3.10.2016

FUNday 16.3

WORKOUT 16.3


Complete as many rounds and reps as possible in 7 minutes of:
10 power snatches
3 bar muscle-ups
Men use 75 lb.
Women use 55 lb.
Notes
This workout begins with the barbell on the floor and the athlete standing tall. At the call of “3, 2, 1 … go,” the athlete will perform 10 power snatches, then move to the pull-up bar to perform muscle-ups. After 3 reps, the athlete will move back to the barbell and begin their next round.
Your score will be the total number of repetitions completed within the 7-minute time cap.
Tiebreak
The scoring for this workout includes a tiebreak. At the end of each round, time should be marked. When you submit your final result, your score will be the number of reps completed. There will be another field in which you will enter the elapsed time at which you completed your last full round. In the case where 2 athletes have the same score (total number of reps), the athlete with the lower tiebreak time will be ranked higher.
Note: All tiebreak times must be reported in elapsed time, not in time remaining. If you are using a countdown timer, you must convert to elapsed time before reporting your score. For this reason, it is recommended you set your clock to count up.
Equipment
• Barbell
• Plates to load to the appropriate weight for your division
• Collars
• Pull-up bar
For each workout, be sure the athlete has adequate space to safely complete the workout. Clear the area of all extra equipment, people or other obstructions.
*The official weight is in pounds. For your convenience, the minimum acceptable weights in kilograms are 34 kg (75 lb.), 29 kg (65 lb.), 25 kg (55 lb.), 20 kg (45 lb.), and 15 kg (35 lb.).
Video Submission Standards
Prior to starting, film the plates and barbell to be used so the loads can be seen clearly. All video submissions should be uncut and unedited in order to accurately display the performance. A second person with a stopwatch should be in the frame throughout the entire workout. Shoot the video from an angle so all exercises can be clearly seen meeting the movement standards.

Workout 16.3 Variations
Rx’d (Rx’d Men, Masters Men 40-44, Masters Men 45-49, Masters Men 50-54, Rx’d Women, Masters Women 40-44, Masters Women 45-49, Masters Women 50-54, Teen Boys 16-17, Teen Girls 16-17)
Complete as many rounds and reps as possible in 7 minutes of:
10 power snatches
3 bar muscle-ups
Men use 75 lb.
Women use 55 lb.
Scaled (Scaled Men, Scaled Masters Men 40-44, Scaled Masters Men 45-49, Scaled Masters Men 50-54, Scaled Women, Scaled Masters Women 40-44, Scaled Masters Women 45-49, Scaled Masters Women 50-54)
Complete as many rounds and reps as possible in 7 minutes of:
10 power snatches
5 jumping chest-to-bar pull-ups
Men use 45 lb.
Women use 35 lb.
Masters (Masters Men 55-59, Masters Men 60+, Masters Women 55-59, Masters Women 60+)
Complete as many rounds and reps as possible in 7 minutes of:
10 power snatches
5 chest-to-bar pull-ups
Men use 65 lb.
Women use 45 lb.
Scaled Masters (Scaled Masters Men 55-59, Scaled Masters Men 60+, Scaled Masters Women 55-59, Scaled Masters Women 60+)
Complete as many rounds and reps as possible in 7 minutes of:
10 power snatches
5 jumping chest-to-bar pull-ups
Men use 45 lb.
Women use 35 lb.

3.09.2016

Thursday

Active Recovery - Rest Day

•Run, Walk, Bike, Row or ride the Airdyne for 15min @ 50% effort

•Mobilize for 15min 

•Take the rest of the time to work on movements that challenge you



#1 Learn to win first in your mind. This is accomplished by setting the right goals, establishing a visualization practice, and developing a daily habit of positivity and high-performance self-talk. The combination is extremely powerful in opening up a channel into your subconscious. 
#2 Develop an integrated discipline. Elevate your training to include five domains of intelligence that I call the Five Mountains: Physical, Mental, Emotional, Intuitive and the Kokoro Mountain. This is about training the whole person and how actualizing the whole is much, much great than the sum of its parts.
#3 Starving fear, feeding courage. Learning techniques to control stress and fear are paramount to leadership in business, in sports or on the battlefield. Controlling stress and fear are the initial steps of building a reservoir of the mental toughness that you’ll need on your path to your most challenging goals and dreams. 
As you engage the three pursuits above, you will begin to see expanding awareness, greater presence, and enhanced focus, all of which will be applied toward knocking down your most valuable targets. 
I do not yet have hard data to prove the above hypothesis, but we do have countless testimonials that my theory is accurate. That should be enough to motivate you to put it to the test.
Hooyah!
Mark Divine

3.08.2016

Wednesday

2 Person TEAM Relay for TIME:
 
400m Burpee / Med Ball Toss
    3 Rounds each of:
       10 Burpees
       15 Push-Press (95/65*)
400m Run
   3 Rounds each of:
       10 Power Cleans (95/65*)
       15 KB Swings (53/35*)
400m Run

  

Rest does not come from sleeping but from waking.
                                          -A Course In Miracles

3.07.2016

Tuesday

Double KB Front Squats: 5-5-5-5-5

   then...

*4 Rounds of:
 :30 Row
 :30 Rest
 :30 Airdyne
 :30 Rest

*focus on pacing and consistency 

 Aberdeen police officer was hurt in a crash on his way to back up two other officers early Monday — but with the officers' distress call still crackling over his radio, a department spokesman said, he got out and ran the last half-mile.

The other officers had stopped a car for a traffic violation near Post Road and Green Avenue about 1:30 a.m., when a passenger jumped out and discarded drugs, Aberdeen police spokesman Sgt. Will Reiber said. The officers struggled "over five minutes" to arrest him, Reiber said.

After crashing on the way to the scene, Officer Ryan Nelson was able to drive his damaged car off Route 22 onto Post Road, where he left it and ran to assist Officers Jeanette Giganti and Douglas Taddeo, police said. With help from Nelson, the officers were able to bring the scene under control.

"That's Ryan's mindset. The young man is not only mentally fit and prepared, he is physically fit," said Jason Neidig, president of the Harford County Municipal Lodge #128 of the Fraternal Order of Police. "It does not surprise me his thought process was to get to the two officers needing assistance."

Nelson is being treated at Maryland Shock Trauma Center in stable condition; Giganti and Taddeo were treated for minor injuries suffered in the struggle and released from Harford Memorial Hospital, police said. Reiber also responded to the scene but was not injured.

The suspect, Brandon Lee Watson, 34, of Aberdeen, also was taken to Harford Memorial Hospital, where he was treated and released to police.

He was charged with first- and second-degree assault, resisting arrest, possession of more than 10 grams of marijuana and possession of PCP, police said. No phone number was listed for him at his address on East Bel Air Road.

Watson previously pleaded guilty in 2005 to second-degree assault and was sentenced to a year in jail, according to online court records.

3.06.2016

Monday

Take another shot at 16.2 or...

AMRAP in 12min of:
  30 Hollow Rocks
  20 Box Jumps
  10 Sumo-Deadlift High Pulls (95/65*)