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Showing posts with label kettlebell training. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kettlebell training. Show all posts

Thursday, March 20, 2014

CrossFit Raeda - the best gym in Harlow



Last weekend I finally got round to seeing the new venue in Harlow that is Crossfit Raeda



 Myself and owner Lee Ottey cleaning the place up



This is not your average gym and is run by some of the best coaches in the UK. What you have is a first class facility for weightlifting, strength and conditioning, athletic preparation and testing as well as regular classes to stay in shape. Annie and Lee have a wealth of experience as both competitive athletes and coaches having been an integral part of the GB handball team for the London 2012 Olympics. You will not find a venue run by someone who has dabbled in training, opened a gym and put shiny certificates all over the wall. These coaches are the real deal and have athletic testing sessions with light gates and a force mat to check progress and performance levels.






I had a lifting session there recently in prep for a competition and have to say that it was a very good session in a venue that I would like to train in as regularly as time and travel distance will allow being 60 miles away.




They have a set of 8 level platforms, Eleiko bars and competition plates hidden away and a fantastic wall-mount rig construction with an overhang ladder. You have the concept 2 rowers, a lot of good quality cast iron and competition steel kettlebells as well as the usual circuit stuff such as boxes, med balls and dumbbells. It is a great place to train, with first class coaches that will do more than just run you into the ground 3 times a week. They understand performance and will make sure you show steady progress, as injury free as possible, and with intelligently planned progressions based on your specific goals.



Aside from the Crossift classes the venue is also a recognised weightlifting club affiliated with British Weightlifting. Sessions are run for you to learn and improve these skills on a regular basis which will greatly improve your confidence when workouts contain these technical movements. The exercises are broken down into manageable chunks that allow you to fully understand what is happening at each aspect of the global movement so you begin to understand mechanics, power production, centre of mass and become a proficient lifter.



If you are within a 30 minute drive of this venue than I would simply make it your new training facility and finally get some professional coaching to achieve your goals. Far too many people zombie along in the local leisure centre looking and feeling no different to when they joined 3 years ago. Here you will be very surprised at what can be achieved when your time and efforts are specifically focussed on achieving your goals.

I also had one of my best ever training session there.

Go check them out!


Tel: +44 203 243 1020
Mob: 07738 210101 or 07958 359681



Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Scotland part 1 – kettlebell competition


 


Although I have been using kettlebells for many, many years – one of the first in the UK back in 2000/2001 - I have never really trained much for the competition side of it – Girevoy Sport. I put this right at the weekend and decided to compete in the Scottish championships in Glasgow.


Fantastic turnout and event!


The weekend had multiple agendas and was a combination of kettlebells and nutrition workshops that will be discussed in part 2. The reason I have never really taken to GS in the past is on multiple levels. I always enjoyed training for strength and endurance as separate events and never really combined these. I have also been competing in weightlifting for the last few years and the different energy system work really adds a lot of training time to the gym routine. However, I gave it a go and put myself on the line to get a decent baseline figure to check progress.



Now and then you find world champions at these events!

I decided to compete with the 16kg for the very simple reason that I have had a minor disc injury for 20 years and the double rack is the only position in any of my training that aggravates it. A pretty good reason to avoid GS until now! The other reason is that not being able to get both elbows to iliac crest means that the platform for rest is not present and the weights slowly fatigue the posterior section of the shoulder girdle in around 2-3 minutes. Having little expectation I racked the 16s and did my first 10. It did not feel too bad, but after a minute or so I knew that putting them down early was a very wise option and so at 30 reps they went back on the floor. Trying not to be hard on myself I would regard this performance as awful at best and I was not happy. My only option was to make some impact with the snatch and get some good number as it is my best event.


Off they go and Anna Plumridge of BoxBellFit.com got a Gold!

After the generous gap between events I got on the platform and started on my left hand as the timer began. I got the full 5 minutes left hand and with 85 reps switched sides. I did manage the full 10 minutes for possibly the first time and got 100 on my right. There were a few extra, but these were no counts as the fatigue made fixation quite tough at about 9:30 and so a few dropped short of the mark. 185 snatches was a PB for me and I was very happy with that. What made it event better is that it was enough to pull my score up for a bronze medal in my group and really made the day worth it.


Me with my bronze and some strange fingers that I hid away.

It taught me a lot about myself and also really encouraged me to take it further as most of the lifters I spoke to mention the jerk is much easier than snatch – same as Olympic lifting I guess – and with a jerk at rank 4 (16k 55) and snatch nearly CMS (32k 60) it is safe to say the foundations are there to make this an enjoyable journey.

Me, Russell Pearcy of KB3training.com. Steve Gordon of Tunovakettlebells.com and Anna.


Alexander Khvostov - world champion and elite lifter with the best coach in the world - Sergey Rudnev.

There is a shedload of trigger point, stretching and fascia release on the cards in order to get the elbows to rack eventually and also using the heavier weights will help pull the arms down lower on the torso. Like many things in life, you really understand what it is all about when you go out there and actively rise to the challenge. It was fun, it was educational and it will be repeated very soon. Now the real training begins as the analysis is complete and the program will take me forwards for future goals.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Big Heavy Kettlebell Training

Heavy, hard work and hands hurt!






I think this type of 10 minute strength work will stay in the program once a week!

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Kettlebell Pentathlon - see what you are made of!

The kettlebell pentathlon was designed by Valery Fedorenko in order to assess the strength and conditioning of participants. It is a paced event that has a fixed number of reps per exercise per time slot. 5 events are performed for 6 minutes with a 5 minute rest in between for a total time of 50 minutes.

The aim is to increase your overall score by increasing the weight you use for the exercises as the reps are fixed. Your score increases when you move up a kettlebell for some or all of the exercises as each weight has a corresponding number that creates your total score -

8kg - 1

12kg - 1.5

16kg - 2

20kg - 2.5

24kg - 3

28kg - 3.5

32kg - 4

36kg - 4.5

40kg - 5

44kg - 5.5

48kg - 6

So 120 cleans with the 16kg kettlebell would give you 240 points to your total. Go up to the 20kg next time and you will get 300 points and so on.

There is rumour that the table goes up to 72kg and it would be interesting to see this lifted for 6 minutes!

The exercises and reps per minutes are as follows -

Single arm clean - 20rpm

Single arm long cycle press - 10rpm

Single arm jerk - 20rpm

Single arm half snatch - 18rpm

Single arm push press - 20rpm

You can change hands as often as you wish, but cannot put the kettlebell down!

The rpm is the maximum reps. If you find you still had more in the tank then use a heavier bell. However, this tests how you deal with accumulated fatigue and a very brief relative recovery. You only have 5 minutes before you go again for what should be a near maximum effort. Performing too heavy on the first exercise will short change you for the remainder of the event so always go through the entire routine with a lighter weight to complete it and get an idea of how you perform based on the demands.


A video to explain the entire event is below -



The overall aim of the pentathlon is really to test yourself against the only real competitor that matters - yourself. Has your training improved you! It is also a great way to get a very different energy system workout compared to traditional GS with the biathlon and can be used for specific work capacity to develop a weaker event. Like anything, you get out what you put in and it could be personalised for whatever you are specifically training for with some imagination!

There is a rankings table so you can compare your superhero status and motivate yourself to get better -

For Men 

Low - less than 720

Average - 721 - 900

Good - 901 - 1080

High - 1081 - 1260

Extreme - 1261 - 1440

Superhuman - 1441 +


For Women

Low - less than 360

Average - 361 - 540

Good - 541 - 720

High - 721 - 900

Extreme - 901 - 1080

Superhuman - 1081 +



Have fun and feel free to post your scores below!

3/10/2012 - First Attempt 1320 points using 24/20/20/20/16 - really enjoyed it!

10/12/2012 - second attempt 1500 points using 32/20/20/20/20 - rank superhuman - very happy!

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Kettlebell Training goes live - kettlebell public workshops

The new website is finally live and selling. Although it has taken a long time it is worth it and houses a very powerful system that makes life nice and simple so I still have time to train!

After 2 months of compiling a database of gyms within a certain radius of where I now live, I currently have events booked in 12 locations/gyms and this should expand to close to 30 geographical locations from 2013 onwards.

So far we have

London (several)
Cambridge (several)
Oxford
Reading
Peterborough (several)
Bury St Edmunds
Bedford
Huntingdon
Gillingham
Basingstoke

Many events are now live and initially aimed at complete beginners so that they can get professional coaching on how correctly use and train with kettlebells. These workshops came to me after teaching many accredited courses where I realised that a less formal approach with no exams or heavy science would really benefit people that are serious about taking charge of their health and well-being. Whether at home with a DVD or in the gym, kettlebell have delivered exceptional results for thousands of people and it is my mission to spread just how good they are to anyone who will step forwards and take up the offer.

Courses can be found by clicking on my funky new green map of the south east of England below -


There is also some very good news on the consultancy side of my business and on the weightlifting for sports course that will be coming in soon enough. 

Busy as ever and feeling a sense of satisfaction that the engines are running!