HWPO
Hard Work Pays Off
(Sprache: Englisch)
Fittest Man on Earth Mathew Fraser, five-time winner of the CrossFit Games, shares his exercise program as well as insights into his CrossFit competition experiences and strategies.
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Fittest Man on Earth Mathew Fraser, five-time winner of the CrossFit Games, shares his exercise program as well as insights into his CrossFit competition experiences and strategies.
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1Strength
For my first five years of weightlifting, every part of my training was focused on technique. My starting position, my pull from the ground, my bar path as it traveled up everything had to be perfect, and I hated it. I started weightlifting because I wanted to get jacked, not to have the best form. But now, almost a decade after I quit that sport, I see how much that foundation paid off.
Just by looking at a workout, I know exactly how to adjust my technique. If the weight is light and the reps are high, I can shorten my movement and cycle the bar as quickly as possible. If the weight is heavy or I need to recover, I can switch to slow, efficient single reps. And whether I m fresh or at the end of a WOD, I never need to worry about not meeting the movement standards the infamous no rep.
However, technique alone wasn t enough to make me great. When I went to the Olympic Training Camp, I was the weakest guy by far, which is how I ended up breaking my back in two places. From then all the way through my CrossFit career, I ve had to dedicate myself to strength sometimes to the exclusion of all else. It s a long, repetitive process, but to be your best self, you need both strength and technique.
I m here to teach you both.
Strength Technique 101
My weightlifting career began by accident. In middle school, my best friend and I were on the football team, and for a few days each week, we d get to lift with the high school guys. There was no training program to follow, so each session we d max out our bench press and do bicep curls until we failed. At that age, your body s growing so quickly that you don t need good form to get stronger. Almost every time I lifted, I d hit a new personal record.
During one of these sessions, a football coach saw my passion and suggested to my dad, who along with my mom was a former Olympic athlete, that I train at an actual weightlifting club. At the time, I had no clue how any of the
... mehr
movements were supposed to look, and I didn t even know I was already doing a clean and jerk. I just thought it was cool to get the barbell from the ground over my head.
When my dad and I walked into that weightlifting club in Essex, Vermont, it was nothing like what I d expected. For starters, no one looked like the guys I had seen getting pumped at Muscle Beach. They weren t absolutely shredded, and a lot of them weren t even lifting weights. Instead, they had a PVC pipe in their hands and would do nothing more than bend forward at the waist and stand. Bend at the waist and stand. I didn t even see a rack of dumbbells, just a narrow room with white walls, drop ceilings, and twelve platforms made of unfinished plywood.
I expected I d train like we did at football practice no supervision, no form, just lifting as much as I could and dropping the bar when it was too much. Instead, Coach Polakowski told me to grab a broomstick.
For the next few weeks, all I worked on was the starting positions, which differ slightly depending on which of the two Olympic lifts you re doing: the snatch, where you get the barbell from the ground over your head in one motion, or the clean and jerk, where the bar goes first from the ground to your shoulders and then overhead.
Olympic weightlifting consists of two lifts: the snatch and the clean and jerk. For the snatch you get the barbell from the ground over your head in one motion. For the clean and jerk the bar goes first from the ground to your shoulders and then overhead. The starting position is slightly different for each.
Advanced Technique
I worked on my starting position for weeks, then Coach Pol let me move on to the next step, pulling the stick from the ground to my knees. It was slow, repetitive
When my dad and I walked into that weightlifting club in Essex, Vermont, it was nothing like what I d expected. For starters, no one looked like the guys I had seen getting pumped at Muscle Beach. They weren t absolutely shredded, and a lot of them weren t even lifting weights. Instead, they had a PVC pipe in their hands and would do nothing more than bend forward at the waist and stand. Bend at the waist and stand. I didn t even see a rack of dumbbells, just a narrow room with white walls, drop ceilings, and twelve platforms made of unfinished plywood.
I expected I d train like we did at football practice no supervision, no form, just lifting as much as I could and dropping the bar when it was too much. Instead, Coach Polakowski told me to grab a broomstick.
For the next few weeks, all I worked on was the starting positions, which differ slightly depending on which of the two Olympic lifts you re doing: the snatch, where you get the barbell from the ground over your head in one motion, or the clean and jerk, where the bar goes first from the ground to your shoulders and then overhead.
Olympic weightlifting consists of two lifts: the snatch and the clean and jerk. For the snatch you get the barbell from the ground over your head in one motion. For the clean and jerk the bar goes first from the ground to your shoulders and then overhead. The starting position is slightly different for each.
Advanced Technique
I worked on my starting position for weeks, then Coach Pol let me move on to the next step, pulling the stick from the ground to my knees. It was slow, repetitive
... weniger
Autoren-Porträt von Mat Fraser, Spenser Mestel
Mat Fraser with Spenser Mestel
Bibliographische Angaben
- Autoren: Mat Fraser , Spenser Mestel
- 2022, 320 Seiten, mit Abbildungen, Masse: 13,8 x 20,8 cm, Kartoniert (TB), Englisch
- Verlag: Rodale Books
- ISBN-10: 0593233751
- ISBN-13: 9780593233757
- Erscheinungsdatum: 25.02.2022
Sprache:
Englisch
Pressezitat
Praise for Mat FraserMat Fraser isn t just the first and only 5-time Fittest Man on Earth . . . he has cemented his status in many people s minds as the greatest CrossFit athlete in history. Rogue Fitness
The LeBron James of CrossFit. TMZ Sports
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