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  • We're on the first run here.

  • My kind of idea is thinking

  • for me it's been four to five months since I've been able to put in a serious running workout,

  • because I had plantar fasciitis,

  • and I've finally gotten that cleared up,

  • and so, quarter mile,

  • it's like let's see what you've got.

  • You've got three of them

  • with some breaks, but obviously with all the other stuff in between.

  • But if I could have stayed between that 75- and 80-second

  • quarter mile, I would have been pretty happy,

  • which I pretty much did that.

  • First lap was a little slow, a little conservative,

  • I think I came through in like 82,

  • but we'll see here.

  • I do think about some things when I'm running.

  • Most of it's where my foot's hitting,

  • and then my pull,

  • my pull up heel to hamstring,

  • and being light on the feet,

  • not being heavy on the ground,

  • tapping the ground as quick as I can and getting off the ground as quick as I can.

  • And obviously I'm not--this isn't a sprint.

  • I'm--this is a slow run.

  • But, you know, having finished the workout now and had some time to think about it,

  • I probably would have blown out the run a little bit more,

  • if you're really looking to get a good score, because then you can hammer out more double-unders.

  • You get an extra five, six seconds on the run,

  • you know, and you can string all those double-unders together.

  • And I messed up my double-unders on the first two rounds, I think,

  • about halfway through. Yeah, there was a mess-up.

  • Yeah, which, there's 5, 6, 7, 8 reps.

  • Depending on how good you are, you're probably not going to make that up

  • on everything if it's a comparable other Games athlete.

  • Interesting watching doing the double-unders with my right arm.

  • It sticks out further than my left.

  • Big difference between using dumbbells and a barbell.

  • Dumbbells, you have to have more control,

  • so you're worrying about different access, you know, a lateral movement of the dumbbell.

  • You have to stabilize it to prevent it from going

  • left to right, as well as forwards and backwards.

  • You know, a barbell, you can kind of just get it racked there

  • and you can relax a little bit easier.

  • Even when I take a pause with the dumbbells up here,

  • I'm in some state of tension everwhere

  • to try to keep those dumbbells where i want to keep them.

  • So although you're resting, you're still using a little bit of juice,

  • a little bit of energy to kind of keep the dumbbells where you want them.

  • This didn't hurt my lungs too bad,

  • this workout. It did, by the time you hit the end of the five minutes,

  • it's pretty bad,

  • but the failure point was never like,

  • "I'm so out of breath. I don't want to keep moving."

  • You know what I mean? It was

  • my grip and my arms were the biggest thing,

  • which again, makes me think again, maybe I should have blown out that run a little bit harder

  • to try to jack the heart rate up a little bit.

  • But um,

  • again, for my first time coming back running,

  • 75 seconds to 80 seconds is anywhere between

  • a five-minute and 5:20 mile-ish pace,

  • which is clipping along for me not having to run for so long.

  • The first set I went to 20 or 25,

  • I think, on the pull-ups,

  • and I just wanted to take a little bit of a break, like have some kind of

  • like five seconds, six seconds,

  • maybe 10 at the most,

  • and see if that was the best way,

  • and then on the next set I think I went almost to failure on the following round.

  • I wanted to make this where it's like,

  • you finish a round, your transition is

  • you walk straight to the next thing.

  • It's not--try not to make your transitions where

  • something was so bad that

  • now I'm walking to the dumbbells and I'm going to take 10 seconds--20 seconds and think about it.

  • Try to get to it, take a breath, pick them up.

  • Try to finish your double-unders, walk right to the dumbbells.

  • Finish the dumbbells, walk right to the pull-up bar,

  • and try to knock out a set.

  • You end up swinging, for sure.

  • There's no stopping point. I mean, obviously there's a stopping point as they go back for the dumbbell,

  • but uh,

  • it turned into, you know, a little bit of a "swole sesh" with these hang cleans.

  • My arms felt like they were going to pop after every round.

  • Five minutes was great to hit it hard again.

  • People are going to think that that five minutes is a lot,

  • and it's not.

  • It's not a lot of rest.

  • It's not a lot of rest in terms of

  • any conditioning when you look at any other sport:

  • swimming, track and field,

  • whatever it might be.

  • Five minutes really isn't that much if you're going to talk about

  • a max effort of five minutes of work.

  • If you're really trying to maximize your output in that five minutes,

  • it's only a one-to-one.

  • In a lot of max-effort events

  • where you're trying to train for that,

  • like, just full-throttle redline the entire time,

  • you're looking at, like, maybe like, a one-to-five,

  • or a one-to-three rest ratio.

  • If you're telling yourself, "Oh, this rest is too long,"

  • go harder. Run harder.

  • Try to hang onto the dumbbells for a little bit longer.

  • Try to do a couple more pull-ups on your first set.

  • When I'm doing double-unders I'm thinking about,

  • again, really light touch on the ground,

  • trying to make most of the rotation in my wrist,

  • not so much in the shoulder.

  • And every now and then I'll feel the rope scrape my feet somewhere.

  • I mean, there I missed.

  • But, when I jump, my feet kind of spread apart on the jump,

  • so I'll try to hug my feet together to keep them from touching the rope.

  • These 35-lb. dumbbells were deceiving.

  • It looks so easy when I'm watching myself do it,

  • but that doesn't really express how badly my shoulders and my triceps hurt.

  • I have a hard time getting my arms straight up, directly overhead as is.

  • So I have to put in, I feel like, a little bit more effort

  • to get them into that position.

  • It's a flexibility thing,

  • and I've been working on it, but

  • I could feel it today for sure.

  • A minute with just 35-lb. dumbbells doesn't sound like a lot,

  • but when you're just pounding out the reps,

  • it gets pretty sticky.

  • Yeah, so any rest that I did on this,

  • I really wanted to try to rest in that front rack,

  • and not put them down. I think I only ended up putting them down on the first set,

  • or on the last set rather.

  • And this set of pull-ups I think I do a few more than the last one.

  • I really tried to go and test the grip a little bit.

  • Dependent on the workout I guess,

  • chest-to-bar I find that I'll go to muscular failure before I get too winded,

  • but regular pull-ups will take my breath away big time.

  • The transition from the pull-up to the dumbbell squat cleans was all in your arms,

  • arms and shoulders, and just being able to hold onto them.

  • I mean, I was, you know, the squat is like it kind of hurts, and you know you're trying to keep your chest tall,

  • and keep a tight midline when you're going down there, just like you would with any other squat.

  • Yeah Dan, pick your head up.

  • Eyes on the horizon when you squat.

  • Keep that chest tall.

  • But really on a number of them,

  • you know, it looks like I'm setting them down,

  • but I typically know the next rep, the dumbbells might just peel out of my fingers.

  • I wouldn't like to rest more than 10 seconds.

  • Five breaths is usually about 10 seconds.

  • But,

  • you say it's--

  • you say it's 10 seconds,

  • you know, in your mind, but um,

  • really it might be 10 seconds before you decide to pick up the dumbbells,

  • and then by the time you actually go and pick the dumbbells up,

  • you're at 15 seconds,

  • so you have to think about that as well.

  • I'm feeling fatigued on the run now.

  • Feeling my midline kind of breaking a little bit,

  • and what I mean by that is when you get tired when you run,

  • typically, you're going to start to overarch

  • on your back. Your belly's going to start to stick out a little bit,

  • and your hips are going to drop backwards,

  • and that's going to negatively affect you being able to lift at the knee

  • and get the proper stride length that you typically do.

  • So to be cognizant of that, you're almost

  • kind of squeezing your butt a little bit and keeping your hips tucked

  • underneath you rather than breaking at that midline.

  • And I can start to feel that

  • on this round, like the run started to hurt a little bit,

  • a little bit more, I guess.

  • It was always a little bit hard on the other two rounds,

  • but this one, I could really start to feel it here.

  • And again, I think if you really want to maximize this workout

  • and really get everything you want out of it,

  • run a little harder than you think you should.

  • I think I should have ran these 75 or under

  • now that I'm thinking about it.

  • But again, I'm being careful with my foot,

  • being careful with what I'm doing

  • to make sure that I'm not injured for the Open,

  • so this was a great test for it,

  • and I feel pretty confident on my foot right now.

  • But yeah, I couldn't move my arms. My arms were in molasses on this one,

  • just all the blood in your arms,

  • and the--I don't know, whatever you want to call it--lactate,

  • ions--who knows?--whatever,

  • whichever you want to choose,

  • but again--kryptonite, yeah--but again,

  • run straight to it, grab that rope

  • and try to just go.

  • Not a whole lot of break for your shoulders in this whole thing.

  • Man, I'm definitely going to try and fix that. My right arm is definitely higher than my left.

  • I think a lot of people do that with double-unders.

  • And despite previous tips I've given on double-unders,

  • I was definitely trying to do a little bit of a pike, or a knee tuck,

  • I guess, on the double-unders on this last round

  • to make sure that my feet cleared the rope.

  • Just trying to pull my feet up that extra hair,

  • because I was having trouble jumping on that last quarter mile.

  • Put the rope down, get your hands on those dumbbells,

  • put them up to the shoulders, and go.

  • I was surprised on the shoulder-to-overhead how bad my grip hurt,

  • even just holding onto the dumbbell.

  • I look like I'm laughing there.

  • I'm not.

  • Thirty-fives were definitely appropriate,

  • even though, I guess though,

  • the fourth--the fourth workout I've done today.

  • The other two were fairly shoulder-intensive.

  • The 35s, I still feel like, would be a good test for somebody to just blast through

  • every round and see if you just don't have to put them down

  • or don't have to stop.

  • Oh good, see, I'm really glad to see that it's just kind of turn around and onto the next movement.

  • Just go. Don't really think about it.

  • Crank out what you can. Short breaks.

  • You only have a minute.

  • Let fatigue be the guide.

  • Go ahead and go to failure.

  • You know what I mean?

  • Go ahead and go there, and then

  • count to five and jump back on the bar

  • and see what you can get. Test yourself.

  • You can always do better. You can always change your strategy

  • the next time you go back and redo a workout,

  • and it's important to redo workouts,

  • because that's how you know if you're getting fitter or not.

  • And taking a chance in training usually means

  • that you're going to, um--

  • you'll probably get more out of the workout, period,

  • just because you don't have the adrenaline from competing,

  • and you will take the chance in competition.

  • Oh, there's a big wad of drool.

  • Oh, that was bad.

  • I was trying to keep it in.

  • I was trying to keep it in.

  • Guess that means I was working hard.

  • It would be annoying to hear that they'd say that you're 30 seconds in.

  • It's like, "Gosh, why can't I just keep holding onto these things?

  • There's just another 30 seconds,

  • another 10 seconds."

  • Very deceptive on the grip.

  • I knew the arms were going to be hurting though.

  • Pretty bad.

  • Oh, my arms.

  • I went to near-failure on everything I could do.

  • I tried to do all of the shoulder-to-overhead unbroken.

  • I tried to only drop the dumbbells once

  • on any of the squat cleans,

  • and most of the time when I was going to drop them they--

  • I just felt my hands just peeling open,

  • and uh,

  • if I would change anything I would definitely sell out a little more on the run.

  • Again, because I've been kind of hurt I took it a little bit slow,

  • that 75- to 80-second pace.

  • If you're anywhere between a 5:20 and 5:40 miler,

  • I would look at going sub-75 for sure

  • for all three of these.

  • Especially if you want to get a better score, you can crank out more double-unders.

  • Heart rate was jacked during the workout but not--

  • not that I've experienced--not the worst that I've experienced.

  • It definitely comes down to,

  • you know, muscular fatigue, how long you can hang onto the dumbbells,

  • how long you can stay on the pull-up bar,

  • what's your grip going to allow you to do,

  • and how many chances do you want to take.

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