ROD 081811

ROD

Thursday, 18Aug11

 

Ready for Anything Training!!!!!

This class is a ….. let’s see what you’ve got, are you Bad Ass enough, leave nothing in the tank, punch, kick, jump, run, crawl, swing ….we throw anything at you 1 hour boxing circuit .

Your cardiorespiratory and muscle strength will benefit from our motivational, challenging and fun circuit training set to energetic music.

Let’s see what you’ve got!!!!

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Arthur De Vany – Evolutionary Fitness

by Chris. Average Reading Time: about 6 minutes.

Arthur De Vany is someone I owe a lot to. He got me on the right path with Fitness and Nutrition and his blog posts throughout the years have served me with a wealth of information. In this post I am going to sum up some of his basic principles and show you how to get started working out and eating how we evolved to for optimal health. He was featured yesterday in a great article from the Sunday Times (British Newspaper) check out the article online here……………..

His basic premise for nutrition is as follows:

Entree @ Frank Restaurant - 88 2nd Avenue

Cook by colour and texture so that meals look beautiful. If busy, skip meals with little worry. You don’t have to have three square meals a day. Snack on nuts or celery. Drink plenty of water. I also drink tea, coffee and a little wine.

Carbohydrates

Avoid bread, muffins, bagels, pasta, rice, potatoes, cereals, vegetable oils, beans or anything in a package — empty, high-calorie foods with a high carbohydrate content. These kind of foods are not only detrimental to your health, they are of no use to your body unless your glycogen stores are severely depleted from overtraining and participating in events like marathons.

Flavour

Spice up your food with fresh ingredients such as basil, garlic, parsley, rosemary, spring onions, avocados and nuts, and use various oils, such as olive oil, for flavour.

Celery adds texture (and is good for testosterone too). I personally love to add a high quality Balsamic vinegar to my salads.

Fruits

Fresh fruits of all sorts are good; I focus on melon and red grapes. Fruit juice is out. I have one or two fruits with most breakfasts; now and then a piece with other meals. Fruits are one of the best ways for quick fresh energy, I usually try to buy local fruit, and find it important to feel and smell the fruit as these are good indicators of the freshness.

Vegetables

Eat lots of fresh raw, steamed, sauteed or grilled vegetables. Never use frozen, canned or packaged vegetables. Although Devany does not like canned vegetables I find them better than nothing and really enjoy canned pumpkin with some fresh berries and cinnamon mixed in.

Protein

Eat plenty of meat, such as ribs, steak, bacon, pork loin, turkey and chicken, but trim fat from the edges. Fish, seafood and eggs are also good choices. These should be a mainstay of most meals, protein with meals will improve satiety and keep you feeling fuller longer.

Sample Menu

  • Breakfast  – Eat last night’s leftovers: turkey with jarlsberg cheese and fruit, bacon with red grapes, omelettes with rosemary, olives and spring onions. 2-3 Boiled eggs with a piece or two of fruit and coffee is a great breakfast.
  • Lunches – Usually salads, with red cabbage, romaine lettuce, spring onions, garlic, kale, broccoli or cauliflower, with salmon, tuna, turkey, chicken, pork or steak. Feel free to throw in a fresh piece of fruit or a punnet of berries.
  • Dinners – I sometimes eat a whole rack of ribs with salad and vegetables. Or a large steak, trimmed of fat. Almost always there is a beautiful salad and vegetables. I find it important to have my largest hit of protein in this final meal as it helps me wind down and relax, usually allowing me to sleep better. A  glass of wine or beer is also acceptable with dinner.

Don’t be afraid to skip a meal and prolong your overnight fasts, I often workout first thing in the morning eat a decent breafast  and eatwithin the hour afterwards. This is great for Growth Hormone release.

 

 

ROD 052511

ROD

Wednesday, 25May11

The 5:30 am class has been cancelled due to reasons beyond our control. Classes for that time slot will resume on Friday, 27May11.

 

Kettlebell Couplets

Work / rest ratio 20/10 work for 6 minutes at each couplet with a 1 minute rest in between each set of couplets.

  • Figure 8 to a hold 
  • KB cleans  1 round R / 1 round L  

            1 minute rest

  • KB rack squats  (3r / 3l)
  • H2H KB swings 

            1 minute rest

  • KB strict presses (3 rds R / 3 rds L) 
  • KB high pulls 

Go Heavy!!!

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Intrepid Boot Camp Circuit (7 pm class @ The Intrepid)

30 seconds work/30 seconds rest non-stop for 3 rounds.

  • Battling Ropes
  • Ball slams
  • Body squats
  • Hindu push ups
  • Alternating lunges 
  • Burpees
  • Split jumps
  • Walkouts

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HOW TO WEAR YOUR RUNNING SHOES?

To many newbies and occasional runners this might sound like a dumb question. But seasoned runners know that wearing the shoes right is just as important as wearing the right shoes.

Most of running related injuries comes from bad running technique and bad running shoes. Plenty was written on the subject of running technique, and we’ve talked about getting the right shoes. Now let’s discuss how to wear those shoes.

Dr. Romanov’s recommendation on this matter can be summed up as follows:

  • Wear running shoes in your size, i.e. don’t leave a lot of room for toes
  • Lace them up tight at the arch up to the ankle and loose at the toes and balls of your feet
  • Wear your shoes with thin socks, preferably made from cotton

That’s it! It sounds simple – but it makes all the difference. Now let’s break it down and talk about why you should wear shoes according to the above bullet points.

1. Wear running shoes in your size, i.e. don’t leave a lot of room for toes.
Why do people normally recommend wearing running shoes a size bigger? To avoid black nails, to avoid toe discomfort and to allow room for foot swelling. How do you get a black toenail? When your toes keep hitting the wall of the shoe inside when your foot slides during running. In Pose Method® your foot does not slide, it lands on the ball of the foot and then you lift it up and the cycle continues. So there is no need for extra toe room. Your running shoe needs to fit like a sock. How do you deal with swelling? Work your shoelaces. Read below.

2. Lace them up tight at the arch up to the ankle and loose at the toes and balls of your feet.
This is how you leave room for your toes and the forefoot when it’s width changes during running due to motion and swelling – loosen up your shoelaces at the toe and forefoot area. But tighten them up at the arch and up to the ankle to prevent your shoes from loosely hanging on your feet. It is important to have your shoes on just right because loose shoes will create the wrong perception and it will interfere with landing and pulling.

3. Wear your shoes with thin socks, preferably made from cotton.
While some runners prefer running sockless, Dr. Romanov recommends wearing thin socks for better running experience. Socks, especially cotton socks, absorb moisture well and protect your skin from the seams on the inside part of the shoe.

ROD 042811

ROD

Thursday, 28Apr11

Ready for Anything Training!!!!!

This class is a ….. let’s see what you’ve got, are you Bad Ass enough, leave nothing in the tank, punch, kick, jump, run, crawl, swing ….we throw anything at you 1 hour boxing circuit . 

Your cardiovascular and muscle strength will benefit from our motivational, challenging and fun circuit training set to energetic music.

Let’s see what you’ve got!!!!

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The morning of the High Rock, you should wake up about two to three hours before the challenge and eat your breakfast. Give your body some time to digest the food so it can be used in your challenge. Running a race distance of 10k or shorter you should drink a cup of water and a couple pieces of toast with jelly. Eating fruit, 1/2 cup oatmeal or anything else that is easy to digest would be great. Stay away from things that have a lot of fat and protein, because it does not digest as well

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“Failure to Prepare is Preparing to Fail”… The High Rock Challenge

As your trainers we want you to approach the High Rock Challenge intelligently. That means that we want you to perform optimally on the day of the challenge. Throughout your preperation for the race your participations in the ROD’s readied you for:

Building Your Energy Systems

There are three different energy systems that we prepared & trained you to build:

  1. Lactate threshold - This is your capacity to do high-intensity work for up to 3 minutes. The Energy System Delivery unit of your training program is a form of interval training in which you will alternate between periods of intense exercise with less strenuous periods.
  2. Lactate power – This is your body’s ability to do high-level work for periods of up to 12 seconds.
  3. Aerobic system – The ability to work beyond 3 minutes and help you recover from your bouts with the lactate threshold. For instance, if you’re sprinting up hills and walking down, you’re using the lactate system on the way up and the aerobic system on the way down. In this case, the aerobic system enhances your recovery from these intense bursts of energy.

Rest before the “Race”

Should you train or rest before the High Rock Challenge?

The best way to train a couple of days before an important race or a marathon is to stop training altogether. How long you can exercise a muscle depends on how much sugar you can store in that muscle before you start to exercise. Dr. Dave Costill of Ball State University asked one group of highly- trained runners to jog at a slow pace on the two days prior to measuring their muscle sugars and another group to not jog at all. The runners who didn’t jog stored the most sugar.

Studies on bicycle racers show that their muscles will load maximally with sugar when they take a very hard workout four days prior to racing and then ride easily for the next three days. However, running three or four days before a marathon will decrease the amount of sugar that muscles can store, presumably because hard running damages muscles and interferes with their ability to store sugar.

There is no evidence that a hard workout in the week before a race will help a runner during that race. Hard training tears down muscles and it take several days for the muscles to heal sufficiently to improve performance. Run at a slow pace on the fifth, fourth and third day before your event, and don’t run at all on the last two days. I would go as far as to swim laps at your local YMCA or JCC the day before the challenge.

ROD 041411

ROD

Thursday, 14Apr11

 

Ready for Anything Training!!!!!

 

This class is a ….. let’s see what you’ve got, are you Bad Ass enough, leave nothing in the tank, punch, kick, jump, run, crawl, swing ….we throw anything at you 1 hour boxing circuit . 

Your cardiovascular and muscle strength will benefit from our motivational, challenging and fun circuit training set to energetic music.

Let’s see what you’ve got!!!!___________________________________________________________________

Is Sugar Toxic?

Photo Illustration by Kenji Aoki for The New York Times
By GARY TAUBES
Published: April 13, 2011

On May 26, 2009, Robert Lustig gave a lecture called “Sugar: The Bitter Truth,” which was posted on YouTube the following July. Since then, it has been viewed well over 800,000 times, gaining new viewers at a rate of about 50,000 per month, fairly remarkable numbers for a 90-minute discussion of the nuances of fructose biochemistry and human physiology.

Lustig is a specialist on pediatric hormone disorders and the leading expert in childhood obesity at the University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine, which is one of the best medical schools in the country. He published his first paper on childhood obesity a dozen years ago, and he has been treating patients and doing research on the disorder ever since.

The viral success of his lecture, though, has little to do with Lustig’s impressive credentials and far more with the persuasive case he makes that sugar is a “toxin” or a “poison,” terms he uses together 13 times through the course of the lecture, in addition to the five references to sugar as merely “evil.” And by “sugar,” Lustig means not only the white granulated stuff that we put in coffee and sprinkle on cereal — technically known as sucrose — but also high-fructose corn syrup, which has already become without Lustig’s help what he calls “the most demonized additive known to man.” Read on…

ROD 040711

ROD

Thursday, 07Apr11

 

Ready for Anything Training!!!!!

 

The circuit is as follows: all 90 second rounds no rest…  last 30 seconds of each round  “I say you do”

  1. Bosu pushups w/clap 
  2. Prone Hip pops
  3. BAG
  4. 1/2 Burpees 
  5. Bosu alt. toe touches
  6. BAG 
  7. Band Pull-aparts (10x chest/10x shoulders)
  8. Lunge w/a high kick 
  9. BAG 
  10. Bench jumps 
  11. Slam Ball 
  12. BAG
  13.  V-ups
  14.  Alt. shoulder taps in pushup position

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The painful truth about trainers: Are running shoes a waste of money?

Thrust enhancers, roll bars, microchips…the $20 billion running – shoe industry wants us to believe that the latest technologies will cushion every stride. Yet in this extract from his controversial new book, Christopher McDougall claims that injury rates for runners are actually on the rise, that everything we’ve been told about running shoes is wrong – and that it might even be better to go barefoot…
Read more…

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ROD 033111

ROD

Thursday, 31Mar11

 

Ready for Anything Training!!!!!

 

The circuit is as follows: all 90 second rounds no rest…  last 30 seconds of each round  “I say you do”

  1. Bosu pushups w/clap 
  2. Prone Hip pops
  3. BAG
  4. 1/2 Burpees 
  5. Bosu alt. toe touches
  6. BAG 
  7. Band Pull-aparts (10x chest/10x shoulders)
  8. Lunge w/a high kick 
  9. BAG 
  10. Bench jumps 
  11. Slam Ball 
  12. BAG
  13.  V-ups
  14.  Alt. shoulder taps in pushup position

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Here is another Nxt Level trained athlete in action:

St. Joseph by-the-Sea 11, Notre Dame Academy 0

Staten Island Advance, March 28, 2011 7:25 p.m.

Alexa Tedeschi tossed a one-hitter, striking out six and Kristina Mazzarisi had three hits and two RBI as the Vikings opened their season with five-inning mercy rule win at home.

Megan Seaman and Noelle Mulligan had two hits and two RBI each.

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Ohh Boy!! Here is another Nxt Level trained athlete making news. To think in January of 2011 Taylor was diagnosed with a SLAP tear to her pitching shoulder.  SLAP tear is an injury to a part of the shoulder joint called the labrum. The shoulder joint is a ball and socket joint, similar to the hip; however, the socket of the shoulder joint is extremely shallow, and thus inherently unstable. Well with proper training and strengthening at Nxt Level, Taylor has more stability and strength to accomplish below: Cudo’s Taylor.

Sarcone powers Susan Wagner to 7-2 softball win at Petrides

Staten Island Advance, March 25, 2011 9:20 p.m.

Taylor Sarcone starred on the mound (complete game win) and at the plate (three hits, three RBI) in Susan Wagner’s 7-2 win at Petrides. – (Advance file photo by Hilton Flores)

Taylor Sarcone was a one-player wrecking crew for Susan Wagner in its PSAL opener at Petrides on Friday.

The junior had three hits and three RBI, and pitched a complete game to lead the Falcons to a 7-2 win in Sunnyside.

Wagner, which was coming off a season-opening non-league loss to Moore Catholic, jumped ahead early with two runs in the first. Back-to-back singles by Danielle Locke and Kristine Ciurcina were followed by Sacrone’s RBI ground-rule double and Dayna Williams’ run-producing fielder’s choice.

The Falcons added another two-spot in the fifth. Locke doubled, stole third and scored on Ciurcina’s fielder’s choice. Sarcone then doubled and would score on a Williams ground out.

Wagner broke it open in the seventh when Sarcone tripled in two runs and scored when the ball was thrown away.

Sarcone lost her bid for a shutout when the Panthers scored twice in the bottom of the frame, but she finished with a six-hitter and no walks, to go along with three strikeouts.

Note: We, at Nxt Level Performance, are very glad to hear that all of our athletes are doing so well. They are outstanding individuals and deserve the recognition they recieve for their individual efforts. They work hard in the gym so they can play the game they love with minimal risk of injury. So we want to give a shout out to Taylor and Alexa for a job well done.

ROD 021711

ROD

Thursday, 17Feb11

 

REMINDER: Our new schedule is posted but it doesn’t go into effect until Monday, February 28th.

READY FOR ANYTHING TRAINING!!!!

                 

The circuit is as follows: 90 second rounds no rest… last 30 seconds of each round  “I say you do”

  1. Bosu pushups w/clap 
  2. Jumping split squats
  3. BAG
  4. 1/2 Burpees 
  5. Bosu alt. toe touches
  6. BAG 
  7. Band Pull-aparts (10x chest/10x shoulders)
  8. KB Highpulls 
  9. BAG 
  10. Bench jumps 
  11. Kneeling Slams
  12. BAG
  13.  V-ups
  14.  Alt. shoulder taps in pushup position

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Stretching: The Truth

I have discussed with many of the members and young Athletes about the the types of stretching before and after a workout.  The question keeps coming up about which is better, static or dynamic stretching. I hope this article sheds some light on the differences. ~ Coach D

RETCHEN REYNOLDS
Published: October 31, 2008,  NY Times
WHEN DUANE KNUDSON, a professor of kinesiology at California State University, Chico, looks around campus at athletes warming up before practice, he sees one dangerous mistake after another. “They’re stretching, touching their toes. . . . ” He sighs. “It’s discouraging.”

If you’re like most of us, you were taught the importance of warm-up exercises back in grade school, and you’ve likely continued with pretty much the same routine ever since. Science, however, has moved on. Researchers now believe that some of the more entrenched elements of many athletes’ warm-up regimens are not only a waste of time but actually bad for you. The old presumption that holding a stretch for 20 to 30 seconds — known as static stretching — primes muscles for a workout is dead wrong. It actually weakens them. In a recent study conducted at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, athletes generated less force from their leg muscles after static stretching than they did after not stretching at all. Other studies have found that this stretching decreases muscle strength by as much as 30 percent. Also, stretching one leg’s muscles can reduce strength in the other leg as well, probably because the central nervous system rebels against the movements.

“There is a neuromuscular inhibitory response to static stretching,” says Malachy McHugh, the director of research at the Nicholas Institute of Sports Medicine and Athletic Trauma at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City. The straining muscle becomes less responsive and stays weakened for up to 30 minutes after stretching, which is not how an athlete wants to begin a workout.

THE RIGHT WARM-UP should do two things: loosen muscles and tendons to increase the range of motion of various joints, and literally warm up the body. When you’re at rest, there’s less blood flow to muscles and tendons, and they stiffen. “You need to make tissues and tendons compliant before beginning exercise,” Knudson says.

A well-designed warm-up starts by increasing body heat and blood flow. Warm muscles and dilated blood vessels pull oxygen from the bloodstream more efficiently and use stored muscle fuel more effectively. They also withstand loads better. One significant if gruesome study found that the leg-muscle tissue of laboratory rabbits could be stretched farther before ripping if it had been electronically stimulated — that is, warmed up.

To raise the body’s temperature, a warm-up must begin with aerobic activity, usually light jogging. Most coaches and athletes have known this for years. That’s why tennis players run around the court four or five times before a match and marathoners stride in front of the starting line. But many athletes do this portion of their warm-up too intensely or too early. A 2002 study of collegiate volleyball players found that those who’d warmed up and then sat on the bench for 30 minutes had lower backs that were stiffer than they had been before the warm-up. And a number of recent studies have demonstrated that an overly vigorous aerobic warm-up simply makes you tired. Most experts advise starting your warm-up jog at about 40 percent of your maximum heart rate (a very easy pace) and progressing to about 60 percent. The aerobic warm-up should take only 5 to 10 minutes, with a 5-minute recovery. (Sprinters require longer warm-ups, because the loads exerted on their muscles are so extreme.) Then it’s time for the most important and unorthodox part of a proper warm-up regimen, the Spider-Man and its counterparts.

“TOWARDS THE end of my playing career, in about 2000, I started seeing some of the other guys out on the court doing these strange things before a match and thinking, What in the world is that?” says Mark Merklein, 36, once a highly ranked tennis player and now a national coach for the United States Tennis Association. The players were lunging, kicking and occasionally skittering, spider-like, along the sidelines. They were early adopters of a new approach to stretching.

While static stretching is still almost universally practiced among amateur athletes — watch your child’s soccer team next weekend — it doesn’t improve the muscles’ ability to perform with more power, physiologists now agree. “You may feel as if you’re able to stretch farther after holding a stretch for 30 seconds,” McHugh says, “so you think you’ve increased that muscle’s readiness.” But typically you’ve increased only your mental tolerance for the discomfort of the stretch. The muscle is actually weaker.

Stretching muscles while moving, on the other hand, a technique known as dynamic stretching or dynamic warm-ups, increases power, flexibility and range of motion. Muscles in motion don’t experience that insidious inhibitory response. They instead get what McHugh calls “an excitatory message” to perform.

Dynamic stretching is at its most effective when it’s relatively sports specific. “You need range-of-motion exercises that activate all of the joints and connective tissue that will be needed for the task ahead,” says Terrence Mahon, a coach with Team Running USA, home to the Olympic marathoners Ryan Hall and Deena Kastor. For runners, an ideal warm-up might include squats, lunges and “form drills” like kicking your buttocks with your heels. Athletes who need to move rapidly in different directions, like soccer, tennis or basketball players, should do dynamic stretches that involve many parts of the body. “Spider-Man” is a particularly good drill: drop onto all fours and crawl the width of the court, as if you were climbing a wall. (For other dynamic stretches, see the sidebar below.)

Even golfers, notoriously nonchalant about warming up (a recent survey of 304 recreational golfers found that two-thirds seldom or never bother), would benefit from exerting themselves a bit before teeing off. In one 2004 study, golfers who did dynamic warm- up exercises and practice swings increased their clubhead speed and were projected to have dropped their handicaps by seven strokes over seven weeks.

Controversy remains about the extent to which dynamic warm-ups prevent injury. But studies have been increasingly clear that static stretching alone before exercise does little or nothing to help. The largest study has been done on military recruits; results showed that an almost equal number of subjects developed lower-limb injuries (shin splints, stress fractures, etc.), regardless of whether they had performed static stretches before training sessions. A major study published earlier this year by the Centers for Disease Control, on the other hand, found that knee injuries were cut nearly in half among female collegiate soccer players who followed a warm-up program that included both dynamic warm-up exercises and static stretching. (For a simple explanation visit http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lyDoCAZJtMA&feature=related.) And in golf, new research by Andrea Fradkin, an assistant professor of exercise science at Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania, suggests that those who warm up are nine times less likely to be injured.

“It was eye-opening,” says Fradkin, formerly a feckless golfer herself. “I used to not really warm up. I do now.”

ROD 010411

ROD

Tuesday, 04Jan11

 

Ultimate - 40 seconds of work 20 seconds of rest non-stop for 5 rounds

  • Bosu straight arm alt toe touches 5r/l
  • Burpees
  • Gate swings w alt crossed legs
  • Thrusters
  • Hanging runners (flexed arms)
  • Alt. split jump lunges

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Be always at war with your vices, at peace with your neighbors, and let each new year find you a better person  ~Benjamin Franklin

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Special – Ops

Getting In Shape the Military Way for 2011 

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203513204576048090528437846.html?mod=ITP_personaljournal_0

ROD 120910

ROD

Thursday, 09Dec10

 

Combat Thursday

Three rounds as follows:

 Round 1.

40 sec of work at each movement / 20 sec of burpees after each movement

Round 2.

30 sec of work at each movement / 15 sec of mtn climbers after each movement

Round 3.

20 sec of work at each movement / 10 sec of stationary sprints after each movement

Movements:

  1. Log push
  2. BAG
  3. Jump squats 
  4. Sandbag cleans
  5. BAG
  6. STOW 
  7. DB Clean & Overhead Press (alt arms)
  8. BAG 
  9. Band Sit-ups
  10. Med ball V-ups (alt legs)

                        1 minute rest between rounds… Giddy up!!!!

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People become really quite remarkable when they start thinking that they can do things. When they believe in themselves they have the first secret of success. – Norman Vincent Peale

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Recommended gloves for Combat Thursday.

http://www.google.com/search?q=MMA+gloves&sourceid=ie7&rls=com.microsoft:en-us:IE-SearchBox&ie=&oe=#q=MMA+gloves&hl=en&safe=active&sa=X&rls=com.microsoft:en-us:IE-SearchBox&biw=1004&bih=611&tbs=shop:1,brand:tapout&prmd=ivsn&ei=OCUBTecExd-WB_76oe4H&ved=0CJgBEMEJKAAwCw&fp=255a3570ffa5c64c

ROD 110410

ROD

Thursday, 04Nov10

 

Tabata Athletic Boxing

A timed 3 minutes at each station with NO REST between stations…. the last 30 seconds “We Say You Do”.

Run, Punch and Jump … a full-body experience that will leave you breathless.

  • Human Timer
  • M-I-T-T-S
  • Sandbag Cleans
  • B-A-G
  • Dead lifts
  • B-A-G 
  •  KB Rusian Twists
  • B-A-G
  • Log Jumps 
  • B-A-G
  • Handstand Walk outs
  • M-I-T-T-S
  • Slams

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“A little government and a little luck are necessary in life, but only a fool trusts either of them”

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