Sunday, May 31, 2009

King CrossFit Pull-up Standard

King CrossFit Pull-up Standard from Glen Dosono on Vimeo.


Arvin Agosa demonstrates the new pull-up standard at King CF.

King CrossFit Pull-up Standard

King CrossFit Pull-up Standard from Glen Dosono on Vimeo.


Arvin Agosa demonstrates the new pull-up standard at King CF.

King CrossFit Pull-up Standard

King CrossFit Pull-up Standard from Glen Dosono on Vimeo.


Arvin Agosa demonstrates the new pull-up standard at King CF.

King CrossFit Pull-up Standard

King CrossFit Pull-up Standard from Glen Dosono on Vimeo.


Arvin Agosa demonstrates the new pull-up standard at King CF.

053109 WOD

4 Rounds for time:
25 Lunges
25 Box Jumps
25 Sit Ups
25 Double Unders or 75 Singles

053109 WOD

4 Rounds for time:
25 Lunges
25 Box Jumps
25 Sit Ups
25 Double Unders or 75 Singles

053109 WOD

4 Rounds for time:
25 Lunges
25 Box Jumps
25 Sit Ups
25 Double Unders or 75 Singles

053109 WOD

4 Rounds for time:
25 Lunges
25 Box Jumps
25 Sit Ups
25 Double Unders or 75 Singles

Saturday, May 30, 2009

SSA is in the House

Late Afternoon WOD with members of Social Security Administration

SSA is in the House

Late Afternoon WOD with members of Social Security Administration

SSA is in the House

Late Afternoon WOD with members of Social Security Administration

SSA is in the House

Late Afternoon WOD with members of Social Security Administration

053009 WOD

Team WOD (teams of 2 or 3)

400m run
150 Thrusters
400m run
150 Pull-ups
400m run
For Time

053009 WOD

Team WOD (teams of 2 or 3)

400m run
150 Thrusters
400m run
150 Pull-ups
400m run
For Time

053009 WOD

Team WOD (teams of 2 or 3)

400m run
150 Thrusters
400m run
150 Pull-ups
400m run
For Time

053009 WOD

Team WOD (teams of 2 or 3)

400m run
150 Thrusters
400m run
150 Pull-ups
400m run
For Time

Friday, May 29, 2009

05/29/09 Fridays WOD

200M Farmers Walks (weight will be scaled as needed)
21-15-9
Deadlift (Body Weight)
Kb Swings (53lb Men/35lb Women)
Burpees
200M Farmers Walk

3,2,1 GO!!!!



T.G.I.F
Pictures from Today's WOD


Pictures from Thursday's WOD

05/29/09 Fridays WOD

200M Farmers Walks (weight will be scaled as needed)
21-15-9
Deadlift (Body Weight)
Kb Swings (53lb Men/35lb Women)
Burpees
200M Farmers Walk

3,2,1 GO!!!!



T.G.I.F
Pictures from Today's WOD


Pictures from Thursday's WOD

05/29/09 Fridays WOD

200M Farmers Walks (weight will be scaled as needed)
21-15-9
Deadlift (Body Weight)
Kb Swings (53lb Men/35lb Women)
Burpees
200M Farmers Walk

3,2,1 GO!!!!



T.G.I.F
Pictures from Today's WOD


Pictures from Thursday's WOD

05/29/09 Fridays WOD

200M Farmers Walks (weight will be scaled as needed)
21-15-9
Deadlift (Body Weight)
Kb Swings (53lb Men/35lb Women)
Burpees
200M Farmers Walk

3,2,1 GO!!!!



T.G.I.F
Pictures from Today's WOD


Pictures from Thursday's WOD

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Balance Challenge - Week 4 pics

Balance Challenge - Week 4 pics

Balance Challenge - Week 4 pics

Balance Challenge - Week 4 pics

REST DAY

Make up a missed WOD, go for a walk or jog, play with your kids, ride your bike, do yard work, learn a new sport.....spread the word about KING CROSSFIT.

THROW AWAY THE SCALE!!!

Yes, you heard me. Get rid of that darn thing. And for that matter why are you looking at that BMI chart. For some reason you are convinced that is a better measure of your success than your weight. But ... it is the same thing. Neither take into consideration your body type, bone structure, or your muscle mass.If you are working out on a regular basis you have more muscle.

Does muscle weigh more than fat? Well, not exactly ... I mean a pound of muscle weighs a pound AND a pound of fat weighs a pound. So why do you always hear muscle weighs more than fat? Think of it this way - A pound of muscle is denser, firmer and takes up less space. Isn't that really your goal ... to be firmer and take up less space?

If you want to measure success there are better tools than the scale. Some are listed below:

  • How do your clothes fit
  • Tape measure
  • Body fat percent
  • Cholesterol
  • Improved level of activity
  • How you feel (mood, do you sleep better, etc.)

This time when you embark on a weight loss program change your attitude. Instead think of it as a fitness journey. Here are some things that will contribute to your success.

  • If you must weigh yourself do so only once a month.
  • Take your measurements and record them once a month.
  • Add more activity into everything you do. This means park further from the store, take the stairs, do a little jig while running the vacuum, swing with your kids rather than sitting on the bench watching... be creative and most of all have fun.
  • Walk or crosstrain with another form of aerobic exercise 5 to 7 days a week.
  • Add strength training to your program two to three times a week.
  • Keep a log/or journal of all fitness activities, measurements, food intake, and most of all how your are feeling.
  • Quit dieting. Make healthy food choices, eat 4 or 5 times a day, and drink at least 64 oz. of water each day. I add 8 oz for every 20 minutes of exercise.
  • Find a friend or group for support, King Crossfit is a great place to find motivation.

MOVE! FOCUS ON FITNESS AND FUN RATHER THAN WEIGHT LOSS!

-Courtesy of Crossfit Corona

REST DAY

Make up a missed WOD, go for a walk or jog, play with your kids, ride your bike, do yard work, learn a new sport.....spread the word about KING CROSSFIT.

THROW AWAY THE SCALE!!!

Yes, you heard me. Get rid of that darn thing. And for that matter why are you looking at that BMI chart. For some reason you are convinced that is a better measure of your success than your weight. But ... it is the same thing. Neither take into consideration your body type, bone structure, or your muscle mass.If you are working out on a regular basis you have more muscle.

Does muscle weigh more than fat? Well, not exactly ... I mean a pound of muscle weighs a pound AND a pound of fat weighs a pound. So why do you always hear muscle weighs more than fat? Think of it this way - A pound of muscle is denser, firmer and takes up less space. Isn't that really your goal ... to be firmer and take up less space?

If you want to measure success there are better tools than the scale. Some are listed below:

  • How do your clothes fit
  • Tape measure
  • Body fat percent
  • Cholesterol
  • Improved level of activity
  • How you feel (mood, do you sleep better, etc.)

This time when you embark on a weight loss program change your attitude. Instead think of it as a fitness journey. Here are some things that will contribute to your success.

  • If you must weigh yourself do so only once a month.
  • Take your measurements and record them once a month.
  • Add more activity into everything you do. This means park further from the store, take the stairs, do a little jig while running the vacuum, swing with your kids rather than sitting on the bench watching... be creative and most of all have fun.
  • Walk or crosstrain with another form of aerobic exercise 5 to 7 days a week.
  • Add strength training to your program two to three times a week.
  • Keep a log/or journal of all fitness activities, measurements, food intake, and most of all how your are feeling.
  • Quit dieting. Make healthy food choices, eat 4 or 5 times a day, and drink at least 64 oz. of water each day. I add 8 oz for every 20 minutes of exercise.
  • Find a friend or group for support, King Crossfit is a great place to find motivation.

MOVE! FOCUS ON FITNESS AND FUN RATHER THAN WEIGHT LOSS!

-Courtesy of Crossfit Corona

REST DAY

Make up a missed WOD, go for a walk or jog, play with your kids, ride your bike, do yard work, learn a new sport.....spread the word about KING CROSSFIT.

THROW AWAY THE SCALE!!!

Yes, you heard me. Get rid of that darn thing. And for that matter why are you looking at that BMI chart. For some reason you are convinced that is a better measure of your success than your weight. But ... it is the same thing. Neither take into consideration your body type, bone structure, or your muscle mass.If you are working out on a regular basis you have more muscle.

Does muscle weigh more than fat? Well, not exactly ... I mean a pound of muscle weighs a pound AND a pound of fat weighs a pound. So why do you always hear muscle weighs more than fat? Think of it this way - A pound of muscle is denser, firmer and takes up less space. Isn't that really your goal ... to be firmer and take up less space?

If you want to measure success there are better tools than the scale. Some are listed below:

  • How do your clothes fit
  • Tape measure
  • Body fat percent
  • Cholesterol
  • Improved level of activity
  • How you feel (mood, do you sleep better, etc.)

This time when you embark on a weight loss program change your attitude. Instead think of it as a fitness journey. Here are some things that will contribute to your success.

  • If you must weigh yourself do so only once a month.
  • Take your measurements and record them once a month.
  • Add more activity into everything you do. This means park further from the store, take the stairs, do a little jig while running the vacuum, swing with your kids rather than sitting on the bench watching... be creative and most of all have fun.
  • Walk or crosstrain with another form of aerobic exercise 5 to 7 days a week.
  • Add strength training to your program two to three times a week.
  • Keep a log/or journal of all fitness activities, measurements, food intake, and most of all how your are feeling.
  • Quit dieting. Make healthy food choices, eat 4 or 5 times a day, and drink at least 64 oz. of water each day. I add 8 oz for every 20 minutes of exercise.
  • Find a friend or group for support, King Crossfit is a great place to find motivation.

MOVE! FOCUS ON FITNESS AND FUN RATHER THAN WEIGHT LOSS!

-Courtesy of Crossfit Corona

REST DAY

Make up a missed WOD, go for a walk or jog, play with your kids, ride your bike, do yard work, learn a new sport.....spread the word about KING CROSSFIT.

THROW AWAY THE SCALE!!!

Yes, you heard me. Get rid of that darn thing. And for that matter why are you looking at that BMI chart. For some reason you are convinced that is a better measure of your success than your weight. But ... it is the same thing. Neither take into consideration your body type, bone structure, or your muscle mass.If you are working out on a regular basis you have more muscle.

Does muscle weigh more than fat? Well, not exactly ... I mean a pound of muscle weighs a pound AND a pound of fat weighs a pound. So why do you always hear muscle weighs more than fat? Think of it this way - A pound of muscle is denser, firmer and takes up less space. Isn't that really your goal ... to be firmer and take up less space?

If you want to measure success there are better tools than the scale. Some are listed below:

  • How do your clothes fit
  • Tape measure
  • Body fat percent
  • Cholesterol
  • Improved level of activity
  • How you feel (mood, do you sleep better, etc.)

This time when you embark on a weight loss program change your attitude. Instead think of it as a fitness journey. Here are some things that will contribute to your success.

  • If you must weigh yourself do so only once a month.
  • Take your measurements and record them once a month.
  • Add more activity into everything you do. This means park further from the store, take the stairs, do a little jig while running the vacuum, swing with your kids rather than sitting on the bench watching... be creative and most of all have fun.
  • Walk or crosstrain with another form of aerobic exercise 5 to 7 days a week.
  • Add strength training to your program two to three times a week.
  • Keep a log/or journal of all fitness activities, measurements, food intake, and most of all how your are feeling.
  • Quit dieting. Make healthy food choices, eat 4 or 5 times a day, and drink at least 64 oz. of water each day. I add 8 oz for every 20 minutes of exercise.
  • Find a friend or group for support, King Crossfit is a great place to find motivation.

MOVE! FOCUS ON FITNESS AND FUN RATHER THAN WEIGHT LOSS!

-Courtesy of Crossfit Corona

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

052709 WOD

"Jackie"

1000m row
50 Thrusters
30 Pull-ups
For Time

052709 WOD

"Jackie"

1000m row
50 Thrusters
30 Pull-ups
For Time

052709 WOD

"Jackie"

1000m row
50 Thrusters
30 Pull-ups
For Time

052709 WOD

"Jackie"

1000m row
50 Thrusters
30 Pull-ups
For Time

Massaging Muscles Facilitates Recovery After Exercise.

". . .The massaged muscles recovered an estimated 60 percent of the strength after the four-day trial, compared to restoration of about 14 percent of strength in muscles that were exercised and then rested.

Similarly, the massaged muscles had fewer damaged muscle fibers and virtually no sign of white blood cells, the presence of which would indicate that the body was working to repair muscle damage, when compared with the rested muscles. The massaged muscles weighed about 8 percent less than the rested muscles, suggesting that the massage helped prevent swelling, Best said. . ."

Click here for complete article.
Massaging Muscles Facilitates Recovery After Exercise.

". . .The massaged muscles recovered an estimated 60 percent of the strength after the four-day trial, compared to restoration of about 14 percent of strength in muscles that were exercised and then rested.

Similarly, the massaged muscles had fewer damaged muscle fibers and virtually no sign of white blood cells, the presence of which would indicate that the body was working to repair muscle damage, when compared with the rested muscles. The massaged muscles weighed about 8 percent less than the rested muscles, suggesting that the massage helped prevent swelling, Best said. . ."

Click here for complete article.
Massaging Muscles Facilitates Recovery After Exercise.

". . .The massaged muscles recovered an estimated 60 percent of the strength after the four-day trial, compared to restoration of about 14 percent of strength in muscles that were exercised and then rested.

Similarly, the massaged muscles had fewer damaged muscle fibers and virtually no sign of white blood cells, the presence of which would indicate that the body was working to repair muscle damage, when compared with the rested muscles. The massaged muscles weighed about 8 percent less than the rested muscles, suggesting that the massage helped prevent swelling, Best said. . ."

Click here for complete article.
Massaging Muscles Facilitates Recovery After Exercise.

". . .The massaged muscles recovered an estimated 60 percent of the strength after the four-day trial, compared to restoration of about 14 percent of strength in muscles that were exercised and then rested.

Similarly, the massaged muscles had fewer damaged muscle fibers and virtually no sign of white blood cells, the presence of which would indicate that the body was working to repair muscle damage, when compared with the rested muscles. The massaged muscles weighed about 8 percent less than the rested muscles, suggesting that the massage helped prevent swelling, Best said. . ."

Click here for complete article.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Tuesday 05/26/2009 WOD

After a weekend full of BBQs and desserts, let's get to WORK.......

Fran's cousin "FRANK"

-10 Thrusters (95lb. men / 40lb. women)
-10 Pull ups
-10 Knees to elbows (Challenge: toes to bar)
-300m run

5 rounds for time

Tuesday 05/26/2009 WOD

After a weekend full of BBQs and desserts, let's get to WORK.......

Fran's cousin "FRANK"

-10 Thrusters (95lb. men / 40lb. women)
-10 Pull ups
-10 Knees to elbows (Challenge: toes to bar)
-300m run

5 rounds for time

Tuesday 05/26/2009 WOD

After a weekend full of BBQs and desserts, let's get to WORK.......

Fran's cousin "FRANK"

-10 Thrusters (95lb. men / 40lb. women)
-10 Pull ups
-10 Knees to elbows (Challenge: toes to bar)
-300m run

5 rounds for time

Tuesday 05/26/2009 WOD

After a weekend full of BBQs and desserts, let's get to WORK.......

Fran's cousin "FRANK"

-10 Thrusters (95lb. men / 40lb. women)
-10 Pull ups
-10 Knees to elbows (Challenge: toes to bar)
-300m run

5 rounds for time

Keep Nutrition Simple - Doesn't get any easier than this!

Eat meat and vegetables, nuts and seeds, some fruit, little starch and no sugar. Keep intake to levels that will support exercise but not body fat.

from CrossFit.com

Keep Nutrition Simple - Doesn't get any easier than this!

Eat meat and vegetables, nuts and seeds, some fruit, little starch and no sugar. Keep intake to levels that will support exercise but not body fat.

from CrossFit.com

Keep Nutrition Simple - Doesn't get any easier than this!

Eat meat and vegetables, nuts and seeds, some fruit, little starch and no sugar. Keep intake to levels that will support exercise but not body fat.

from CrossFit.com

Keep Nutrition Simple - Doesn't get any easier than this!

Eat meat and vegetables, nuts and seeds, some fruit, little starch and no sugar. Keep intake to levels that will support exercise but not body fat.

from CrossFit.com

Monday, May 25, 2009

Monday Pics

Monday Pics

Monday Pics

Monday Pics

A DAY OF...

...in remembrance of...
...in memory of...
...in honor of...
...because of your sacrifice we THANK YOU!



052509 HERO WOD

"MURPH"

Run 1 Mile
100 Pull Ups
200 Push Ups
300 Air Squats
Run 1 Mile

or Murph-lite( 1/2 Murph) or Smurph ( 1/4 Murph)
or do WOD as a Team of 2 - 4

3...2...1...GO

A DAY OF...

...in remembrance of...
...in memory of...
...in honor of...
...because of your sacrifice we THANK YOU!



052509 HERO WOD

"MURPH"

Run 1 Mile
100 Pull Ups
200 Push Ups
300 Air Squats
Run 1 Mile

or Murph-lite( 1/2 Murph) or Smurph ( 1/4 Murph)
or do WOD as a Team of 2 - 4

3...2...1...GO

A DAY OF...

...in remembrance of...
...in memory of...
...in honor of...
...because of your sacrifice we THANK YOU!



052509 HERO WOD

"MURPH"

Run 1 Mile
100 Pull Ups
200 Push Ups
300 Air Squats
Run 1 Mile

or Murph-lite( 1/2 Murph) or Smurph ( 1/4 Murph)
or do WOD as a Team of 2 - 4

3...2...1...GO

A DAY OF...

...in remembrance of...
...in memory of...
...in honor of...
...because of your sacrifice we THANK YOU!



052509 HERO WOD

"MURPH"

Run 1 Mile
100 Pull Ups
200 Push Ups
300 Air Squats
Run 1 Mile

or Murph-lite( 1/2 Murph) or Smurph ( 1/4 Murph)
or do WOD as a Team of 2 - 4

3...2...1...GO

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Pics for Week of May 18th

Pics and video of our first full week at the box -- Enjoy!





Untitled from Glen Dosono on Vimeo.

Pics for Week of May 18th

Pics and video of our first full week at the box -- Enjoy!





Untitled from Glen Dosono on Vimeo.

Pics for Week of May 18th

Pics and video of our first full week at the box -- Enjoy!





Untitled from Glen Dosono on Vimeo.

Pics for Week of May 18th

Pics and video of our first full week at the box -- Enjoy!





Untitled from Glen Dosono on Vimeo.

Sunday WOD


15 Min:
7 Medicine Ball Cleans
7 Wall Balls

Count your rounds..

3,2,1 GO!!!!!!

Can you say Lyoto Machida?


Sunday WOD


15 Min:
7 Medicine Ball Cleans
7 Wall Balls

Count your rounds..

3,2,1 GO!!!!!!

Can you say Lyoto Machida?


Sunday WOD


15 Min:
7 Medicine Ball Cleans
7 Wall Balls

Count your rounds..

3,2,1 GO!!!!!!

Can you say Lyoto Machida?


Sunday WOD


15 Min:
7 Medicine Ball Cleans
7 Wall Balls

Count your rounds..

3,2,1 GO!!!!!!

Can you say Lyoto Machida?


Friday, May 22, 2009

HAPPY BIRTHDAY ROZE!!!!

052209 WOD

5 Rounds for time

7 x Wall Ball Men 20#, Women 12#

9 x Burpee

12 x Thruster Men 95#, Women 65#

Function over Aesthetics

Anywhere you look these days, you’re bound to see images of lean, beautiful people in the media enjoying their lives and selling you every product under the sun. Our society has put the image of a svelte, toned individual on such a high pedestal that it has become an obsession for countless individuals. As a result of this, the multi-billion dollar fitness industry has exploded as so many people get in front of the mirrors in gyms across America doing bicep curls to try to look pretty.


Please don’t misunderstand me and think that I’m saying improving your physical appearance is a poor or misguided goal to have. I think it’s an excellent aim to want to lose a little fat or gain a few pounds of muscle and increase your overall level of health, and I realize that everyone who walks through our doors has a different and valid reason for doing so.


Rather, I’m saying that our brand of high-intensity workouts utilizing compound, multi-joint exercises (and not in the fashion of bicep curls with both arms) such as squats, deadlifts, and presses will lead to a much greater level of fitness and health than any circuit of machines at a traditional gym. And here’s the best part—the aesthetics will come with it. They always do. Your body will transform as you become stronger, leaner, and faster, and you’ll be developing the whole package of fitness while doing it.


The difference with our brand of training is that while training on a machine or in a way to isolate a muscle will work that muscle and make it look nice, that’s not how the human body is programmed to work. Our muscles work in concert with one another, and for the best results, that is how you should train. Training your muscles in isolation is kind of like buying a Lamborghini with a Geo Metro engine or going on a date with Paris Hilton. They both look nice, but when you go searching for the substance there’s just nothing there. That’s why you can see a big, buff guy injure himself picking up a 70 lb. box (something any of our ladies can do) because he has never trained to deadlift properly.


So the next time you’re up to your neck in a beast of a workout and you happen to get a lucid moment and wonder why you’re training the way you are, just know that you are stepping closer to your goals, and in a much more effective and valuable way than those guys and gals watching TV while they leg press.

-Written by Mark Riebel

HAPPY BIRTHDAY ROZE!!!!

052209 WOD

5 Rounds for time

7 x Wall Ball Men 20#, Women 12#

9 x Burpee

12 x Thruster Men 95#, Women 65#

Function over Aesthetics

Anywhere you look these days, you’re bound to see images of lean, beautiful people in the media enjoying their lives and selling you every product under the sun. Our society has put the image of a svelte, toned individual on such a high pedestal that it has become an obsession for countless individuals. As a result of this, the multi-billion dollar fitness industry has exploded as so many people get in front of the mirrors in gyms across America doing bicep curls to try to look pretty.


Please don’t misunderstand me and think that I’m saying improving your physical appearance is a poor or misguided goal to have. I think it’s an excellent aim to want to lose a little fat or gain a few pounds of muscle and increase your overall level of health, and I realize that everyone who walks through our doors has a different and valid reason for doing so.


Rather, I’m saying that our brand of high-intensity workouts utilizing compound, multi-joint exercises (and not in the fashion of bicep curls with both arms) such as squats, deadlifts, and presses will lead to a much greater level of fitness and health than any circuit of machines at a traditional gym. And here’s the best part—the aesthetics will come with it. They always do. Your body will transform as you become stronger, leaner, and faster, and you’ll be developing the whole package of fitness while doing it.


The difference with our brand of training is that while training on a machine or in a way to isolate a muscle will work that muscle and make it look nice, that’s not how the human body is programmed to work. Our muscles work in concert with one another, and for the best results, that is how you should train. Training your muscles in isolation is kind of like buying a Lamborghini with a Geo Metro engine or going on a date with Paris Hilton. They both look nice, but when you go searching for the substance there’s just nothing there. That’s why you can see a big, buff guy injure himself picking up a 70 lb. box (something any of our ladies can do) because he has never trained to deadlift properly.


So the next time you’re up to your neck in a beast of a workout and you happen to get a lucid moment and wonder why you’re training the way you are, just know that you are stepping closer to your goals, and in a much more effective and valuable way than those guys and gals watching TV while they leg press.

-Written by Mark Riebel

HAPPY BIRTHDAY ROZE!!!!

052209 WOD

5 Rounds for time

7 x Wall Ball Men 20#, Women 12#

9 x Burpee

12 x Thruster Men 95#, Women 65#

Function over Aesthetics

Anywhere you look these days, you’re bound to see images of lean, beautiful people in the media enjoying their lives and selling you every product under the sun. Our society has put the image of a svelte, toned individual on such a high pedestal that it has become an obsession for countless individuals. As a result of this, the multi-billion dollar fitness industry has exploded as so many people get in front of the mirrors in gyms across America doing bicep curls to try to look pretty.


Please don’t misunderstand me and think that I’m saying improving your physical appearance is a poor or misguided goal to have. I think it’s an excellent aim to want to lose a little fat or gain a few pounds of muscle and increase your overall level of health, and I realize that everyone who walks through our doors has a different and valid reason for doing so.


Rather, I’m saying that our brand of high-intensity workouts utilizing compound, multi-joint exercises (and not in the fashion of bicep curls with both arms) such as squats, deadlifts, and presses will lead to a much greater level of fitness and health than any circuit of machines at a traditional gym. And here’s the best part—the aesthetics will come with it. They always do. Your body will transform as you become stronger, leaner, and faster, and you’ll be developing the whole package of fitness while doing it.


The difference with our brand of training is that while training on a machine or in a way to isolate a muscle will work that muscle and make it look nice, that’s not how the human body is programmed to work. Our muscles work in concert with one another, and for the best results, that is how you should train. Training your muscles in isolation is kind of like buying a Lamborghini with a Geo Metro engine or going on a date with Paris Hilton. They both look nice, but when you go searching for the substance there’s just nothing there. That’s why you can see a big, buff guy injure himself picking up a 70 lb. box (something any of our ladies can do) because he has never trained to deadlift properly.


So the next time you’re up to your neck in a beast of a workout and you happen to get a lucid moment and wonder why you’re training the way you are, just know that you are stepping closer to your goals, and in a much more effective and valuable way than those guys and gals watching TV while they leg press.

-Written by Mark Riebel

HAPPY BIRTHDAY ROZE!!!!

052209 WOD

5 Rounds for time

7 x Wall Ball Men 20#, Women 12#

9 x Burpee

12 x Thruster Men 95#, Women 65#

Function over Aesthetics

Anywhere you look these days, you’re bound to see images of lean, beautiful people in the media enjoying their lives and selling you every product under the sun. Our society has put the image of a svelte, toned individual on such a high pedestal that it has become an obsession for countless individuals. As a result of this, the multi-billion dollar fitness industry has exploded as so many people get in front of the mirrors in gyms across America doing bicep curls to try to look pretty.


Please don’t misunderstand me and think that I’m saying improving your physical appearance is a poor or misguided goal to have. I think it’s an excellent aim to want to lose a little fat or gain a few pounds of muscle and increase your overall level of health, and I realize that everyone who walks through our doors has a different and valid reason for doing so.


Rather, I’m saying that our brand of high-intensity workouts utilizing compound, multi-joint exercises (and not in the fashion of bicep curls with both arms) such as squats, deadlifts, and presses will lead to a much greater level of fitness and health than any circuit of machines at a traditional gym. And here’s the best part—the aesthetics will come with it. They always do. Your body will transform as you become stronger, leaner, and faster, and you’ll be developing the whole package of fitness while doing it.


The difference with our brand of training is that while training on a machine or in a way to isolate a muscle will work that muscle and make it look nice, that’s not how the human body is programmed to work. Our muscles work in concert with one another, and for the best results, that is how you should train. Training your muscles in isolation is kind of like buying a Lamborghini with a Geo Metro engine or going on a date with Paris Hilton. They both look nice, but when you go searching for the substance there’s just nothing there. That’s why you can see a big, buff guy injure himself picking up a 70 lb. box (something any of our ladies can do) because he has never trained to deadlift properly.


So the next time you’re up to your neck in a beast of a workout and you happen to get a lucid moment and wonder why you’re training the way you are, just know that you are stepping closer to your goals, and in a much more effective and valuable way than those guys and gals watching TV while they leg press.

-Written by Mark Riebel

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Balance Challenge - Week 3 Pics

Fun times at the box with the Balance Challenge Crew!



Balance Challenge - Week 3 Pics

Fun times at the box with the Balance Challenge Crew!



Balance Challenge - Week 3 Pics

Fun times at the box with the Balance Challenge Crew!



Balance Challenge - Week 3 Pics

Fun times at the box with the Balance Challenge Crew!



King CF newest member!

King CrossFit welcomes our newest member, IFBB Pro and American Gladiator, Tanji Johnson.


Check out this video of Tanji casted as "Stealth" on NBC's revival of the American Gladiator.



Here's another video of Tanji doing her thang at the Arnold Classic.

King CF newest member!

King CrossFit welcomes our newest member, IFBB Pro and American Gladiator, Tanji Johnson.


Check out this video of Tanji casted as "Stealth" on NBC's revival of the American Gladiator.



Here's another video of Tanji doing her thang at the Arnold Classic.

King CF newest member!

King CrossFit welcomes our newest member, IFBB Pro and American Gladiator, Tanji Johnson.


Check out this video of Tanji casted as "Stealth" on NBC's revival of the American Gladiator.



Here's another video of Tanji doing her thang at the Arnold Classic.

King CF newest member!

King CrossFit welcomes our newest member, IFBB Pro and American Gladiator, Tanji Johnson.


Check out this video of Tanji casted as "Stealth" on NBC's revival of the American Gladiator.



Here's another video of Tanji doing her thang at the Arnold Classic.

05/20/09 WOD

The Bo Derek "10"

This is everyhing including the kitchen sink. This is to prepare for the beach, summer time is right around the corner. The idea is to do 10 movements, alternating between the upper body and lower body. 10 reps for each movement for 10 rounds for time (100 of everything). This is a tough one, so scale as needed and make sure to check your ego at the door!

-10 pull ups
-10 lunges
-10 push up
-10 box jumps (20")
-10 push press (bar @ 45lb)
-10 air squats
-10 KB Swings
-10 thrusters (bar @45lb)
-10 sit ups
-10 burpees

Ready 3,2,1......GO!

05/20/09 WOD

The Bo Derek "10"

This is everyhing including the kitchen sink. This is to prepare for the beach, summer time is right around the corner. The idea is to do 10 movements, alternating between the upper body and lower body. 10 reps for each movement for 10 rounds for time (100 of everything). This is a tough one, so scale as needed and make sure to check your ego at the door!

-10 pull ups
-10 lunges
-10 push up
-10 box jumps (20")
-10 push press (bar @ 45lb)
-10 air squats
-10 KB Swings
-10 thrusters (bar @45lb)
-10 sit ups
-10 burpees

Ready 3,2,1......GO!

05/20/09 WOD

The Bo Derek "10"

This is everyhing including the kitchen sink. This is to prepare for the beach, summer time is right around the corner. The idea is to do 10 movements, alternating between the upper body and lower body. 10 reps for each movement for 10 rounds for time (100 of everything). This is a tough one, so scale as needed and make sure to check your ego at the door!

-10 pull ups
-10 lunges
-10 push up
-10 box jumps (20")
-10 push press (bar @ 45lb)
-10 air squats
-10 KB Swings
-10 thrusters (bar @45lb)
-10 sit ups
-10 burpees

Ready 3,2,1......GO!

05/20/09 WOD

The Bo Derek "10"

This is everyhing including the kitchen sink. This is to prepare for the beach, summer time is right around the corner. The idea is to do 10 movements, alternating between the upper body and lower body. 10 reps for each movement for 10 rounds for time (100 of everything). This is a tough one, so scale as needed and make sure to check your ego at the door!

-10 pull ups
-10 lunges
-10 push up
-10 box jumps (20")
-10 push press (bar @ 45lb)
-10 air squats
-10 KB Swings
-10 thrusters (bar @45lb)
-10 sit ups
-10 burpees

Ready 3,2,1......GO!

CrossFit vs. the globo gym

Article below from Crossfit Journal. Sept. 1, 2002.

“The ideal gym would be located close to home or work, well equipped, clean and manned by knowledgeable and helpful staff. Our ideal gym would also not be overly crowded yet available to friends and family that we’d like to workout with. An ideal gym would be supportive of hard-core fitness a la Crossfit. As long as we’re dreaming it might also play only the music we want to hear.

Many of us are blessed with gyms we love dearly. If that’s your situation, great! For the rest of us our gyms are very different. Often the drive to the gym is 20-30 minutes coming and going, the music is worse than annoying, the staff are less than worthless, the place is packed with selector-ized equipment for which we’ve no use and the few pieces of equipment that you want to use and in near constant use.

Commute, parking, filth, rust, crowding, music, staff and members each can make what for us is an essential activity difficult or impossible. The “Spa” (big tip-off) in our neighborhood has over the years banned Olympic Lifting, all jumping, plyometrics, walking lunges and believe it or not- have as a matter of policy fostered an antagonistic attitude to serious training. No grunting, sweating, yelling or dropping weights allowed.

Our experience in not unique.

In part the problem is one of business model. Your average neighborhood health club or gym is predicated on a low to minimum wage, unskilled staff supervising hapless members. The idea is to fill the space with machines, staff it with high school kids and let “Muscle and Fiction” provide the technical guidance. The predominant model in commercial facilities is the bodybuilding model: all machines and isolation work. Machines and isolation movements require little or no knowledgeable instruction or coaching whereas serious Strength and Conditioning requires less equipment and considerable expertise on the part of the coaches.

You can see this in the National Strength and Conditioning Association’s, landmark Essentials of Strength and Conditioning where schematics of a university strength and conditioning facility and a commercial health club are shown. The schematics speak volumes. You’ll notice that the commercial facility is littered with equipment whereas the university strength and conditioning facility is sparse by comparison.

This has led some people to create a garage gym with everything you need.

Thank you CrossFit for that!

At KING CrossFit, we don't care how much you bench press or how big your biceps are. We have no machines, no mirrors, no cables, no chrome, and no gimmicks. CrossFit is not a bodybuilding program; we train for life, not looks. We leave the vanity and ego outside our gym and we focus on encouragement of one another and TEAMWORK. Our workouts will humble any ego that slips through the door. This atmosphere fosters positive peer influence, camaraderie, motivation and friendly competition. KING CF builds a sense of belonging and FAMILY. We offer a high level of personal attention with the addition of quality coaching that yields an intensity level that is unparalleled to all other gyms.

CrossFit vs. the globo gym

Article below from Crossfit Journal. Sept. 1, 2002.

“The ideal gym would be located close to home or work, well equipped, clean and manned by knowledgeable and helpful staff. Our ideal gym would also not be overly crowded yet available to friends and family that we’d like to workout with. An ideal gym would be supportive of hard-core fitness a la Crossfit. As long as we’re dreaming it might also play only the music we want to hear.

Many of us are blessed with gyms we love dearly. If that’s your situation, great! For the rest of us our gyms are very different. Often the drive to the gym is 20-30 minutes coming and going, the music is worse than annoying, the staff are less than worthless, the place is packed with selector-ized equipment for which we’ve no use and the few pieces of equipment that you want to use and in near constant use.

Commute, parking, filth, rust, crowding, music, staff and members each can make what for us is an essential activity difficult or impossible. The “Spa” (big tip-off) in our neighborhood has over the years banned Olympic Lifting, all jumping, plyometrics, walking lunges and believe it or not- have as a matter of policy fostered an antagonistic attitude to serious training. No grunting, sweating, yelling or dropping weights allowed.

Our experience in not unique.

In part the problem is one of business model. Your average neighborhood health club or gym is predicated on a low to minimum wage, unskilled staff supervising hapless members. The idea is to fill the space with machines, staff it with high school kids and let “Muscle and Fiction” provide the technical guidance. The predominant model in commercial facilities is the bodybuilding model: all machines and isolation work. Machines and isolation movements require little or no knowledgeable instruction or coaching whereas serious Strength and Conditioning requires less equipment and considerable expertise on the part of the coaches.

You can see this in the National Strength and Conditioning Association’s, landmark Essentials of Strength and Conditioning where schematics of a university strength and conditioning facility and a commercial health club are shown. The schematics speak volumes. You’ll notice that the commercial facility is littered with equipment whereas the university strength and conditioning facility is sparse by comparison.

This has led some people to create a garage gym with everything you need.

Thank you CrossFit for that!

At KING CrossFit, we don't care how much you bench press or how big your biceps are. We have no machines, no mirrors, no cables, no chrome, and no gimmicks. CrossFit is not a bodybuilding program; we train for life, not looks. We leave the vanity and ego outside our gym and we focus on encouragement of one another and TEAMWORK. Our workouts will humble any ego that slips through the door. This atmosphere fosters positive peer influence, camaraderie, motivation and friendly competition. KING CF builds a sense of belonging and FAMILY. We offer a high level of personal attention with the addition of quality coaching that yields an intensity level that is unparalleled to all other gyms.

CrossFit vs. the globo gym

Article below from Crossfit Journal. Sept. 1, 2002.

“The ideal gym would be located close to home or work, well equipped, clean and manned by knowledgeable and helpful staff. Our ideal gym would also not be overly crowded yet available to friends and family that we’d like to workout with. An ideal gym would be supportive of hard-core fitness a la Crossfit. As long as we’re dreaming it might also play only the music we want to hear.

Many of us are blessed with gyms we love dearly. If that’s your situation, great! For the rest of us our gyms are very different. Often the drive to the gym is 20-30 minutes coming and going, the music is worse than annoying, the staff are less than worthless, the place is packed with selector-ized equipment for which we’ve no use and the few pieces of equipment that you want to use and in near constant use.

Commute, parking, filth, rust, crowding, music, staff and members each can make what for us is an essential activity difficult or impossible. The “Spa” (big tip-off) in our neighborhood has over the years banned Olympic Lifting, all jumping, plyometrics, walking lunges and believe it or not- have as a matter of policy fostered an antagonistic attitude to serious training. No grunting, sweating, yelling or dropping weights allowed.

Our experience in not unique.

In part the problem is one of business model. Your average neighborhood health club or gym is predicated on a low to minimum wage, unskilled staff supervising hapless members. The idea is to fill the space with machines, staff it with high school kids and let “Muscle and Fiction” provide the technical guidance. The predominant model in commercial facilities is the bodybuilding model: all machines and isolation work. Machines and isolation movements require little or no knowledgeable instruction or coaching whereas serious Strength and Conditioning requires less equipment and considerable expertise on the part of the coaches.

You can see this in the National Strength and Conditioning Association’s, landmark Essentials of Strength and Conditioning where schematics of a university strength and conditioning facility and a commercial health club are shown. The schematics speak volumes. You’ll notice that the commercial facility is littered with equipment whereas the university strength and conditioning facility is sparse by comparison.

This has led some people to create a garage gym with everything you need.

Thank you CrossFit for that!

At KING CrossFit, we don't care how much you bench press or how big your biceps are. We have no machines, no mirrors, no cables, no chrome, and no gimmicks. CrossFit is not a bodybuilding program; we train for life, not looks. We leave the vanity and ego outside our gym and we focus on encouragement of one another and TEAMWORK. Our workouts will humble any ego that slips through the door. This atmosphere fosters positive peer influence, camaraderie, motivation and friendly competition. KING CF builds a sense of belonging and FAMILY. We offer a high level of personal attention with the addition of quality coaching that yields an intensity level that is unparalleled to all other gyms.

CrossFit vs. the globo gym

Article below from Crossfit Journal. Sept. 1, 2002.

“The ideal gym would be located close to home or work, well equipped, clean and manned by knowledgeable and helpful staff. Our ideal gym would also not be overly crowded yet available to friends and family that we’d like to workout with. An ideal gym would be supportive of hard-core fitness a la Crossfit. As long as we’re dreaming it might also play only the music we want to hear.

Many of us are blessed with gyms we love dearly. If that’s your situation, great! For the rest of us our gyms are very different. Often the drive to the gym is 20-30 minutes coming and going, the music is worse than annoying, the staff are less than worthless, the place is packed with selector-ized equipment for which we’ve no use and the few pieces of equipment that you want to use and in near constant use.

Commute, parking, filth, rust, crowding, music, staff and members each can make what for us is an essential activity difficult or impossible. The “Spa” (big tip-off) in our neighborhood has over the years banned Olympic Lifting, all jumping, plyometrics, walking lunges and believe it or not- have as a matter of policy fostered an antagonistic attitude to serious training. No grunting, sweating, yelling or dropping weights allowed.

Our experience in not unique.

In part the problem is one of business model. Your average neighborhood health club or gym is predicated on a low to minimum wage, unskilled staff supervising hapless members. The idea is to fill the space with machines, staff it with high school kids and let “Muscle and Fiction” provide the technical guidance. The predominant model in commercial facilities is the bodybuilding model: all machines and isolation work. Machines and isolation movements require little or no knowledgeable instruction or coaching whereas serious Strength and Conditioning requires less equipment and considerable expertise on the part of the coaches.

You can see this in the National Strength and Conditioning Association’s, landmark Essentials of Strength and Conditioning where schematics of a university strength and conditioning facility and a commercial health club are shown. The schematics speak volumes. You’ll notice that the commercial facility is littered with equipment whereas the university strength and conditioning facility is sparse by comparison.

This has led some people to create a garage gym with everything you need.

Thank you CrossFit for that!

At KING CrossFit, we don't care how much you bench press or how big your biceps are. We have no machines, no mirrors, no cables, no chrome, and no gimmicks. CrossFit is not a bodybuilding program; we train for life, not looks. We leave the vanity and ego outside our gym and we focus on encouragement of one another and TEAMWORK. Our workouts will humble any ego that slips through the door. This atmosphere fosters positive peer influence, camaraderie, motivation and friendly competition. KING CF builds a sense of belonging and FAMILY. We offer a high level of personal attention with the addition of quality coaching that yields an intensity level that is unparalleled to all other gyms.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

05/19/2009 WOD

7 Rounds for time:

7 Burpees

7 Box Jumps

7 Cleans (scale as needed: Medicine ball squat clean, 135lb ,115lb,etc..)

3,2,1 GO!!!!

HOW ARE YOUR SQUATS????



The Pronated Squat - So Ugly, So Dysfunctional

Written by C.J. Martin

Pronating (rolling to the arch of your foot) while squatting is an ugly beast. On the descent (or sometimes only on the ascent from the bottom) we see the knees cave in toward each other and the weight roll to the arch of the foot. Any hope of proper hip, knee and ankle alignment is gone. The result is an increased likelihood of knee injury and drastically decreased ability to generate power.
The pronated squat (or valgus squat - meaning that the knee drops inside the base of the foot) is symptomatic of a lack of hip and pelvic control. Muscle imbalances (too much quad and too little glute) and poor activation of the glute medius is typically to blame. Repeatedly grooving this nasty and deficient pattern can set you up for all sorts of maladies. When the knees cave in, pressure is shifted to the medial aspect of the knee (the inside of your knee) and all the precious ligaments that keep your knee from buckling in. Those cues you hear, “push your knees out” or “press into the outside edges of your feet,” are designed to ensure that everything stays nicely aligned in an optimal position.


But it’s not just the potential for injury that should scare you into assessing your squat. The bigger issue is efficiency. A proper squat is one that recruits the most powerful hip extensors (the glute max and hamstrings). But these monsters are virtually shut down when your knees cave together. Don’t believe me? Stand up from your computer right now, roll to the arch of your foot and draw your knees together and try to contract your glutes (i.e., squeeze your cheeks). It’s not easy. Now push your knees away from each other and roll to the outside ridge of your foot and squeeze your cheeks. It’s like magic. Those big powerful caboose muscles are what we want to power us through the squat, and they simply don’t work when the knees are rolling together and the feet are pronating.

-Courtesy of Crossfit Invicus

05/19/2009 WOD

7 Rounds for time:

7 Burpees

7 Box Jumps

7 Cleans (scale as needed: Medicine ball squat clean, 135lb ,115lb,etc..)

3,2,1 GO!!!!

HOW ARE YOUR SQUATS????



The Pronated Squat - So Ugly, So Dysfunctional

Written by C.J. Martin

Pronating (rolling to the arch of your foot) while squatting is an ugly beast. On the descent (or sometimes only on the ascent from the bottom) we see the knees cave in toward each other and the weight roll to the arch of the foot. Any hope of proper hip, knee and ankle alignment is gone. The result is an increased likelihood of knee injury and drastically decreased ability to generate power.
The pronated squat (or valgus squat - meaning that the knee drops inside the base of the foot) is symptomatic of a lack of hip and pelvic control. Muscle imbalances (too much quad and too little glute) and poor activation of the glute medius is typically to blame. Repeatedly grooving this nasty and deficient pattern can set you up for all sorts of maladies. When the knees cave in, pressure is shifted to the medial aspect of the knee (the inside of your knee) and all the precious ligaments that keep your knee from buckling in. Those cues you hear, “push your knees out” or “press into the outside edges of your feet,” are designed to ensure that everything stays nicely aligned in an optimal position.


But it’s not just the potential for injury that should scare you into assessing your squat. The bigger issue is efficiency. A proper squat is one that recruits the most powerful hip extensors (the glute max and hamstrings). But these monsters are virtually shut down when your knees cave together. Don’t believe me? Stand up from your computer right now, roll to the arch of your foot and draw your knees together and try to contract your glutes (i.e., squeeze your cheeks). It’s not easy. Now push your knees away from each other and roll to the outside ridge of your foot and squeeze your cheeks. It’s like magic. Those big powerful caboose muscles are what we want to power us through the squat, and they simply don’t work when the knees are rolling together and the feet are pronating.

-Courtesy of Crossfit Invicus