WOD: Tue 05.15.2018 “Triple Three”
WOD
“Triple Three”
10 Rounds:
300 Meter Row
30 Double Unders
300 Meter Run
WOD Guidance & Goal: xThere is a 49 minute cap on this workout. Choose a pace you can continue to move without slowing down. Do not go off sprinting BUT you should not be at a conversation pace. If you’re familiar with your 10k run pace, try to target that same feeling.
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Chalk Talk: Integrity
REPUBLISHED FROM THE CROSSFIT JOURNAL (10/19/2016)
Admit it: You’ve shaved a rep. Maybe you’ve even shaved entire rounds off workouts. You might have even lied about loads or times.
Guess what: Your coach noticed. And so did the other people in the class.
Thankfully, cheaters are relatively rare in CrossFit, perhaps because “so much of repugnant behavior is about trying to get something for nothing, and the CrossFitters inherently don’t believe that it’s possible,” as CrossFit Founder and CEO Greg Glassman said in 2009.
But physical suffering can erode loosely rooted morality, and we all know cheaters exist. By bending or breaking the rules, you can reduce or end the pain and perhaps take a whiteboard win, which can be very tempting when a grueling workout demands everything you have and some things you don’t. All athletes have come face to face with the moral dilemma of the 145th wall-ball shot that didn’t quite hit the line during Karen. A choice must be made at that point, and it’s sometimes hard to make the right one. But everyone in the community expects you to man and woman up by replacing the short shot with a good rep.

No moral gray area: Count it if it’s above the line. Don’t count it if it’s not. (John Maguire)
Coaches most definitely understand that sometimes you forget which round you’re in. It happens. We know that sometimes you accidentally write the wrong load or time on the whiteboard because your brain isn’t functioning correctly after a screaming match with Fran. We’re aware that you can’t always tell if you squatted below parallel exactly 300 times during Cindy. These are honest mistakes made by honest people.
But some athletes cheat. On purpose. Regularly.
And when you cheat, it is most assuredly noticed.
Maybe your dishonesty wasn’t noticed right away, and maybe you didn’t hear the discussion after you put your score on the board and left. But eventually your peers and your trainers figured you out. It doesn’t take too many “weren’t you ahead of him?” conversations to solve the mystery without the crime lab.
Here’s some info: Facebook hosts a group for CrossFit affiliate owners, and it’s almost 10,000 strong. In that group, trainers discuss all sorts of things, from cleaning gym mats to teaching muscle-ups. Despite the overwhelmingly large number of honest people in any gym, you usually don’t have to scroll very far to see a post like this: “An athlete at my gym is cheating, and members and coaches are starting to complain. It’s ruining the atmosphere. What do I do?”
Let it be said again: If you cheat, your coach noticed. You have fooled no one.
How did your coach catch you? Coaches know approximately how long it takes to complete certain workouts. Coaches also know your current abilities and level of fitness. When an athlete posts a score outside the expected range, a coach notices. That score might mean an athlete suddenly had a breakthrough—like Awkward Dude’s legendary set of 50 unbroken double-unders that came from nowhere and cut a full 10 minutes off his Filthy Fifty time. But in general, athlete progression follows a pattern any coach can see, and anomalies stand out. Big time.

Adrian “Boz” Bozman didn’t see your shallow squat, but he definitely knows about it, and he is very disappointed. (Alicia Anthony/CrossFit Journal)
Coaches also know how long it takes to do 21 thrusters, for example. It’s just an ability we’ve acquired after watching 2 million reps. Beyond that, we know every movement has a maximum cycle time. Even Ben Smith can only go so fast. When you’re working through 30 wall-ball shots to 10 ft. and you roll on to the next movement after 35 seconds, alarm bells go off in our heads because physics won’t allow that time. We’ve also coached three classes in a row, so we know that your rest break couldn’t possibly allow you to beat the guy who went unbroken two hours ago.
We sense disturbances in The Force, young Jedi.
Further, competitive athletes always count each other’s reps, either by absentminded habit, as a spot check or as part of an attempt to game your time and beat your ass. If you’re training at the end of the 5-p.m. class, it’s guaranteed your reps are being counted by a rival who arrived for the session at 6. Believe it, and rest assured that someone noticed your set of 17 kettlebell swings in the final round of Helen.
Some coaches attack the problem head on and simply tell athletes their scores aren’t correct. This, of course, addresses the issue but often leads to emphatic denials, arguments and bad feelings. Other coaches soft-sell it by questioning the athlete to see if the correct score was written on the board, which often leads to resentment and bad feelings. Some coaches ignore the issue because the athlete is ultimately cheating only him- or herself, but this, too, leads to bad feelings in members who note injustice on the leaderboard. Some coaches stand beside suspicious athletes and count their reps out loud, which usually leads to bad feelings and a lack of attention paid to other clients in the class.

Yes, the last inch matters a great deal. (Dave Re/CrossFit Journal)
The obvious point is that cheating causes bad feelings. You’re breaking the contract that binds all members of the community: We put a number on the board, you do that many reps, then you tell us how long it took. Accept a high five and have a protein shake. Same time tomorrow.
But some people cheat. They cheat because they’re lazy, they cheat because they want to win, they cheat because they lack moral character and don’t see the problem, they cheat because they’re embarrassed about their current fitness level, and so on. The reasons are endless—and they’re all bullshit.
So let it be said once more: We all notice when you cheat.
And we want you to stop.
About the Author: Mike Warkentin is the managing editor of the CrossFit Journal and the founder of CrossFit 204.
WOD: Mon 05.14.2018 Regional Event 5
WOD
“Regional Event 5”
50 Handstand Push Ups
50 Toes to Bar
50 Calorie Bike
50 Dumbbell Box Step Overs (24/20)(70/50)
50′ Right-Arm Dumbbell Overhead Lunge
50′ Left-Arm Dumbbell Overhead Lunge
WOD Guidance & Goal: This is one of the regional workouts for those athletes looking to qualify for the CrossFit Games. If 50 reps seems like A LOT of reps for some of these movements, then scale to 30 reps. If 70/50 dumbbells seems impossible, this is a great workout to scale the dumbbell weight with the intention of finishing the workout within a 17/22 minute cap. Weight will be limited by the single arm overhead lunge. You should be able to lunge 10 steps without having to place the dumbbell down.
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ENDURANCE
5 sets
500m fast
100m easy
3 min rest
5 sets
250m fast
50 easy
BARBELL CLUB
Clean and jerk
10 sets on the :90
2 reps at 85%
dumbbell row
5 sets of 10 each arm
WOD: Sat 05.12.2018 “Hold My Hand”
WOD
“Hold My Hand”
3 Rounds:
21 Calorie Row
15 Box Jumps (30/24)
12 Cleans (155/105)
6 Muscle Ups
3 Rope Climbs
WOD Guidance & Goal: Another long workout!! Aim to complete the row in :60-:90, keeping your stroke rate low and output high. Choose a weight for the cleans you can complete 4 in a row. Muscle up scaling options will be bar muscle ups, transitions or 6 pull ups + 6 dips. Rope climbs are with feet from the standing position.
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WOD: Fri 05.11.2018 “Carnage”
WOD
“Carnage”
400 Meter Run
100 Wall Balls (20/14)
75 Burpees
50 Calorie Bike
25 Toes to Bar
400 Meter Run
WOD Guidance & Goal: xGRINDER! Choose a pace that you can maintain for 20-25 minutes. Easy first run followed by a big set of wall balls. Smaller sets after that, but time your rests. You can always do one more burpee. Try to complete the bike in 3-5 minutes. Toes to bar chip away. And SMASH your final run.
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ENDURANCE
5 sets
500m fast
100m easy
3 min rest
5 sets
250m fast
50 easy
WOD: Thu 05.10.2018 Regional WOD 2
WOD
Hang Snatch + 2 Overhead Squats
5 sets
“2017 Regional WOD 2”
21-15-9
Dumbbell Snatch (50/35)
Ring Dip
WOD Guidance & Goal: xThe weightlifting portion of this workout is meant for technique work. Build to a heavy complex ONLY if ROM and technique are solid. The metcon is very fast. Aim to complete in less than 10 minutes.
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BARBELL CLUB
WOD: Wed 05.09.2018 Front Squat + Push Press
WOD
Front Squat
3 x 8 reps, across
Push Press
3 x 4 reps, across
WOD Guidance & Goal: Try to perform sets at 65-75% of your 1 Rep Max
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ENDURANCE
20 minute jog
3 min rest
3 sets
600m easy, 400m at 1 mile pr pace
rest :90 between sets
WOD: Tue 05.08.2018 “Wild Thing”
NEWS
- NO TEEN CLASS TODAY
WOD
“Wild Thing”
Teams of 2
Complete 3 Rounds Each of:
500 Meter Row
400 Meter Run
*One partner completes a round while the other rests.
WOD Guidance & Goal: ALL OUT efforts. There’s a rest built in. Go for it!
Post Total Time to Comments. Compare scores HERE.
WOD: Mon 05.07.2018 “In The Wild”
NEWS
- NO TEEN CLASS TOMORROW
WOD
“In the Wild”
AMRAP 20:
20 Burpee Pull Ups
20 Thrusters (75/55)
20/15 Calorie Bike
60 Double Unders
WOD Guidance & Goal: xChoose a steady pace on the burpee pull ups and a weight you can do 20 consecutive thrusters the first round. Aim to complete 2 rounds.
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ENDURANCE
5 on/2.5 off
4 on/2 off
3 on/1.5 off
2 on/1 off
1 on