Crossfit® is arguably the most successful brand in the world of high intensity interval and mixed modal training. This can be attributed to various factors but the fact is that it brought improved cardiovascular capacity, strength, health, enjoyment and (fill in the blank space) to hundreds of thousands of people all over the world (including myself).
Programming include the disciplines of gymnastic skills, monostructural training and weightlifting/powerlifting and in keeping with the philosophy of exercise over broad time and modal domains, the countless WODs designed over time have produced some classic workouts.
However, upon studying the 51 WODs of the past ten years for the Crossfit Opens, there seems to be an imbalance in the programming and I would like the community to comment on their view on it.
The main point is the big emphasis on strength in general and weightlifting and powerlifting in particular. It needs to be stated that for the purpose of this piece, strength was considered any movement that stated a specific weight to be used, with the exception of wall balls.
Analysis of these WODs show the following:
(a). Bodyweight. Of all the disciplines used in Crossfit, weightlifting and powerlifting are the only sporting codes that officially compete in weight classes. In an attempt to compare apples with apples, bodyweight plays a definitive role in these sports, one which Crossfit chose to ignore. Of course pure strength (regardless of bodyweight) should also play a role in our quest to find the “Fittest” but shouldn't just powerlifting movements settle that and then also in a more limited way? The point is that doing any WL/PL exercise the Crossfit way puts the “lighter” participants at an unfair disadvantage accroding to the rules of WL/PL, so it doesn't make sense that WL and PL appeared in 49% of all WODs.
(b). Weightlifting in particular is a highly technical skill that only comes from a lot of dedicated practice and expert guidance and the high incidence of these movements in the Opens, considering the wide variety of other movements and exercises available, doesn't make sense. Is it any surprise that people with great WL background continue to do so well compared to others?
(c). Degree of difficulty. The Opens should give ANY Crosfitter a reasonable chance to take part – surely it is a competition that aims to get as many people on board as possible, yet the standards required for some of the strength work for the Opens are just too high in my opinion (what about safety?). For the later rounds beyond the Opens it's fine but in the Opens itself you want people who have only an hour or so per day to train (the majority) to feel they have a realistic chance to compete. Why do we have WODs that eliminate a large portion of competitors before they even reach the end of it. Is this one of the reasons entries have fallen over the years?
Some examples:
Opens WOD 20.3 demanded an already fatigued participant to do a further total of 45 deadlifts at 142kg/310lbs (men) or 93kg/205lbs (women) in the second half. Worldwide only 0.39% (men) and 0.34% (women) could even finish the workout.
Opens WOD 20.4 demanded an already fatigued participant to do 10 C&J at 102kg/225lbs (men) or 66kg/145lbs (women) in one go (and that's only at the halfway mark). Not something that professional weightlifters would do, let alone with other exercises. Why then Crossfit? Completion rate was a staggering 0.19% (men) and & 0.45% (women).
Opens WOD 19.2 demanded an already fatigued participant to do 9 squat cleans at 125kg/275lbs (M) or 80kg/175lbs (W). Again not something that professional weightlifters would do, let alone with other exercises. Why then Crossfit? Completion rate was even worse at 0.07% (M) and 0.1% (W).
Are these figures indicating a reasonable workout for the average Crosfitter out there? Why the huge emphasis on exercises that uses the phosphagen metabolic pathway?
The following appeared in Crossfit.com in 2002:
Total fitness, the fitness that CrossFit promotes and develops, requires competency and training in each of these three pathways (phosphagen, glycolytic and oxidative) or engines. Balancing the effects of these three pathways largely determines the how and why of the metabolic conditioning or “cardio” that we do at CrossFit.
I'm looking forward to hear your thoughts.
Programming include the disciplines of gymnastic skills, monostructural training and weightlifting/powerlifting and in keeping with the philosophy of exercise over broad time and modal domains, the countless WODs designed over time have produced some classic workouts.
However, upon studying the 51 WODs of the past ten years for the Crossfit Opens, there seems to be an imbalance in the programming and I would like the community to comment on their view on it.
The main point is the big emphasis on strength in general and weightlifting and powerlifting in particular. It needs to be stated that for the purpose of this piece, strength was considered any movement that stated a specific weight to be used, with the exception of wall balls.
Analysis of these WODs show the following:
- 23 Different exercises/movements were used (those similar to each other were counted as one, such as Cleans and C&J) for a total of 132 times.
- The individual movements most used were cleans and MU (11), thrusters and T2B (10), snatches (9) and deadlift and C2B (8).
- The percentages of individual movements used in WODs are 47% (strength), 31.8% (monostructural) and 29.5% (gymnastics).
- The percentages of WODs containing a specific discipline are 86.3% (strength), 68.6% (gymnastics) and 51.0% (monostructural). Furthermore, 49% of all WODs contained weightlifting or powerlifting.
(a). Bodyweight. Of all the disciplines used in Crossfit, weightlifting and powerlifting are the only sporting codes that officially compete in weight classes. In an attempt to compare apples with apples, bodyweight plays a definitive role in these sports, one which Crossfit chose to ignore. Of course pure strength (regardless of bodyweight) should also play a role in our quest to find the “Fittest” but shouldn't just powerlifting movements settle that and then also in a more limited way? The point is that doing any WL/PL exercise the Crossfit way puts the “lighter” participants at an unfair disadvantage accroding to the rules of WL/PL, so it doesn't make sense that WL and PL appeared in 49% of all WODs.
(b). Weightlifting in particular is a highly technical skill that only comes from a lot of dedicated practice and expert guidance and the high incidence of these movements in the Opens, considering the wide variety of other movements and exercises available, doesn't make sense. Is it any surprise that people with great WL background continue to do so well compared to others?
(c). Degree of difficulty. The Opens should give ANY Crosfitter a reasonable chance to take part – surely it is a competition that aims to get as many people on board as possible, yet the standards required for some of the strength work for the Opens are just too high in my opinion (what about safety?). For the later rounds beyond the Opens it's fine but in the Opens itself you want people who have only an hour or so per day to train (the majority) to feel they have a realistic chance to compete. Why do we have WODs that eliminate a large portion of competitors before they even reach the end of it. Is this one of the reasons entries have fallen over the years?
Some examples:
Opens WOD 20.3 demanded an already fatigued participant to do a further total of 45 deadlifts at 142kg/310lbs (men) or 93kg/205lbs (women) in the second half. Worldwide only 0.39% (men) and 0.34% (women) could even finish the workout.
Opens WOD 20.4 demanded an already fatigued participant to do 10 C&J at 102kg/225lbs (men) or 66kg/145lbs (women) in one go (and that's only at the halfway mark). Not something that professional weightlifters would do, let alone with other exercises. Why then Crossfit? Completion rate was a staggering 0.19% (men) and & 0.45% (women).
Opens WOD 19.2 demanded an already fatigued participant to do 9 squat cleans at 125kg/275lbs (M) or 80kg/175lbs (W). Again not something that professional weightlifters would do, let alone with other exercises. Why then Crossfit? Completion rate was even worse at 0.07% (M) and 0.1% (W).
Are these figures indicating a reasonable workout for the average Crosfitter out there? Why the huge emphasis on exercises that uses the phosphagen metabolic pathway?
The following appeared in Crossfit.com in 2002:
Total fitness, the fitness that CrossFit promotes and develops, requires competency and training in each of these three pathways (phosphagen, glycolytic and oxidative) or engines. Balancing the effects of these three pathways largely determines the how and why of the metabolic conditioning or “cardio” that we do at CrossFit.
I'm looking forward to hear your thoughts.