While working at the Attitude Nation Gym in Charlotte, NC I was asked to answer a few interview questions concerning CrossFit and my thoughts on a variety of topics. Really interesting stuff... but of course I am biased. Take a read and see what you think...
There are those in the Strength and Conditioning field that do not agree with Crossfit, for a multitude of reasons. They believe that the body's CNS was not designed for high repetition Olympic Lifts paired with other heavy compound movements as well as CrossFit's lack of assessments on its members which leads to a high number of injuries, What are your thoughts on this?
When speaking about CrossFit people say, "If you train for everything, you become great at nothing." What are your feelings about this? Do you find this statement to be true?
You recently left New Jersey to become the Head ANP Coach at the Attitude Nation. What are your experiences like at the gym? What have you learned from Jon and Donny, as well as Jessica and Travis mash? How have they developed you as a coach?
What do you think is the most important thing Donny Shankle has taught you?
How and why did you get into CrossFit?
My brother in law Frank, an
Army Ranger and absolute workout LEGEND, started telling me about CrossFit in
2007. He was doing SealFit workouts, and
when I saw them and thought, “Dude that shit looks IMPOSSIBLE!” I instantly
become intrigued. I started researching
CrossFit and after a few YouTube videos and a trip to the nearest box (which at
the time was 30 minutes away) I was totally hooked.
I fell in love with it
because CrossFit filled a void in my life.
Not just physically, but mentally and emotionally as well. I was depressed and unhappy with the way my
life was going and my confidence was dwindling with each passing day. CrossFit reminded me that nothing or no one
had control over me or my happiness… that happiness was a choice and all I had
to do was make that choice every day.
Just like the workouts, it was up to me to move the weight, do another
pull up, and run one more sprint. No one
was going to do that for me and I loved knowing I had that control over my mind
and my body.
What do you think CrossFit has done for the sport of Weightlifting, if anything at all?
What do you think CrossFit has done for the sport of Weightlifting, if anything at all?
The knee jerk response here
is that CrossFit has done wonders for weightlifting. While I do believe that to be true, it has
not come without some growing pains. In
the beginning, there was a lot of really bad weightlifting performed in
CrossFit boxes all over the world.
Videos were surfacing of people doing the most God awful snatches and
clean and jerks… all in the name of a faster “Grace” or “Isabel’ time. Trainers didn’t know how to teach the
movements but still had no problem programming them in workouts. I think this hurt weightlifting and turned
both CrossFitters away from weightlifting and weightlifters away from CrossFit
in the early years.
But things have changed for
the better in recent years. With guys
like Jon North going to CrossFit gyms literally
every single weekend to teach his style of weightlifting and educate the
masses, with the popularity of guys like Donny Shankle and Kendrick Farris,
with social media now being flooded with videos from the Attitude Nation,
Catalyst Athletics, Cal Strength, and MDUSA, there is so much more accessible
and quality information out there.
CrossFitters have taken advantage of all of this and have made leaps and
bounds across the board in weightlifting.
Now, you have countless CrossFitters hanging up their board shorts and
Nanos for a singlet and some Romaleos.
CrossFit, as a result, has helped bring the great sport of weightlifting
into the spotlight and will hopefully help grow the support.
There are those in the Strength and Conditioning field that do not agree with Crossfit, for a multitude of reasons. They believe that the body's CNS was not designed for high repetition Olympic Lifts paired with other heavy compound movements as well as CrossFit's lack of assessments on its members which leads to a high number of injuries, What are your thoughts on this?
I think when asking these
types of questions, you have to specify who the athlete is. Am I training Rich Froning or Jason
Khalipa? Or am I training Bob the local
CPA who is trying to lose a few pounds before his 15 year high school
reunion? With the former, I do not
believe there is anything these guys can’t do or shouldn’t do. They are athletes who are competing in what
is now a sport (like it or not) to win lots of money. In order to win they will have to be able to do
everything from triathlons to max effort clean and jerk attempts (all during
the same weekend mind you) and countless other tests in between. These guys train hard to be able to withstand
the rigors of high rep movements and as we have seen, they have done so very,
very well.
However in the case of the
latter, there is no need for him to perform 30 snatches as fast as he can. I can obtain high levels of fitness and help
our friend Bob achieve his goals with a much smaller risk of injury utilizing
other movements. Would I still teach
this individual how to snatch?
Absolutely. And I would progress
him in resistance (weight) as his ability improved.
It is like training a kid
for JV high school football compared to an NFL athlete. Both are playing football. But I do not need my JV kid duplicating some
of the drills and techniques used during training for the NFL.
I would also like to add
that people need to chill out. It’s
funny, I would have people make this whole argument about high reps being
dangerous and then tell me how they love to go skiing and surfing and play
rugby in a men’s league and pickup basketball… I am sorry, but is there not a
risk of injury doing those things? “Yea but I enjoy them…” Well guess what:
some people enjoy lifting as much weight as they can as fast as they can. To each their own.
As far as the assessment
process, I believe CrossFit gyms assess their members every single day,
starting from day one at Foundations / On Ramp.
During this time trainers are able to observe athletes move through
every range of motion in a controlled environment. They can see missing range of motion in a
squat, they can see poor thoracic mobility in a press, and they can see things
like glute activation and proper bracing mechanisms. In CrossFit we use the athletes movement to
tell us what will need to be focused on and we can then share that with the
athlete, bringing awareness to him /her and allowing him to work on these
things each day in the gym.
When speaking about CrossFit people say, "If you train for everything, you become great at nothing." What are your feelings about this? Do you find this statement to be true?
When you train for
everything, you become great at doing everything. In other words, training for CrossFit will
make you better at CrossFit.
If you want to be a better
football player… play football.
If you want to be a better
tennis player… play tennis.
With that being said, there
are so many aspects of CrossFit that have tremendous carry over to other sports
and can assist in you becoming great at that specific sport.
CrossFit will not, by
itself, make you great at anything specific.
But as a part of a program it can ABSOLUTELY help.
For instance, the mental
aspect of getting through a CrossFit workout can help train an athlete to be
mentally tough in the fourth quarter of a game or the third period in a
match. When you continually train your
body to push through your limitations and train outside your comfort zones –
something CrossFit workouts regularly ask you to do – you will see benefits on
any kind of playing field.
Also, the emphasis CrossFit
puts on weightlifting and strength development.
Long gone are the days where CrossFit only means running around for 45
plus minutes every day. Heavy squats and
cleans are a part of most programming.
This type of training can and will certainly help any athlete become
great at their sport.
You recently left New Jersey to become the Head ANP Coach at the Attitude Nation. What are your experiences like at the gym? What have you learned from Jon and Donny, as well as Jessica and Travis mash? How have they developed you as a coach?
There are NO WORDS to
describe the experience I have been blessed with working alongside people like
Jon, Jess, Donny and Travis. Their
knowledge, their experience, their insight… it’s just remarkable. I do not think there is a seminar or
certification in the world that could have taught me more in such a short
time. Whether it was about technique or
life lessons, everyone here has shared with me so much knowledge.
I always strive to become a
better coach, to always try and learn and grow to be able to better serve my
athletes. Being around everyone here has
taken that learning and growth to an entirely new level. Every day I am improving leaps and bounds
because of the people I am surrounded by and I am just so grateful and
fortunate for the opportunity.
What do you think is the best thing about CrossFit?
The worst thing?
I believe CrossFit has
gotten so many things right. What they
have done to help change the face of fitness is nothing short of
miraculous. The best thing CrossFit has
done in my opinion is take people away from isolation movements and machines
and shown them the value and efficacy of compound, functional movements such as
squats and deadlifts. It opened the mass
public’s eyes to sports like weightlifting, powerlifting and gymnastics and
allowed them to become involved in these sports.
It’s hard to say a business
as successful as CrossFit has done much wrong, but I do have some issues with
what it has evolved into. My biggest
concern is the lack of quality control in the various affiliates opening up all
over. I believe that CrossFit is safe
and applicable to anyone but only if you have the proper coaching and
instruction. That doesn’t just mean
teaching air squats, but knowing how to program and how to control a large
class. It means knowing how to keep
people safe while helping them continually improve. This is no easy task and too often it is put
in the hands of ill-equipped and unprepared “coaches”.
Why do you think that CrossFit has such a bad reputation among college professors as well at physical therapists?
Why do you think that CrossFit has such a bad reputation among college professors as well at physical therapists?
With all due respect, I do
not automatically defer to the opinions of professors or therapists. I have spoken to plenty of professors and
therapists that were (for lack of a better phrase) fools and disagreed with
their opinions vehemently. I guess we
can just add these people to the list.
CrossFit does not warrant a
“bad reputation” because of its methodology and its application.
Where CrossFit does
unfortunately find itself in some hot water, is when an unqualified instructor
attempts to teach / coach movements and workouts he / she is not prepared to
lead. This leads to poor instruction and
ultimately will cause injuries, in the worst case scenario. But this does not give the right for someone
to make a blanket statement that CrossFit is bad.
After all, CrossFit is
weightlifting. Powerlifting. Endurance.
Gymnastics. Are all of these
things “bad”?
And if a few videos of
someone with bad snatch technique means an entire movement is “bad”, then where
is the same outcry about the COUNTLESS videos of people destroying themselves
in globo gyms all over the world on a DAILY basis?
What do you think is the most important thing Donny Shankle has taught you?
Wow. How do I limit
this to just one thing? Donny has shared
so much with me during my time here and literally every bit of it has been pure
GOLD. Even his secret to making the best
pot of gumbo ever…
The biggest thing I have learned from Donny is what true
dedication looks like. So many people
and athletes claim to be 100% dedicated to their goals. Well people, dedication has a completely new
meaning once you meet Donny Shankle.
Donny has one thing and ONE THING only on his mind: Rio 2016.
His focus is like nothing I have ever seen. He sees nothing as a sacrifice yet only what
must be done to put him in the best possible situation to make it to Rio and
represent our country at the Olympics.
Weightlifting is not a part of his life… it is his life. His entire
life.
I cannot even begin to explain the amount of respect I have
for someone who can be so dedicated to a goal.
Especially one that requires him to DAY IN and DAY OUT get back on the
platform and fight that bar. Throw the
weight overhead. Squat it on your
back. Pull it. Push it.
Heavier. Always heavier. Every… single… day.
I thought I knew what dedication meant… until I met
Donny.
Now I know for sure.
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