Why set time caps in workouts?
Ever wondered why we set time caps to workouts? Is it just a number your coaches pick out of thin air to ensure an adequate time frame to suffer for? Not quite.
There are actually a number of factors at play when determining a workout’s time frame. Firstly, the intended stimulus is the first port of call when designing each workout.
Does the coach want it to be a fast-paced, intense workout or do we want you to be lifting heavy weights that are going to slow you down and force you to take longer breaks? These could be in the forms of AMRAPS or rounds for time. Another workout option is a longer conditioning piece at a decreased intensity due to the volume of work required over the time domain. This could be in the form of an EMOM.
Regardless of AMRAP, RFT or EMOMs, time caps within each modality provide you with a guideline as to setting your pace to complete the prescribed work. With this in mind, your aim shouldn’t always be to Rx the workout, but to find modifications and weights that require effort, but allow you to complete the workout while working on your current skill set.
Remember,“Rx” means doing the workout at the prescribed weight/height, for the prescribed number of reps, to the full movement standard. Any workout that is completed otherwise is considered a scaled or modified. Remember, there is nothing wrong with completing it as such. In fact, if you are able to modify the workout to get the correct “dose-response,” then you are way ahead of those who simply try to go as close to Rx as possible without considering the workouts intent. Not sure how to do this? Simply ask your coach to help.
So, let's apply the above to a workout
Complete 10 rounds for time:
3 Barbell clean & jerks 5 Burpees over the bar
Rx - 80/55kg
Time cap for this workout is 10 minutes
To start, think about this; What’s really more important in the workout: the load, volume or intensity? In this workout, volume and intensity are the keys, and the weight (load) is a means to an end. This is going to be a super fast workout, with short, planned breaks.
The aim is to complete 10 rounds of 3 clean and jerks and 5 burpees over the bar in 10 minutes. Based on the time cap you would need to complete a round every 60 seconds. The burpees over the bar should be completed within 20-25 seconds. Here is the crunch point though, picking the right weight to use for the clean and jerks.
Knowing your 1-rep clean and jerk max it's always helpful. For instance, if you know that on a good day you can clean and jerk 100kg, then 80kg in this workout equates to 80%of your 1-rep max. Does 30 reps at that weight plus 50 burpees all within 10 minutes sound doable? If your weight selection only allows you to get through 6 rounds of work when 10 are required, then you are missing out on 40%of the workout. As coaches, we don’t expect you to finish every workout but we want your weight choices to get you as close to the finish line as possible.
If you choose weights that require 30-60 seconds of rest when it is a conditioning workout, you’re better off saving that weight for a workout dedicated to building strength and power.
In an ideal scenario, you should complete the workout under the required time cap while still using loads and movements that are going to challenge you. It might not always happen this way, but everyday is a school day when it comes to how you approach a workout.
Completing the workout, your forearms are pumped, your lungs feel like they are going to burst and you feel a real sense of accomplishment in getting that done.
Reasons for a time cap:
It's all about intensity. Putting a time cap on a workout forces you to ramp up your intensity so that you get the intended benefit/stimulus of the workout. Let’s take the workout Fran, everyone knows Fran. A workout of 21-15-9 Thrusters and Pull-Ups, this a sprint and should be completed in under 8 minutes. If you’re taking too long to finish the workout then you’re not getting the required stimulus of the workout. You’re probably resting more than you are working and therefore not getting much “intensity”.
Modify your workout, make the intensity relative. Time capped workouts force you to scale/modify the movements or weights to an appropriate load or volume that will allow you to finish the workout in the intended time and thereby achieving intended stimulus. Of course you might be able to do the Rx weight or movement for a handful of reps but you would not be able to complete the workout with that amount of volume. So then you should scale the Rx weight or movements so that you finish the workout in the allotted time or quicker. Therefore achieving the intended stimulus of the workout and feeling exactly the same as everyone in the room.
The workouts are programmed for specific loads, volume and intensity not just with that session in mind but with what the rest of the week looks like. We calculate the intensity by the amount of time we expect the workout to take with the ability to change. What it comes down to is what we are trying to achieve in the workout and how we want you to feel during and after the workout. Some workouts are designed to take 45-60 minutes (like Murph) and others less than 8 minutes (like Fran). Those workouts with a smaller amount of time required to complete the workout generally mean you will be working at a greater intensity than the longer sessions.
Your goal in every work should be to complete it.
Keep it simple, put a process in place that you know is going to be achievable and that you can maintain. Then get after it.
Connect with Andy:
ENGINE
Working on holding our MIKKOS score calories for longer blocks of time.
GYMNASTICS
This week, we will focus on rope climbing, doubleunders, and handstand push-ups in gymnastics. We will focus on the skill elements to help you with these movements! Whether you have these movements down or not, this class will help you improve in all these movements so you're ready to attack classes!
HYROX
We start to put together the pieces and do a mini HYROX
MOBILITY
We will go over full-body flow routines focusing on flexibility for full-body alignment.
PURE STRENGTH
In Pure Strength, we start the week with some percentage work on the close grip bench press, followed by heavy rows and a shoulder pump to finish. Wednesday, we worked up to a heavy single on the deadlift, with some tough drop sets followed by some heavy single leg work.
WEIGHTLIFTING
Snatch Focus this week, and we get into over-head squats before working into some Snatch High Pulls and Hang Snatch and then finish with some heavy Snatch singles!
Track Tuesday
Week two of our over/unders block, this week we move to 1km efforts.
Start time: 05:59 am
Session Length: 1 hour
Wednesday Ride
Wednesday ride* 5.59am BOTS. << use links/details from a few months back
4 X 8min at your best effort, what have you got?
Start time: 05:59am
Session Length: 1 hour
Location: BOTS - https://goo.gl/maps/6AwtJXW8nA45Cy9H8
The Coffee Run
Our classic builders set this week, 5min builds based on effort! A great tempo run.
Start time: 05:59 am
Session length: 1 hour
Location: Common Grounds, Jumeirah Beach Track
Saturday Ride
Back to a long ride today, 105km in the group with some structured intervals to follow.
Start time: 05:59am
Session Length: 1 hour
Location: BOTS - https://goo.gl/maps/6AwtJXW8nA45Cy9H8
Sunday long run
Team IFE on Tour are 3 weeks out from the marathon in Munich, so they need to run long. Why not come along and support with some miles to? Message sh@innerfight.com to find out more.
Start time: 05:29am
Session Length: 1 hour
Location: From InnerFight
Monday
Time: 5:59am & 5:59pm
Location: InnerFight
Session: Ladies Only Tempo
Today we will hold tempo for 2 long blocks and one shorter block. Keep asking yourself if you are running a 7/10 effort during this session.
Tuesday
Time: 5:59am
Location: Sports City
Session: Track Tuesday
This week our over/unders have increased from 800m to 1000m. Paces are the same as last week. This is your chance to run fast with the wider InnerFight Endurance Community and Coaches.
Wednesday
Time: 5:59am & 5:59pm
Location: InnerFight
Session: Ladies Only Intervals
We will be running our intervals around the Olivia apartments this week for 1 loop and then in the park for a shorter loop. Try and pick up the pace on the shorter park loops.
Friday
Time: 5:59am
Location: Kite Beach
Session: The Coffee Run
This week our efforts will build from 4/10 to 7/10 over 3 blocks of builders. You therefore have 3 attempts to hit that 7/10 feeling. We recommend that you do not start off too fast on this one.
Sunday
Time: 5:29am
Location: InnerFight
Session: Long Run
We will be running from InnerFight this Sunday. There are various options from 15km to 35km depending on which races you have coming up. If you would rather run for time, that is also fine! Routes will be shared in WhatsApp and on TrainingPeaks.
We will kick the week off on Monday with heavy single-leg work and move on to a fast interval workout. Tuesday is about the sandbags with a tough set of EMOMs followed by a partner workout. Wednesday, we have more focus on our strict pull-ups and then a gymnastics and running-based workout. Thursday, we will hit some technical work on a clean complex and follow it up with some heavy clean singles, followed by a tough and fast-paced workout with rowing cleans and wall balls. Friday, we finish the week with some heavy Jerks in the skill and then a gruelling chipper.
Monday:
Strength:
Walking Dumbell Lunges
Conditioning:
In a 2 min window
25 KB Sumo deadlift (2x24/16)
Amrap DU
rest 2 mins
In a 2 min window
16 Weighted Box Step Ups 1 x KB 24/16
AMRAP Cals Bike
rest 2 mins
x3
Tuesday:
Strength:
Building Weight Sandbag To Shoulder
Conditioning:
In Pairs
100 sandbags to shoulder (80/50)
Every 4 mins
1 car park lap farmers carry 2 x 32/24
Wednesday:
Strength:
A) Strict Pull Ups
B) KB Push Press + Pull Ups + Side Plank
Conditioning:
16 min amrap
Pool Run
10 burpee pull-ups
3 wall walks
Thursday:
Strength:
A) Clean Pull + Hang Squat Clean + Front Squat
B) Squat Clean
Conditioning:
For time:
500/400m row
30 squat clean (60/40)
50 WallBalls
Friday:
Strength:
A) Push Jerk
Conditioning:
It's an awesome triplet to end the week! Therapyyyyy!
Ever wondered why we set time caps to workouts? Is it just a number your coaches pick out of thin air to ensure an adequate time frame to suffer for? Not quite.
There are actually a number of factors at play when determining a workout’s time frame. Firstly, the intended stimulus is the first port of call when designing each workout.
Does the coach want it to be a fast-paced, intense workout or do we want you to be lifting heavy weights that are going to slow you down and force you to take longer breaks? These could be in the forms of AMRAPS or rounds for time. Another workout option is a longer conditioning piece at a decreased intensity due to the volume of work required over the time domain. This could be in the form of an EMOM.
Regardless of AMRAP, RFT or EMOMs, time caps within each modality provide you with a guideline as to setting your pace to complete the prescribed work. With this in mind, your aim shouldn’t always be to Rx the workout, but to find modifications and weights that require effort, but allow you to complete the workout while working on your current skill set.
Remember,“Rx” means doing the workout at the prescribed weight/height, for the prescribed number of reps, to the full movement standard. Any workout that is completed otherwise is considered a scaled or modified. Remember, there is nothing wrong with completing it as such. In fact, if you are able to modify the workout to get the correct “dose-response,” then you are way ahead of those who simply try to go as close to Rx as possible without considering the workouts intent. Not sure how to do this? Simply ask your coach to help.
So, let's apply the above to a workout
Complete 10 rounds for time:
3 Barbell clean & jerks 5 Burpees over the bar
Rx - 80/55kg
Time cap for this workout is 10 minutes
To start, think about this; What’s really more important in the workout: the load, volume or intensity? In this workout, volume and intensity are the keys, and the weight (load) is a means to an end. This is going to be a super fast workout, with short, planned breaks.
The aim is to complete 10 rounds of 3 clean and jerks and 5 burpees over the bar in 10 minutes. Based on the time cap you would need to complete a round every 60 seconds. The burpees over the bar should be completed within 20-25 seconds. Here is the crunch point though, picking the right weight to use for the clean and jerks.
Knowing your 1-rep clean and jerk max it's always helpful. For instance, if you know that on a good day you can clean and jerk 100kg, then 80kg in this workout equates to 80%of your 1-rep max. Does 30 reps at that weight plus 50 burpees all within 10 minutes sound doable? If your weight selection only allows you to get through 6 rounds of work when 10 are required, then you are missing out on 40%of the workout. As coaches, we don’t expect you to finish every workout but we want your weight choices to get you as close to the finish line as possible.
If you choose weights that require 30-60 seconds of rest when it is a conditioning workout, you’re better off saving that weight for a workout dedicated to building strength and power.
In an ideal scenario, you should complete the workout under the required time cap while still using loads and movements that are going to challenge you. It might not always happen this way, but everyday is a school day when it comes to how you approach a workout.
Completing the workout, your forearms are pumped, your lungs feel like they are going to burst and you feel a real sense of accomplishment in getting that done.
Reasons for a time cap:
It's all about intensity. Putting a time cap on a workout forces you to ramp up your intensity so that you get the intended benefit/stimulus of the workout. Let’s take the workout Fran, everyone knows Fran. A workout of 21-15-9 Thrusters and Pull-Ups, this a sprint and should be completed in under 8 minutes. If you’re taking too long to finish the workout then you’re not getting the required stimulus of the workout. You’re probably resting more than you are working and therefore not getting much “intensity”.
Modify your workout, make the intensity relative. Time capped workouts force you to scale/modify the movements or weights to an appropriate load or volume that will allow you to finish the workout in the intended time and thereby achieving intended stimulus. Of course you might be able to do the Rx weight or movement for a handful of reps but you would not be able to complete the workout with that amount of volume. So then you should scale the Rx weight or movements so that you finish the workout in the allotted time or quicker. Therefore achieving the intended stimulus of the workout and feeling exactly the same as everyone in the room.
The workouts are programmed for specific loads, volume and intensity not just with that session in mind but with what the rest of the week looks like. We calculate the intensity by the amount of time we expect the workout to take with the ability to change. What it comes down to is what we are trying to achieve in the workout and how we want you to feel during and after the workout. Some workouts are designed to take 45-60 minutes (like Murph) and others less than 8 minutes (like Fran). Those workouts with a smaller amount of time required to complete the workout generally mean you will be working at a greater intensity than the longer sessions.
Your goal in every work should be to complete it.
Keep it simple, put a process in place that you know is going to be achievable and that you can maintain. Then get after it.
Connect with Andy:
Track Tuesday
Week two of our over/unders block, this week we move to 1km efforts.
Start time: 05:59 am
Session Length: 1 hour
Wednesday Ride
Wednesday ride* 5.59am BOTS. << use links/details from a few months back
4 X 8min at your best effort, what have you got?
Start time: 05:59am
Session Length: 1 hour
Location: BOTS - https://goo.gl/maps/6AwtJXW8nA45Cy9H8
The Coffee Run
Our classic builders set this week, 5min builds based on effort! A great tempo run.
Start time: 05:59 am
Session length: 1 hour
Location: Common Grounds, Jumeirah Beach Track
Saturday Ride
Back to a long ride today, 105km in the group with some structured intervals to follow.
Start time: 05:59am
Session Length: 1 hour
Location: BOTS - https://goo.gl/maps/6AwtJXW8nA45Cy9H8
Sunday long run
Team IFE on Tour are 3 weeks out from the marathon in Munich, so they need to run long. Why not come along and support with some miles to? Message sh@innerfight.com to find out more.
Start time: 05:29am
Session Length: 1 hour
Location: From InnerFight
Monday
Time: 5:59am & 5:59pm
Location: InnerFight
Session: Ladies Only Tempo
Today we will hold tempo for 2 long blocks and one shorter block. Keep asking yourself if you are running a 7/10 effort during this session.
Tuesday
Time: 5:59am
Location: Sports City
Session: Track Tuesday
This week our over/unders have increased from 800m to 1000m. Paces are the same as last week. This is your chance to run fast with the wider InnerFight Endurance Community and Coaches.
Wednesday
Time: 5:59am & 5:59pm
Location: InnerFight
Session: Ladies Only Intervals
We will be running our intervals around the Olivia apartments this week for 1 loop and then in the park for a shorter loop. Try and pick up the pace on the shorter park loops.
Friday
Time: 5:59am
Location: Kite Beach
Session: The Coffee Run
This week our efforts will build from 4/10 to 7/10 over 3 blocks of builders. You therefore have 3 attempts to hit that 7/10 feeling. We recommend that you do not start off too fast on this one.
Sunday
Time: 5:29am
Location: InnerFight
Session: Long Run
We will be running from InnerFight this Sunday. There are various options from 15km to 35km depending on which races you have coming up. If you would rather run for time, that is also fine! Routes will be shared in WhatsApp and on TrainingPeaks.
We will kick the week off on Monday with heavy single-leg work and move on to a fast interval workout. Tuesday is about the sandbags with a tough set of EMOMs followed by a partner workout. Wednesday, we have more focus on our strict pull-ups and then a gymnastics and running-based workout. Thursday, we will hit some technical work on a clean complex and follow it up with some heavy clean singles, followed by a tough and fast-paced workout with rowing cleans and wall balls. Friday, we finish the week with some heavy Jerks in the skill and then a gruelling chipper.
Monday:
Strength:
Walking Dumbell Lunges
Conditioning:
In a 2 min window
25 KB Sumo deadlift (2x24/16)
Amrap DU
rest 2 mins
In a 2 min window
16 Weighted Box Step Ups 1 x KB 24/16
AMRAP Cals Bike
rest 2 mins
x3
Tuesday:
Strength:
Building Weight Sandbag To Shoulder
Conditioning:
In Pairs
100 sandbags to shoulder (80/50)
Every 4 mins
1 car park lap farmers carry 2 x 32/24
Wednesday:
Strength:
A) Strict Pull Ups
B) KB Push Press + Pull Ups + Side Plank
Conditioning:
16 min amrap
Pool Run
10 burpee pull-ups
3 wall walks
Thursday:
Strength:
A) Clean Pull + Hang Squat Clean + Front Squat
B) Squat Clean
Conditioning:
For time:
500/400m row
30 squat clean (60/40)
50 WallBalls
Friday:
Strength:
A) Push Jerk
Conditioning:
It's an awesome triplet to end the week! Therapyyyyy!
ENGINE
Working on holding our MIKKOS score calories for longer blocks of time.
GYMNASTICS
This week, we will focus on rope climbing, doubleunders, and handstand push-ups in gymnastics. We will focus on the skill elements to help you with these movements! Whether you have these movements down or not, this class will help you improve in all these movements so you're ready to attack classes!
HYROX
We start to put together the pieces and do a mini HYROX
MOBILITY
We will go over full-body flow routines focusing on flexibility for full-body alignment.
PURE STRENGTH
In Pure Strength, we start the week with some percentage work on the close grip bench press, followed by heavy rows and a shoulder pump to finish. Wednesday, we worked up to a heavy single on the deadlift, with some tough drop sets followed by some heavy single leg work.
WEIGHTLIFTING
Snatch Focus this week, and we get into over-head squats before working into some Snatch High Pulls and Hang Snatch and then finish with some heavy Snatch singles!
Ever wondered why we set time caps to workouts? Is it just a number your coaches pick out of thin air to ensure an adequate time frame to suffer for? Not quite.
There are actually a number of factors at play when determining a workout’s time frame. Firstly, the intended stimulus is the first port of call when designing each workout.
Does the coach want it to be a fast-paced, intense workout or do we want you to be lifting heavy weights that are going to slow you down and force you to take longer breaks? These could be in the forms of AMRAPS or rounds for time. Another workout option is a longer conditioning piece at a decreased intensity due to the volume of work required over the time domain. This could be in the form of an EMOM.
Regardless of AMRAP, RFT or EMOMs, time caps within each modality provide you with a guideline as to setting your pace to complete the prescribed work. With this in mind, your aim shouldn’t always be to Rx the workout, but to find modifications and weights that require effort, but allow you to complete the workout while working on your current skill set.
Remember,“Rx” means doing the workout at the prescribed weight/height, for the prescribed number of reps, to the full movement standard. Any workout that is completed otherwise is considered a scaled or modified. Remember, there is nothing wrong with completing it as such. In fact, if you are able to modify the workout to get the correct “dose-response,” then you are way ahead of those who simply try to go as close to Rx as possible without considering the workouts intent. Not sure how to do this? Simply ask your coach to help.
So, let's apply the above to a workout
Complete 10 rounds for time:
3 Barbell clean & jerks 5 Burpees over the bar
Rx - 80/55kg
Time cap for this workout is 10 minutes
To start, think about this; What’s really more important in the workout: the load, volume or intensity? In this workout, volume and intensity are the keys, and the weight (load) is a means to an end. This is going to be a super fast workout, with short, planned breaks.
The aim is to complete 10 rounds of 3 clean and jerks and 5 burpees over the bar in 10 minutes. Based on the time cap you would need to complete a round every 60 seconds. The burpees over the bar should be completed within 20-25 seconds. Here is the crunch point though, picking the right weight to use for the clean and jerks.
Knowing your 1-rep clean and jerk max it's always helpful. For instance, if you know that on a good day you can clean and jerk 100kg, then 80kg in this workout equates to 80%of your 1-rep max. Does 30 reps at that weight plus 50 burpees all within 10 minutes sound doable? If your weight selection only allows you to get through 6 rounds of work when 10 are required, then you are missing out on 40%of the workout. As coaches, we don’t expect you to finish every workout but we want your weight choices to get you as close to the finish line as possible.
If you choose weights that require 30-60 seconds of rest when it is a conditioning workout, you’re better off saving that weight for a workout dedicated to building strength and power.
In an ideal scenario, you should complete the workout under the required time cap while still using loads and movements that are going to challenge you. It might not always happen this way, but everyday is a school day when it comes to how you approach a workout.
Completing the workout, your forearms are pumped, your lungs feel like they are going to burst and you feel a real sense of accomplishment in getting that done.
Reasons for a time cap:
It's all about intensity. Putting a time cap on a workout forces you to ramp up your intensity so that you get the intended benefit/stimulus of the workout. Let’s take the workout Fran, everyone knows Fran. A workout of 21-15-9 Thrusters and Pull-Ups, this a sprint and should be completed in under 8 minutes. If you’re taking too long to finish the workout then you’re not getting the required stimulus of the workout. You’re probably resting more than you are working and therefore not getting much “intensity”.
Modify your workout, make the intensity relative. Time capped workouts force you to scale/modify the movements or weights to an appropriate load or volume that will allow you to finish the workout in the intended time and thereby achieving intended stimulus. Of course you might be able to do the Rx weight or movement for a handful of reps but you would not be able to complete the workout with that amount of volume. So then you should scale the Rx weight or movements so that you finish the workout in the allotted time or quicker. Therefore achieving the intended stimulus of the workout and feeling exactly the same as everyone in the room.
The workouts are programmed for specific loads, volume and intensity not just with that session in mind but with what the rest of the week looks like. We calculate the intensity by the amount of time we expect the workout to take with the ability to change. What it comes down to is what we are trying to achieve in the workout and how we want you to feel during and after the workout. Some workouts are designed to take 45-60 minutes (like Murph) and others less than 8 minutes (like Fran). Those workouts with a smaller amount of time required to complete the workout generally mean you will be working at a greater intensity than the longer sessions.
Your goal in every work should be to complete it.
Keep it simple, put a process in place that you know is going to be achievable and that you can maintain. Then get after it.
Connect with Andy:
Monday
Time: 5:59am & 5:59pm
Location: InnerFight
Session: Ladies Only Tempo
Today we will hold tempo for 2 long blocks and one shorter block. Keep asking yourself if you are running a 7/10 effort during this session.
Tuesday
Time: 5:59am
Location: Sports City
Session: Track Tuesday
This week our over/unders have increased from 800m to 1000m. Paces are the same as last week. This is your chance to run fast with the wider InnerFight Endurance Community and Coaches.
Wednesday
Time: 5:59am & 5:59pm
Location: InnerFight
Session: Ladies Only Intervals
We will be running our intervals around the Olivia apartments this week for 1 loop and then in the park for a shorter loop. Try and pick up the pace on the shorter park loops.
Friday
Time: 5:59am
Location: Kite Beach
Session: The Coffee Run
This week our efforts will build from 4/10 to 7/10 over 3 blocks of builders. You therefore have 3 attempts to hit that 7/10 feeling. We recommend that you do not start off too fast on this one.
Sunday
Time: 5:29am
Location: InnerFight
Session: Long Run
We will be running from InnerFight this Sunday. There are various options from 15km to 35km depending on which races you have coming up. If you would rather run for time, that is also fine! Routes will be shared in WhatsApp and on TrainingPeaks.
We will kick the week off on Monday with heavy single-leg work and move on to a fast interval workout. Tuesday is about the sandbags with a tough set of EMOMs followed by a partner workout. Wednesday, we have more focus on our strict pull-ups and then a gymnastics and running-based workout. Thursday, we will hit some technical work on a clean complex and follow it up with some heavy clean singles, followed by a tough and fast-paced workout with rowing cleans and wall balls. Friday, we finish the week with some heavy Jerks in the skill and then a gruelling chipper.
Monday:
Strength:
Walking Dumbell Lunges
Conditioning:
In a 2 min window
25 KB Sumo deadlift (2x24/16)
Amrap DU
rest 2 mins
In a 2 min window
16 Weighted Box Step Ups 1 x KB 24/16
AMRAP Cals Bike
rest 2 mins
x3
Tuesday:
Strength:
Building Weight Sandbag To Shoulder
Conditioning:
In Pairs
100 sandbags to shoulder (80/50)
Every 4 mins
1 car park lap farmers carry 2 x 32/24
Wednesday:
Strength:
A) Strict Pull Ups
B) KB Push Press + Pull Ups + Side Plank
Conditioning:
16 min amrap
Pool Run
10 burpee pull-ups
3 wall walks
Thursday:
Strength:
A) Clean Pull + Hang Squat Clean + Front Squat
B) Squat Clean
Conditioning:
For time:
500/400m row
30 squat clean (60/40)
50 WallBalls
Friday:
Strength:
A) Push Jerk
Conditioning:
It's an awesome triplet to end the week! Therapyyyyy!
ENGINE
Working on holding our MIKKOS score calories for longer blocks of time.
GYMNASTICS
This week, we will focus on rope climbing, doubleunders, and handstand push-ups in gymnastics. We will focus on the skill elements to help you with these movements! Whether you have these movements down or not, this class will help you improve in all these movements so you're ready to attack classes!
HYROX
We start to put together the pieces and do a mini HYROX
MOBILITY
We will go over full-body flow routines focusing on flexibility for full-body alignment.
PURE STRENGTH
In Pure Strength, we start the week with some percentage work on the close grip bench press, followed by heavy rows and a shoulder pump to finish. Wednesday, we worked up to a heavy single on the deadlift, with some tough drop sets followed by some heavy single leg work.
WEIGHTLIFTING
Snatch Focus this week, and we get into over-head squats before working into some Snatch High Pulls and Hang Snatch and then finish with some heavy Snatch singles!
Track Tuesday
Week two of our over/unders block, this week we move to 1km efforts.
Start time: 05:59 am
Session Length: 1 hour
Wednesday Ride
Wednesday ride* 5.59am BOTS. << use links/details from a few months back
4 X 8min at your best effort, what have you got?
Start time: 05:59am
Session Length: 1 hour
Location: BOTS - https://goo.gl/maps/6AwtJXW8nA45Cy9H8
The Coffee Run
Our classic builders set this week, 5min builds based on effort! A great tempo run.
Start time: 05:59 am
Session length: 1 hour
Location: Common Grounds, Jumeirah Beach Track
Saturday Ride
Back to a long ride today, 105km in the group with some structured intervals to follow.
Start time: 05:59am
Session Length: 1 hour
Location: BOTS - https://goo.gl/maps/6AwtJXW8nA45Cy9H8
Sunday long run
Team IFE on Tour are 3 weeks out from the marathon in Munich, so they need to run long. Why not come along and support with some miles to? Message sh@innerfight.com to find out more.
Start time: 05:29am
Session Length: 1 hour
Location: From InnerFight
Ever wondered why we set time caps to workouts? Is it just a number your coaches pick out of thin air to ensure an adequate time frame to suffer for? Not quite.
There are actually a number of factors at play when determining a workout’s time frame. Firstly, the intended stimulus is the first port of call when designing each workout.
Does the coach want it to be a fast-paced, intense workout or do we want you to be lifting heavy weights that are going to slow you down and force you to take longer breaks? These could be in the forms of AMRAPS or rounds for time. Another workout option is a longer conditioning piece at a decreased intensity due to the volume of work required over the time domain. This could be in the form of an EMOM.
Regardless of AMRAP, RFT or EMOMs, time caps within each modality provide you with a guideline as to setting your pace to complete the prescribed work. With this in mind, your aim shouldn’t always be to Rx the workout, but to find modifications and weights that require effort, but allow you to complete the workout while working on your current skill set.
Remember,“Rx” means doing the workout at the prescribed weight/height, for the prescribed number of reps, to the full movement standard. Any workout that is completed otherwise is considered a scaled or modified. Remember, there is nothing wrong with completing it as such. In fact, if you are able to modify the workout to get the correct “dose-response,” then you are way ahead of those who simply try to go as close to Rx as possible without considering the workouts intent. Not sure how to do this? Simply ask your coach to help.
So, let's apply the above to a workout
Complete 10 rounds for time:
3 Barbell clean & jerks 5 Burpees over the bar
Rx - 80/55kg
Time cap for this workout is 10 minutes
To start, think about this; What’s really more important in the workout: the load, volume or intensity? In this workout, volume and intensity are the keys, and the weight (load) is a means to an end. This is going to be a super fast workout, with short, planned breaks.
The aim is to complete 10 rounds of 3 clean and jerks and 5 burpees over the bar in 10 minutes. Based on the time cap you would need to complete a round every 60 seconds. The burpees over the bar should be completed within 20-25 seconds. Here is the crunch point though, picking the right weight to use for the clean and jerks.
Knowing your 1-rep clean and jerk max it's always helpful. For instance, if you know that on a good day you can clean and jerk 100kg, then 80kg in this workout equates to 80%of your 1-rep max. Does 30 reps at that weight plus 50 burpees all within 10 minutes sound doable? If your weight selection only allows you to get through 6 rounds of work when 10 are required, then you are missing out on 40%of the workout. As coaches, we don’t expect you to finish every workout but we want your weight choices to get you as close to the finish line as possible.
If you choose weights that require 30-60 seconds of rest when it is a conditioning workout, you’re better off saving that weight for a workout dedicated to building strength and power.
In an ideal scenario, you should complete the workout under the required time cap while still using loads and movements that are going to challenge you. It might not always happen this way, but everyday is a school day when it comes to how you approach a workout.
Completing the workout, your forearms are pumped, your lungs feel like they are going to burst and you feel a real sense of accomplishment in getting that done.
Reasons for a time cap:
It's all about intensity. Putting a time cap on a workout forces you to ramp up your intensity so that you get the intended benefit/stimulus of the workout. Let’s take the workout Fran, everyone knows Fran. A workout of 21-15-9 Thrusters and Pull-Ups, this a sprint and should be completed in under 8 minutes. If you’re taking too long to finish the workout then you’re not getting the required stimulus of the workout. You’re probably resting more than you are working and therefore not getting much “intensity”.
Modify your workout, make the intensity relative. Time capped workouts force you to scale/modify the movements or weights to an appropriate load or volume that will allow you to finish the workout in the intended time and thereby achieving intended stimulus. Of course you might be able to do the Rx weight or movement for a handful of reps but you would not be able to complete the workout with that amount of volume. So then you should scale the Rx weight or movements so that you finish the workout in the allotted time or quicker. Therefore achieving the intended stimulus of the workout and feeling exactly the same as everyone in the room.
The workouts are programmed for specific loads, volume and intensity not just with that session in mind but with what the rest of the week looks like. We calculate the intensity by the amount of time we expect the workout to take with the ability to change. What it comes down to is what we are trying to achieve in the workout and how we want you to feel during and after the workout. Some workouts are designed to take 45-60 minutes (like Murph) and others less than 8 minutes (like Fran). Those workouts with a smaller amount of time required to complete the workout generally mean you will be working at a greater intensity than the longer sessions.
Your goal in every work should be to complete it.
Keep it simple, put a process in place that you know is going to be achievable and that you can maintain. Then get after it.
Connect with Andy:
Ever wondered why we set time caps to workouts? Is it just a number your coaches pick out of thin air to ensure an adequate time frame to suffer for? Not quite.
There are actually a number of factors at play when determining a workout’s time frame. Firstly, the intended stimulus is the first port of call when designing each workout.
Does the coach want it to be a fast-paced, intense workout or do we want you to be lifting heavy weights that are going to slow you down and force you to take longer breaks? These could be in the forms of AMRAPS or rounds for time. Another workout option is a longer conditioning piece at a decreased intensity due to the volume of work required over the time domain. This could be in the form of an EMOM.
Regardless of AMRAP, RFT or EMOMs, time caps within each modality provide you with a guideline as to setting your pace to complete the prescribed work. With this in mind, your aim shouldn’t always be to Rx the workout, but to find modifications and weights that require effort, but allow you to complete the workout while working on your current skill set.
Remember,“Rx” means doing the workout at the prescribed weight/height, for the prescribed number of reps, to the full movement standard. Any workout that is completed otherwise is considered a scaled or modified. Remember, there is nothing wrong with completing it as such. In fact, if you are able to modify the workout to get the correct “dose-response,” then you are way ahead of those who simply try to go as close to Rx as possible without considering the workouts intent. Not sure how to do this? Simply ask your coach to help.
So, let's apply the above to a workout
Complete 10 rounds for time:
3 Barbell clean & jerks 5 Burpees over the bar
Rx - 80/55kg
Time cap for this workout is 10 minutes
To start, think about this; What’s really more important in the workout: the load, volume or intensity? In this workout, volume and intensity are the keys, and the weight (load) is a means to an end. This is going to be a super fast workout, with short, planned breaks.
The aim is to complete 10 rounds of 3 clean and jerks and 5 burpees over the bar in 10 minutes. Based on the time cap you would need to complete a round every 60 seconds. The burpees over the bar should be completed within 20-25 seconds. Here is the crunch point though, picking the right weight to use for the clean and jerks.
Knowing your 1-rep clean and jerk max it's always helpful. For instance, if you know that on a good day you can clean and jerk 100kg, then 80kg in this workout equates to 80%of your 1-rep max. Does 30 reps at that weight plus 50 burpees all within 10 minutes sound doable? If your weight selection only allows you to get through 6 rounds of work when 10 are required, then you are missing out on 40%of the workout. As coaches, we don’t expect you to finish every workout but we want your weight choices to get you as close to the finish line as possible.
If you choose weights that require 30-60 seconds of rest when it is a conditioning workout, you’re better off saving that weight for a workout dedicated to building strength and power.
In an ideal scenario, you should complete the workout under the required time cap while still using loads and movements that are going to challenge you. It might not always happen this way, but everyday is a school day when it comes to how you approach a workout.
Completing the workout, your forearms are pumped, your lungs feel like they are going to burst and you feel a real sense of accomplishment in getting that done.
Reasons for a time cap:
It's all about intensity. Putting a time cap on a workout forces you to ramp up your intensity so that you get the intended benefit/stimulus of the workout. Let’s take the workout Fran, everyone knows Fran. A workout of 21-15-9 Thrusters and Pull-Ups, this a sprint and should be completed in under 8 minutes. If you’re taking too long to finish the workout then you’re not getting the required stimulus of the workout. You’re probably resting more than you are working and therefore not getting much “intensity”.
Modify your workout, make the intensity relative. Time capped workouts force you to scale/modify the movements or weights to an appropriate load or volume that will allow you to finish the workout in the intended time and thereby achieving intended stimulus. Of course you might be able to do the Rx weight or movement for a handful of reps but you would not be able to complete the workout with that amount of volume. So then you should scale the Rx weight or movements so that you finish the workout in the allotted time or quicker. Therefore achieving the intended stimulus of the workout and feeling exactly the same as everyone in the room.
The workouts are programmed for specific loads, volume and intensity not just with that session in mind but with what the rest of the week looks like. We calculate the intensity by the amount of time we expect the workout to take with the ability to change. What it comes down to is what we are trying to achieve in the workout and how we want you to feel during and after the workout. Some workouts are designed to take 45-60 minutes (like Murph) and others less than 8 minutes (like Fran). Those workouts with a smaller amount of time required to complete the workout generally mean you will be working at a greater intensity than the longer sessions.
Your goal in every work should be to complete it.
Keep it simple, put a process in place that you know is going to be achievable and that you can maintain. Then get after it.
Connect with Andy: