Friday, Saturday, Monday

Friday

100 turns of the rope for speed.

One game hustle, one game two on two, one game three on three.

Got in the car and drove to another court and did 10 suicides (Sprint to free throw, return to baseline, sprint to half court, return, sprint to far free-throw, return, sprint to far baseline, finish) and worked on dunks. Legs were dead but got up over a double rim with force.

Suicides:

1. Forward

2. Forward/backward

3. Forward

4. Defense shuffle

5. Karaoke (foot behind, then in front)

6. Forward

7. Forward/backward

8. Defense shuffle

9. Forward

10. Forward

The last two were done double style, hitting each line two times.

Rest for ten long deep breaths between each repetition.

Your legs will be heavy, your lungs will burn but you will never be beat to a loose ball due to lack of hustle. Stretch quads, hamstrings, hips, calves.

I find more and more that most people will get their mind in shape faster than their bodies. It is easier to make the decision that you are going to work more than it is to lay out a plan, do the work day in and day out, stick to it and indulge in the results of a long period of serious and intense exertion. One day of hard work will not do it. Nor will one week or one month. What is a true fitness goal? Is it to look better? While that is a start, I feel one of the best goals to have is to strive to be the best, feel great and to be able to do things with your mind and body that you never thought reachable until you did your first pull up, muscle up, back flip, rope climb, 10 mile run, 100 burpees or all of them in a row. But why, why are you doing this? There always has to be an answer to that question, a reason to go back to that place, push through lactic burn and meet your goals no matter the challenge, physical or mental. Physical appearance will not be the answer you need, it will eventually betray you, whether before you reach ‘ripped’ or after, it will fail you and your goals. Physical appearance should be a side effect of fitness, not the main goal.

Fitness is much more than ‘getting ripped’. It is the ability to swing your grand kids around, to pick up all of the groceries in one trip, walk around the city all day, or play the sport that you love all day the same way you played as a child…free of pain, worry or fear of injury.

Take a look at professional athletes…how many of them are ‘ripped’ according to modern standards? Basketball players? Not usually, yet the best of them run the court for forty minutes and maintain the ability to shoot, jump and sprint. Marathon runners? Certainly not. With huge amounts of slow twitch muscles these athletes are thin and gangly, yet world class marathoners can run for 26.2 miles at a sub five minute per mile pace. Mixed martial artists? Certainly some of them are in tip top shape visually, yet the athlete many consider to be the best in the world (heavyweight Victor Emalianinko) carries a gut and is not the usual picture of fitness, yet has the ability to fight continuously for several five minute rounds. Tennis players? While many of them have stepped up their physical regiments to include weight lifting and other resistance movements, they are not bulging with muscle, and because of that can play matches that last for hours. Golfers? Well, the best has embraced a weight program and is reaping the benefits, but the elite carry many shapes and sizes. What does this tell you? It tells me that while training for hypertrophy may allow you to look in the mirror and flex and enjoy the narcissism, the real life benefits of a well balanced fitness plan do not need to contain lifting for shaping or hypertrophy unless your goal is only physical appearance, in which case I can almost universally guarantee burn out and drop out.

Saturday

20 pushups, 20 squats, 20 sit up warm up

5 single arm dumbbell swings, 5 single arm dumbbell clean and press, 10 burpees

Three and a half minute sets (2:20 working, 1:10 off)

Set one=40lb.

Set two=55lb.

Set 3, 4, 5=60 lb.

17:30 total.

Last two sets of burpees should really burn.

And then…

Jump Squats (same as a regular squat, upon reaching bottom of movement explode upward jumping as high as possible)

85 lb. x10

105 lb. x10

125 lb. x10

Protein, stretch, water.

Sunday-REST

Monday

circuit three rounds:

Dumbbell Lat rows x10 each side 40lb/60lb/70lb

Bodyweight rows on rings x20, x19, x15

Beer Barrel Rows x15, x15, x15

Slow drop pull ups on rings (3 seconds up, 5 seconds down) x5, x5, x5

Lateral shoulder raise x10 full range, x10 short range 15 lb. two sets
Front deltoid raise x10 full range, x10 short range 15 lb . two sets
Rear deltoid flies x10 25 lb two sets
Shrugs x10 70 lb two sets

bicep curls with barbell
wide grip x7
natural grip x7
close grip x7
twice with 75 lb.

GARAGE STRONGMAN 6

Lets try this for an overall beat down.

Squat 185 lbs x 20 reps
Bench 185×20
Dead lift (Russian-bent knees) 185×20
One arm DB row-Left arm 70×20
-Right arm 70×20
Walking lunge (70lb DB) 140×20
Overhead standing Bar press 115×20

500 and The Burpee

We did the bodyweight 500 today and the competition drove it to a new PR.
Peter flew in at 12:28, I came in just behind at 12:32.
I’m pretty confident that now that we’ve done it that way it can be pushed below 10 minutes.
The goal of this routine is to be able to move through all of the movements with no stopping, no breaking up sets.
Right now the trouble is with pull ups and rows. I complete the first set but get stuck at 10 pulls and 15 rows the second time around.
I’m almost tempted to make this a daily ritual…

Anyway…
BEHOLD! THE POWER OF THE BURPEE!!!

TAKE THE 100 BURPEE CHALLENGE AND WIN AT LIFE.

Your form will invariably suffer,I’ve found the stretch of 30-70 to really not be fun.
The first 30 is all optimistic “I’m going to get a PR” territory…
Then the “Oh, this…I forgot about this…” in the 30-50 session,
Followed by “Why am I doing this again?” in the 50-70 range.
70-100 is all lactic build up, mental toughness and seeing the finish line on the horizon.

Try it, you’ll like it.

Tuesday with Otto

Bodyweight 500

20 jump squats
20 spider man push ups
20 lunge jumps
15 pull ups
25 prisoner squats
20 push ups
20 bodyweight rows
20 lunge step backs
20 hip bridges
20 toe touches
50 jumping jacks

repeat x2 for a total of 500 reps
15:33

Circuit:
1.Bench Press 135 lb x20, 15, x15
2. 25 lb. plate squeeze raise to shoulder height, drop slow x10, x10, x10
3. 10 lb. plate Russian twists x50, x70, 25 lb. ball twists x50
4. Beer Barrel Row x15, x15, x15
5. Jump pull up on rings, 5, second hold, 5 second drop x5, x5, x5

Cardio One x4
1. Jumping Jacks
2. Burpees (x8, x8, x8, x10)
3. Split Runs
4. Mountain Climbers
5. High Knee Sprint

30 seconds each, no rest for a 2:30 round
4 rounds=10 minutes

Monday

Monday
20 push ups, 20 squats, 20 full range sit ups

185 lb. bench press
x2, x2, x2, x2, x2 x2, x2, x3, x3 with 15 seconds between each set total of 20
followed immediately by…
feet elevated 24″ push ups to failure x25
followed immediately by…
regular push ups to failure x10
followed immediately by…
hands elevated 24″ push ups to failure x10

one minute rest

feet elevated 24″ push ups to failure x20
followed immediately by…
regular push ups to failure x9
followed immediately by…
hands elevated 24″ push ups to failure x9

40 lb. kettle bell swing x8 each arm 2 sets
40 lb. kettle bell clean and press x8 each arm
40 lb. kettle bell assisted curl x6 each arm