WOD

How Rogue are you?

What is more exciting than getting some new equipment at the gym?! Seeing Andy in all his Rogue Glory "using" the new GHD!...wearing a Rogue hoodie, t-shirt & shorts all while holding a fancy Rogue water bottle! And not to forget the new bench sitting behind the GHD!

So, can you spot all of the Rogue logos in this picture? Take a close look...

Now try to find them all while thinking about how awesome it is to have a new GHD at the gym! I think your glutes are getting excited to try this thing out!

...and click here to find out how many Rogue logos are in this picture.

Snatch PR's For Lani and Scott

Lani and I have been working hard on our Olympic lifting since the Strength Specific Seminar and I really feel it has paid off in big ways.  For one I feel I have better control over my body and can exert a lot of force in gymnastic and kettlebell movements now.  

CrossFit says your fitness is based on your competency in the 10 general physical skills being:

1. Cardiovascular/respiratory endurance - The ability of body systems to gather, process, and deliver oxygen.

2. Stamina - The ability of body systems to process, deliver, store, and utilize energy.

3. Strength - The ability of a muscular unit, or combination of muscular units, to apply force.

4. Flexibility - the ability to maximize the range of motion at a given joint.

5. Power - The ability of a muscular unit, or combination of muscular units, to apply maximum force in minimum time.

6. Speed - The ability to minimize the time cycle of a repeated movement.

7. Coordination - The ability to combine several distinct movement patterns into a singular distinct movement.

8. Agility - The ability to minimize transition time from one movement pattern to another.

9. Balance - The ability to control the placement of the bodies center of gravity in relation to its support base.

10. Accuracy - The ability to control movement in a given direction or at a given intensity.

Now the first two...Cardiovascular/respiratory endurance and Stamina may not play a lot of influence in a 1 rep max but believe me the following 8 general physical skills are completely involved in oly lifting especially the Snatch.  No other movement you can find in life requires as much as this lift.  Nothing but Strength, extreme amounts of Flexibility (If you think you are flexible just try an overhead squat), Power (huge range of motion in a extremely short time frame), Speed, Coordination (Moving something fast and heavy requires lots of cooperation between a lot of different muscles), Agility (All explosive power moving straight up only to transition to a squat in a matter of nano-seconds) Balance, and finally Accuracy (This movement you need to have an accuracy of millimeters to complete a heavy lift).

So in conclusion, if you want to improve your fitness you need to work on your Oly-lifting.  Enjoy the PR's by Lani and I of 95 and 185 lbs respectively along with our misses at that weight.

New Year's Eve Party - hosted by Andy & Kayley!

For those of you not on Facebook (what?!), you are invited to a party on New Year's Eve!

Pull-up bars, squat sits...maybe a drink or two? Can you image a better way to ring in the new year?! I think not!

Please let Andy or Kayley know if you plan to join the awesomeness so you don't have to starve that evening!

When: Saturday, December 31, 2011 at 6:30pm until Sunday, January 1, 2012 at 8:30am

Where: Andy and Kayley's House (ask if you need the address)

Details: We will be hosting a New Years Eve party,we planning on cooking ribs. Kayley and Lani are going to do some side dishes. There will be a fridge full of beer, wine and champagne. Details are still up in the air, I will post more as I figure it out.

Fructose Foolishness

I came across this interesting article about sugar. This puts eating fruit into perspective. So if you want one easy way to clean up your diet, read this & maybe go throw that soda away...

http://whole9life.com/2011/11/fructose-foolishness/

Fructose Foolishness

Today’s post is an illustration of three important concepts.

1. Science can be confusing.
2. Numbers don’t always tell the truth.
3. Context matters.

Last week, we saw an article on the Yahoo! contributor network that seemed – upon reading the first paragraph, at least – right up our alley.  However, upon probing deeper into the logic (and the numbers), the conclusion proved so ludicrous, we thought maybe we’d accidentally huffed some paint.

Or, at the very least, the author had.

Fruit = Nature’s Soda, Dontcha Know

Here is an excerpt from the article, written by a PhD(!) and scientist(!!) from Tufts University(!!!).   (Read the full article here.)

“Consumption of HFCS (high fructose corn syrup) is not good for health. But, I’d like to add a bit of perspective: the main sugar found in fruit is fructose! …

One 20 oz. soda contains 240 calories and 65 grams of sugar. All of this sugar comes from HFCS, which is 55% fructose. To determine the amount of fructose in soda, we multiply 65 g by 0.55, to obtain 35.75 grams of fructose.

How much fructose is contained within fruit? When normalized to the same amount of calories as a 20 oz. soda, bananas contain 16.4 g of fructose; strawberries, 20.1 g; cherries, 20.8 g; blueberries, 21.2 g; oranges (navels), 21.6 g; peaches, 24.0 g; raisins, 24.0 g; pears 27.4 g; grapes, 28.6 g; apples, 32.0 g…

The amount of fructose found in fruit isn’t too far away from the amount found in calorie-matched soda.

Now, if Melissa’s Mom read this article (and she probably did, because she considers Yahoo! a pretty respectable source of information), she’d probably think, “I had no idea that fruit contained as much fructose as soda.”  And she’d conclude one of two things:  (a) fruit is not as healthy as I thought it was, or (b) soda isn’t as unhealthy as I thought it was.  And then Melissa’s Mom would either stop eating fruit because of all the sugar, or go back to drinking Pepsi, because drinking HFCS is practically the same as eating an apple.

This makes us mad.  Because it’s stuff like this that makes all of our Moms so confused about what to eat.  And it’s a shame when credible PhD scientists don’t present their information in a way that’s useful, practical and relevant for our Moms.  (And our Dads.  And our co-workers, and best friends, and grandparents.)

Let’s Do the Math

Let’s dig a little deeper into the logic our PhD used to arrive at his conclusions that “fruit isn’t that far off from soda.”

First, won’t debate the amount of fructose in a 20 oz. soda.  Nutritiondata.com confirms that a 20 oz. Pepsi (Mom’s soda of choice) contains 68 grams of total sugar – close enough to the reported 65 grams for our purposes.  The calculation as to of the amount of HFCS is also correct.

The wheels start to come off the bus in next paragraph.  Specifically, in this sentence:  “When normalized to the same amount of calories as a 20 oz. soda…”  Here’s where context matters.

A 20 oz. soda is a perfectly reasonable single serving size for most people.  It’s smaller than the “medium” sized soft drink at McDonalds, and 20 oz. bottles of Pepsi are sold by the case at big box warehouse stores like Sam’s Club and Costco.   Our point is, it’s not at all unusual for someone to drink an entire 20 oz. soda in one sitting.

When was the last time you saw someone eat FIVE BANANAS all at once?

They key to this hot, hot mess of a comparison is that the author “normalized” a person’s fruit intake to the same amount of calories (240) as a 20 oz. soda.  We postulate that there is nothing normal about eating that much fruit.

The Analysis

You want math?  We’ve got math.  Here’s what your fruit consumption would look like if you “normalized” your eating habits to compete with a 20 oz. soda.

Bananas:  1 medium banana has 105 calories, and 7.1 grams of fructose.  You’d have to eat 2-1/4 bananas to get to 240 calories, but more importantly, you’d have to eat 5 bananas to get the same dose of fructose as a 20 oz. soda.

Strawberries:  1 cup of strawberries has 49 calories, and 4.1 grams of fructose.  You’d have to eat almost 5 cups of strawberries to get to 240 calories, but more importantly, you’d have to eat nearly 9 cups of strawberries to get the same dose of fructose as a 20 oz. soda.

Cherries:  1 cherry has 5 calories, and 0.4 grams of fructose.  You would have to eat 48 cherries to get to 240 calories, but more importantly, you’d have to eat 89 cherries to get the same dose of fructose as a 20 oz. soda.

Apples:  1 medium apple has 95 calories, and 12.6 grams of fructose.  You would have to eat 2-1/2 apples to get to 240 calories, but more importantly, you’d have to eat almost 3 apples to get the same dose of fructose as a 20 oz. soda.

Must we continue?  The original argument states that when you “normalize” the data so you’re comparing apples to apples (pun intended), you’re getting just a smidge more fructose from your 20 oz. soda as you are from your fruit.  But in this case, the data has been, how do you say… massaged.  And numbers don’t always tell the truth if you remove reasonable context.  Which is why our Moms can be so easily confused, and why myths like “High fructose corn syrup is a healthy, all-natural choice” persist.

In Summary

Can eating too much fruit contribute to metabolic issues?  Yes, especially if you’re already insulin resistant, metabolically deranged and/or obese.  But the overall comparison between fruit and soda falls down on two points.  First, as demonstrated above, you’d have to eat an awful lot of fruit to measure up to the 20 oz. soda mentioned in this comparison.  Second, and more importantly, fruit isn’t just fructose. It’s also a rich source of vitamins, minerals, phytonutrients and fiber – things that make you healthier.  You can’t say the same for soda, which contain fructose + absolutely nothing that contributes to your health.  And we assure you, eating a few servings of fruit a day in the context of an otherwise healthy, anti-inflammatory diet and lifestyle (as we advocate) isn’t going to create metabolic dysfunction in anyone.

So go ahead and have an apple a day.  Or a cup of strawberries.  Or a banana.  As long as you’re not washing it down with a 20 oz. Pepsi, it’s 100.0% good.  (And we’ve got the numbers to back that up.)


All figures calculated from www.nutritiondata.com. Serving sizes as stated, fructose calculation = (total sucrose/2) + total fructose.

100 Burpee WOD for time...

...and the 100 Day Burpee 'Chalange' (that's French, B*tches!) ends.

Today marks the 100th day of the Burpee 'Chalange' at CrossFit Beloit. Well, it is actually the 101st day…but who's keeping track, anyhow?! That would be Peg, Mac  & Miller! They are the only 3 left standing after committing to this challenge 101 days ago!

WOD
100 Burpees for time

If you do not know how this type of insane challenge or 'chalange' works, it goes like this.

Day 1 - do 1 burpee
Day 2 - do 2 burpees
Day 3 - do 3 burpees...

I am sure you get it now…and you do this for 100 days. If you miss a day, you make it up. If you miss 5 days, you make them all up…yeah, it is a little insane!

how you make up missed days<--- this is what the white board looks like if you are playing catch-up

A few notable moments over the past 100 days are:

* Peg not missing one day. From how she describes it, her mornings went a little something like this.  1) Do burpees in the morning, 2) make bed, 3) finish burpees for the day. I'm not sure if the daily burpees or the daily bed-making is more crazy!

* Miller being a little behind in the challenge and catching up by doing 800 burpees in one night! It took about 1 hour & 40 minutes. Seriously.

* Mac finishing his last 90+ burpees AFTER the 100 Burpee for time WOD this evening!

 You guys rock! 5050 burpees that took up more than one quarter of the year. Talk about commitment!

Mac, Peg & Miller finish up their burpees