Snatch Complex
Every 90 seconds for 10 rounds:
Snatch High Pull + Low Hang (from 1″) Snatch + Overhead Squat
Stay tight, maintain back angle, and shift your weight back (just behind mid-foot) on the start of the High Pull. Don’t pull the bar crazy high on the High Pull. Anywhere above naval height is plenty high, and remember the arms perform their job after the legs have accelerated the bar upward. The goal is not to have to move your feet to adjust for the Overhead Squat.
Post loads to comments.
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AMRAP 20 minutes:
20 Russian Kettlebell Swings 24/16kg
10 Chest-to-Bar Pull-Ups
270m Run
The Swings should be medium-heavy and unbroken for the most part. Sub regular Pull-Ups or Jumping Chest-to-Bar as needed.
Post time and Rx to comments.
Rob U. gets some encouragment from the fam during “Murph”
Hand Care for CrossFitters, Part 1
By Noah Abbott
Editor’s note: Are your hands feeling a little beat up after “Murph”? Now’s a perfect time to read “Hand Care for CrossFitters” by our greatly missed Coach Noah. Part 2, by Coach Fox, can be found here. “Hand Care for CrossFitters, Part 1” was originally posted on 10.20.15.
“Friction is the force resisting the relative motion of solid surfaces, fluid layers, and material elements sliding against each other. There are several types of friction: Dry friction resists relative lateral motion of two solid surfaces in contact. When surfaces in contact move relative to each other, the friction between the two surfaces converts kinetic energy into thermal energy. This property can have dramatic consequences, as illustrated by the use of friction created by rubbing pieces of wood together to start a fire. Another important consequence of many types of friction can be wear, which may lead to performance degradation and/or damage to components.” —Dr. Wiki Pedia
While this may be the most boring and technical opening to an article about CrossFit ever, thinking about friction when related to hand care is useful for isolating and overcoming the fundamental problem faced by kippers everywhere. In short, the solid surface of your hand slides against the (much more) solid surface of the bar, leading to dramatic consequences and damage to components (ripped hands) and subsequent performance degradation (having to stop a workout or avoid workouts while your boo boo heals.)
While it may seem like an inevitable rite of passage to do a high volume kipping workout, tear your hands to shreds, and then post pictures of it to social media, ripped hands are simply drags on optimal performance. Further, hands that are constantly rough, flaky, and/or bloody are, to put it mildly, gross. So, what’s fledgling CrossFitter/hand model to do? There are plenty of ways to take care of your hands, both intra and extra-WOD. The following routine is what has worked well for me, use at your own risk (of beautiful, baby soft mitts!).
During a Workout
During a workout, reducing friction is all about reducing lateral motion between your hand and the bar. Make sure you grip the bar right where your palm and fingers meet—any lower and you risk folding skin under the bar, adding to the surface causing friction. Then, grip the bar tightly, and motion during a kip should happen at your wrist, not through your hand rotating around the bar. You are trying to grip the bar with your skeleto-muscular structure, not the thin layer of epidermis covering it. Don’t grip the bar so deeply in your palm that the skin near your fingers scrunches up—that’s creating a fleshy surface for the bar to rip. Here’s Mark Rippetoe, folksy as ever, taking a long time to say just that (this is the shorter of two videos I could find from him).
The biggest thing you can do during a workout to avoid rips is to pay attention to your hands and fear the last 5-10 reps of a workout. Every time I’ve ripped it’s been between reps 95 and 100 in a workout like Angie—that’s usually the part when you are tired, stomping on the gas, and having to really throw everything behind every rep. The added force and shift of attention from your hands to the clock often leads to a rip, just as you finish the workout. If you feel your hands getting hot (thermal energy!) or skin starting to shift, drop from the bar and rest for a bit. In the words of Papa Osorio, “Be careful,” and be especially careful at the end of a workout.
Also, unless you are literally in danger of falling off the bar and cracking your head open, don’t overdo it with the chalk! (This shouldn’t even be an issue if you are gripping with your thumb around the bar, like a homo sapien.) While chalk can help promote a good relationship of your hand to the bar, especially if you are a little sweaty, overchalking can cause your hand to stick when you don’t need/want it to, especially when trying to release the bar.
There are a number of ways to protect your hands from the bar. CrossFit’s commercialization has led to all sorts of gloves, wraps, and other bar-hand barriers being available. For the most part, the tradeoff between protection, grip, and “feel” is up to the user. Generally gloves offer lots of protection but poor grip and feel (also, do NOT buy Reebok’s CrossFit gloves, they are just marked-up batting gloves, which you can buy for 10 bucks elsewhere). Gymnastics grips are a pretty good compromise. Classically they are suede (fancy!) with a wrist wrap, like these from Rogue, or these from MuscleDriver. NaturalGrip makes a lower profile version that is a permanent (or at least semi-permanent) grip that you secure with athletic tape or a wrist wrap. The NaturalGrips are based off the tape jobs people have been using to protect themselves pre/post tear for a while, which are also a good option. Here is a pretty involved way to tape, very similar to the heartier NaturalGrip. Here’s a slightly quicker/dirtier way to do it, more appropriate mid-WOD. The main theme is that the tape needs to run both lengthwise and across your palm, otherwise it will roll up under and movement and either fall off your hand or be the world’s crappiest bracelet. Further, you don’t need tons of tape, your hand shouldn’t look like this when you are done.
Home Prep
Taking care of your hands does not start and stop when you walk in the gym. A little consistent attention at home will make sure your hands are both less aesthetically gross and less susceptible to tearing at the gym. Flaky, cracked hands with big, raised calluses are asking for trouble, because the rough callus represents one half of the two solid surfaces that create friction. Since we can’t do anything about the bar, making sure your calluses are smooth and low-profile will keep you from tearing.
There are plenty of tools for shaving down calluses, but in my opinion most of them suck. Pumice stones, Ped-Eggs, nail files, and other sorts of abrasives require daily use and are pretty slow. I think of them more as “finishing” tools for getting your hands smooth after the real work has been done. For this heavy-duty work I recommend the Tweezerman Safety Slide Callus Shaver with Rasp. The Tweezerman is basically a razor blade on a stick, akin to a cheese grater for your hand. You use it when your hands are dry and it shaves your callus down in big, satisfying flakes. It has a built in rasp for the fine cleanup work at the end, and only costs 10 bucks, making it the king of callus care in my book. While it takes a little bit of bravery the first few times, it pretty quickly becomes natural to use and works wonders. Get one, and again, don’t use it in the shower, it will bite into your softened skin and get stuck, as opposed to slicing off nice little flakes.
Lastly, make sure to keep your hands moisturized. Buy a decent lotion and use it whenever you can, especially after you cut your calluses down. Smooth, supple hands are less prone to cracking, and won’t stick to the bar like dry hands. Just take it easy with the scents, this isn’t middle school.
Wound Care
If you do rip, don’t freak out. First, assess where you are in the workout. If there are six pull-ups left, just finish the damn thing. If there are 60, it’s scaling time—no sense in ruining a week of training just to finish.
Make sure you wash the wound and spray some Bactene on it. Cold water is key here—hot water will sting like bajeezus. Then let it dry. When you get home, cut off any excess skin. I use the Tweezeman for this, but you could use nail scissors, a katana, an angle grinder, or whatever you want.
A Final Thought
In the end, the biggest factor in not ripping is simply time. The longer you do this stuff the more time under tension you accumulate, and the more conditioned your hands become. Further, the easier pull-ups are for you, the less likely you are to tear. Most coaches and OGs brag that they haven’t ripped in “forever,” but like most people they probably ripped a bunch initially, and then slowly got strong, skilled, and epidermically-conditioned enough for it to not be a big issue.
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OGAR: Will of Steel Trailer CrossFit
Pessimism Is Suicide Current Affairs
Coach Ro says
AG
A. HSPU kipping/strict
B. conditioning
@80-90% sustainable effort
5 min
5 burpees
10 KB swings
rest/walk/correctives 2 min
5 min
5 box jumps/step down, 24"/20"
10 alt DB power snatch, 50lb/35lb
rest/walk/correctives 2 min
5 min
5 DB thrusters, 50/35lb
7 t2b/10 v-ups/10 sit ups
rest/walk/correctives 2 min
Mario says
Started using the WODROD which is basically a short aluminum stick with the feel of a barbell and which has sandpaper attached on one side. This thing worked wonders for me and so far has been the absolute best tool to get rid of calluses.
https://www.wodrod.com/
Dan L says
8am
Worked up to a kind of ugly 185 on the complex. Up through 175 it was feeling and looking pretty good though.
Metcon – just under 8 rounds (was in the middle of the final run) C2B added up and I had to break them up after the 5th round
Kayleigh says
Snatch Complex: Worked up to 113#. Failed at 118 – high enough, just not committing. This is my PR, so did not go into the lift with the right confidence at all.
WOD: 6 rounds + 20 KB swings. Scaled to 6 C2B pull-ups per round. Was actually able to string a few of them together kipping, which is a big change for me (usually need to do switch grip singles).
Played around with the yoke after class doing 50' walks (thats one length of 608, yes?). Started with the empty yoke (195), then 245, 295, 345, 365. Last one felt like a fawn trying to walk for the first time. I'm sure it did not look that adorable.
Allie B says
Snatch: worked up to 83# Hey, I've power snatched an ugly 83 once, so this is a PR! Hit it twice so I'm sure I own it! I definitely have way more.
Wod: Don't know how many rounds, I think I was :15 seconds shy of my 7th round. (Came in from the run at 20:15) did 10 regular kipping pull-ups.
AG: Had a second PR! Got my first strict handstand push-up no ab mat!! Did two of them!
Then was pretty tired, but pushed through a sustainable pace workout. DB snatches at 30#, dumbbell thrusters at 25#.
Allie B says
Can I also mention that this article made me miss Noah's jokes during group class!! :/
Karina S says
Heck yeah Allie!
Open Gym!
Make up for Saturday.
Tempo Backsquat 2×8 at 95lbs, Front 1×8 at 85. These were really light, I should have made a bigger jump but was otherwise distracted by annoying Cam with requests to take pictures of me and Gabby.
Afterwards aforementioned Gabby talked me into 21-15-9 of calories rowed and dumbell thrusters at 20lbs. To quote Hobbes, this workout was "nasty, brutish, and short." Took 5:50.
Whole day has felt weird? Probably due to bad eating. Ate one soft boiled egg but was interrupted by an early arriving client, afterwards ate the other egg, like some sort of lizard. Then had another client, ate a can of tuna and some oats. Then met a friend and ate a grilled cheese with bacon? Not recommended. Then came to OG. Going to eat some greens now. Hope to improve.
KLove says
Allie, how did I miss your HSPUs???? Congrats!!
Snatch complex: Worked up to 88". Didn't feel heavy, but didn't feel smooth either. Bar was getting away from me.
WOD: 6+14 with pullups
Was disappointed I could only do the first set of pullups unbroken before having to switch to 6-4. Was moving well then got a cramp in my right trap from running and had to stop and stretch it a bit in round 4 and 5 and break pullups into three sets. I think this is definitely related to my right arm issues so have to start doing my neck stretches again. I've only been doing my shoulder stretches lately, but it's alllll connected. Was back to normal on the 6th round.
AG:
HSPUs strict with 2 ab mats. So glad to be working on these again with NO pain.
DB presses 22.5
WOD:
DB snatches @35#, box jumps on 16" box bc there weren't any 20" boxes left- was totally fine with this, thrusters @30# (so hard today!) and v-ups instead of TTB because my hands were so sore.
FUN day!
Last week of classes ๐ ๐ ๐