds
20 x Calorie Assault Bike
50 x Double Unders
4 Mins Rest Between Rounds

"Crossfit"

a) Every 2 Mins for 10 Rounds
3 x Full Snatches

b) 21  15  9
Power Snatches (115, 80)
Srtrict HSPU
Pistols

SATURDAY POWER WORK (to be done before class)

A) Every 90 seconds x 15 rds:

1 x power clean
1 x full clean
1 x split jerk

Increasing weight.

 

Tuesday 8th December

"Competitors"

a) Every 2 Mins for 10 Rounds
3 x Strict Press (all same weight)

b) Every 2 Mins for 10 Rounds
3 x Push Press

c) For time -
30 x Calorie Row
30 x Overhead Squats (115, 80)
30 x Box Jumps (24 inch)
7 Mins Rest - Then repeat

"Crossfit"

a) Every 90 seconds for 10 Rounds
3 x Clusters

b) Open WOD 11.6

c) Deadlift to 5 x 5
Bench Press to 5 x 5

 

Monday 7th December

"Competitors"

a) Back Squat to 5RM
Then 4 x 5 @90%

b) DB Weighted Bulgarian Squat to 5 x 8

c) GHR 5 x 15
5 x 60 Double Unders

"Crossfit"

a) Every 90 secs for 10 Rounds
3 x Power Clean

b) Every 2 Mins for 10 Rounds
5 x Strict Press
& 8/7 x Strict Pull Ups

c) WOD - 12 Min Cap
30  20  10  
Overhead Squat  (115, 80)
Box Jumps (24, 20)
Row 


Thursday 3rd December

"Competitors"

a) Overhead Squat 3RM

b) 5 Rounds
3 x Bar Muscle Ups
6 x Pull Ups
9 x Toes to Bar

4 Rounds
2 x Legless Rope Climbs
30 x Calorie Row
40 x KB Snatches
2 Mins Rest  Between Rounds

"Crossfit"

a) Every 90 seconds for 10 Rounds
5 x Strict Press

b) EMOM for 20 Mins
1 x Full Clean & Jerk

c) 4 Rounds
3 Mins Max Calorie Row
1 Min Max Muscle Ups / Rope Climbs
1 Min Rest