The Planche at Beast Skils

Congrats to Jim at Beast Skills for nailing the planche! Wow, that's some strong work, and I know he's been at it for awhile... the rewards of hard work and perseverance. No permalink yet, so just check out the home page.

Played Well, Wasn't Enough

Sad to report that our (Koob's) season ended at Regionals this year. On Saturday we lost a close one to GLUM (12-10 in a capped game) and a less-close one to Above & Beyond (15-10). We won our other games, so that put us third after reseeding. We beat Bos in the first round of the backdoor bracket 15-9 or so. Meanwhile GLUM upset A&B in the championship game (not sure of the score, but by all accounts they were on fire winning maybe 15-10 after jumping out to a big lead). So we played A&B in the game to go, and oh oh oh I thought we had 'em. We took half 8-7, but lost 15-12. I would normally include details and color commentary, but I just can't bring myself to. Very proud of my team, everybody played their guts out. Hats off to GLUM and A&B. As much as it sucks to lose (and boy, does it suck), these hard-fought, high-stakes, tough-but-sporting games are why we play.

Nice to come home to a hero's welcome even with our premature exit from the series. Vicky made a great dinner and Amelia (8) and Ella (4) were all over me with sympathy, and were especially good last night. Funny exchange with Ella:

Ella: I'm sorry you lost your frisbee Daddy.
Jim: Thank you, baby.
Ella: But next year, TRY.
Jim & Vicky: [laugh]
Ella: (Wonders for a moment why we're laughing, then...) Try HARDER, I mean.

I will.

High-Intensity Training Research Summary

I was reading Ross Enamait's post on the recent report that walking won't get you fit, and followed his link to Sports Conditioning by Mark J. Smith, Ph.D., a four-page PDF (seven if you count the citations) nicely summarizing the current thinking on high-intensity training. How's this grab you:

The acknowledgment that the activity did not need to be continuous was a major shift from the initial recommendations of the ACSM. It was even stated, "accumulation of physical activity in intermittent, short bouts is considered an appropriate approach to achieving the activity goal". This concept was validated in another study that demonstrated that three 1-minute bouts of maximal intensity exercise, separated by 1-hour recoveries, constituted 74% of the oxygen uptake of 20 minutes of low- to moderate-intensity exercise.

In what other venue can 15% of the time buy you 74% of the benefit? And would a fourth minute get you to almost 100%?

I hate to steal Dr. Smith's thunder, and I strongly encourage you to read the whole thing, but he concludes:

...the research is extensive in its support for the notion that high-intensity intermittent training should be the predominant method employed by the field and court sport athlete. It has been established that this type of exercise can have an equal or even greater training effect on the cardiovascular system than continuous endurance training, while also increasing the anaerobic capacity. This form of training also produces a more favorable body composition, and better improves the ability of the athlete to tolerate lactate. Research also supports the fact that there are a number of additional benefits resulting from participation in high-intensity training that are not evident with long continuous exercise.

Leave the endurance training for the endurance athletes.

Vertical Leap, Fat, Trans Fat, Rollerbladers, Grasso Lunge

Somehow a bunch of links piled up on me:

  • The Beast Skills tutorials don't come around very often these days, but they are always worth the wait. The latest covers standing rollouts with the evil wheel.
  • Crossfit has a vertical leap thread going. Two Joe DeFranco pieces are referenced therein: Fabulous 15 (which I believe I've linked up before) and Dirty Tricks For Higher Jumps.
  • I don't have any medical chops for evaluating this critically, but every time Art De Vany posts something by Mark Sisson it makes a lot of sense. This time: Fat Cells as Disposal Sites for Toxins.
  • Speaking of fat, you (and I) really should completely eliminate trans fat from our diets:
    Furthermore, two independent methods of estimation indicate that the adverse effect of trans fat is stronger than that of saturated fat. By our most conservative estimate, replacement of partially hydrogenated fat in the U.S. diet with natural unhydrogenated vegetable oils would prevent approximately 30,000 premature coronary deaths per year, and epidemiologic evidence suggests this number is closer to 100,0000 premature deaths annually. These reductions are higher than what could be achieved with realistic reductions in saturated fat intake.
  • Hopefully the offseason is still a month away, but I'm thinking I'd like to work the Grasso Lunge into my winter routine.
  • Finally, a bit of fun: "Unbelievably Long Rollerblade Grind" @ Google Video.

500 Meter Rowing Time

Inspired by this 500 Meter Rowing Time Crossfit thread, I had to give it a go. I was pretty pleased with my 1:37 time (barely keeping my lungs in my chest towards the end) until I started reading up on the C2 drag factor. Sounds like for this distance setting the damper at 10 is as close as we have to a standard. Mine was set on 3. Dang. Not sure how much harder 10's going to be, but I'll try it next week.

One of the nice things about this particular distance is the C2 display shows you the 500 split pace you are currently rowing. You get feedback on each stroke what your time is going to look like if you keep pulling the way you are. As fatigue set in I'm sure I would have slacked if the meter didn't make it painfully apparent I couldn't afford to slack if I wanted to beat 1:40.

Box Variant: Fast Break Rule

The days are getting shorter and Thursday pickup is dwindling. As our Goaltimate kit was late in arriving last night, we played a few rounds of box, which reminds me of a rule variation y'all might like. Everybody has their own rules for how the disc is cleared after a turnover, either past a certain point/perimeter, or after X number of throws. The variation is "the fast break rule" and it works like this: you are allowed to score on the very first throw of your possession after a turnover. If that first throw is not a score (or if you opt to not even try) you then must clear as usual before you are allowed to score. One additional wrinkle: if the turnover occurs in the box, the fast break rule allows the score to be thrown from inside the box (so a player can pick up the disc lying in the box and immediately chip it to a receiver who's also in the box). No Callahan goals, but again, if a defender catches the disc in the box they can immediately throw it to a teammate also in the box for the fast break score.

Of course, if your house rules don't require a clear at all ("scrum rules", I like to call such games), this variation is meaningless.

Osman Extreme Climbing, MOS Circuit, Vibration Platforms

Three things to start off your Monday:

  • Insane. Dan Osman Extreme Climbing. The man goes 400+ feet straight up in under 4.5 minutes. Ridiculously fit and strong, not to mention crazy.« via kottke »
  • Although I'm not a kettlebell guy I really like the Clean & Press ladder circuit presented in The Minute of Strength, Issue #16. And I really like the look of the "Figure 8 to a Hold" movement, and the Super Plank (both in the latter half of the video).
  • Finally, here's the skinny on vibration platforms. Still seems like an expensive gimmick of dubious benefit to me. There is no substitute for hard work.

Update: Oh. Damn. Turns out Dan Osman died doing something different (but similarly risky) in 1999.

How I Fixed My Achilles Tendinitis

First off, I was never actually diagnosed with achilles tendinitis. They hurt like hell though, and now, after a lot of work, they're better. I think my self-diagnosis was correct, but what do I know? Anyway, here's what happened and what I did:

I played Easterns in early June with no problems, but afterwards had some achilles pain in one ankle. Pickup over the subsequent weeks made it quite a bit worse, and it ended up in both ankles. Some days were worse than others. On a good day I was aware of my achilles but could play fine, and on a bad day my first step was very painful and I probably could only manage 75% of my top speed, if that. I stayed in denial for two to four weeks (can't remember), then decided I had to take steps. So I did what I always do, which is read a lot about the problem. If you don't feel like doing all the same reading, here's what I took away from it:

In most cases it's not an inflammation problem. Instead, the tendon fibers are being damaged, and the tendon is becoming less tendon-like. There were scary MRIs somewhere of healthy tendon vs. deteriorating, and they certainly helped spur me to action. Anyway, there was a study where one group did your typical anti-inflammatory treatments (ice, ibuprofen, cortizone) while another group did strengthening exercises. At the end of the 12 weeks, the whole (I think) anti-inflammatory group was still miserable, while the whole (I think) strengthening group was much improved or cured. Sounds great, right? Unfortunately, the strengthening protocol is a bit of a pain in the ass. You do the following twice per day (!), seven days a week (!) for twelve (!!) weeks:

  • 3 sets of 15 straight-leg, weighted, eccentric calf drops per leg (45/leg, 90 total).
  • 3 sets of 15 bent-leg, weighted, eccentric calf drops per leg (45/leg, 90 total).
  • (so that's 180 in the morning, then another 180 in the evening.)

An eccentric calf drop works like this: Stand with the balls of your feet on the edge of a step, and your heels hanging off the edge. With both feet, raise yourself up on your toes. Now stand on one foot and lower your heel as far as it will go. Put your other foot back down to raise yourself up again. The point is you are trying to NOT work the raise (concentric contraction of the calf), and are trying to super-work the lower (eccentric contraction).

The study said you should work your way up to decent extra weight. I started off with bodyweight just to try it, jumped up to 20 pounds almost immediately, and finished the 12 weeks at 60 pounds (attached to a dip belt). The study also said the participants generally pushed through pain, but what does that mean, really? Personally, I found my achilles might start off sore in a given session, but would usually improve over the course of the session. The study didn't say anything about whether you should lay off other activity, so I chose not too. Kept playing pickup twice a week (at times quite painful), doing other workouts, etc. Not sure if this was the right thing to do or not.

The other thing I did was borrow a night splint (I've never ordered from them before, so can't vouch for them) and wear it overnight on whichever achilles felt worse (wish I had two!). I feel like this helped, but it's hard to be sure. There is no doubt the splinted achilles was less stiff and sore first thing in the morning. Anyway, if I were buying new I'd probably try a couple of the sock-like variety (another vendor I've never tried) as the bulky ones are, well, bulky, and more expensive.

Finally, the last thing I did was work the calf stretch I described in my My Key Stretches as often as possible. I can now get my hips to the wall, which is a pretty big improvement from where I started 12 weeks ago.

Anyway, the bottom line is that in the first four weeks I wasn't sure if it was helping. I suspected it might be, but still had painful days. In the second four weeks I was sure it was helping, but I wasn't all better yet. By the third four weeks I was basically pain-free. At this point I'm all done with the program and the achilles don't affect my play at all. I'm doing maintenance sets every other day or so, and we'll see how that goes. I still get stiffness in the achilles from time to time, but so far no more pain. We'll see if maintenance workouts keep the problem in check.

Which Way is Your Health Care Going?

Wow, this is a shockingly bad logo:

As a friend noted, do I really want the new direction for my health care to be backwards? And doesn't it look more like CJIIP rather than CDHP?

On the other hand, maybe the backwards bit is appropriate.

WOD: Tabata Sprints, Medicine Ball Throws

Just a quick workout of the day for you: do a set of Tabata sprints, followed by Tabata "backwards overhead medicine ball throws" (hold the ball with both hands, squat a bit while bending over then hurl the ball backwards over your head as far as you can). I used an 8 lb. ball and a 10 lb. ball, so I'd throw one then the other then sprint to them and do it again as fast and as forcefully as I could. My daughter thought this was a particularly fun one to watch.

Gladwell on NCAA, Supertraining TOC, One-Arm Work

Great Disc for Youngsters

Until yesterday, I had no luck playing catch with my daughter, either with balls or discs. She's afraid of getting hit with anything hard, and doesn't judge trajectories very well (probably because we haven't played catch enough because of the first problem!). Smaller discs are still too hard for her to use without fear, and the really light cheap-o promotional discs are just too erratic. Same with must weighted fabric discs (and you can't throw a flick).

But I finally think I found the ideal disc for us, as we had a very satisfying round yesterday! It's called the Fun Gripper Flyer, and it comes in 6" and 9" models. I got the 9", which is working out well. It's perfect for my eight-year-old, and I think it would work for my four-year-old too, if she didn't insist on throwing in her own unique style (picture a forehand arm motion, but with a backhand grip). Anyway, it's of the "weighted fabric" variety, but the rim is pretty thick, feels like it had a bunch of little beads in it, and is covered with a rubbery weave. The body is a padded nylon, I think. It holds it's shape pretty well, and you can even throw a serviceable flick with it! It's certainly not a distance disc, but it works great in the 15-25 yard range (we aren't throwing further than that yet). Anyway, I'm going to pick up another and introduce my daughter and her friends to Schtick.

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