05-13-2008, 09:01
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#1
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Asset
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Boston MA
Posts: 15
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crossfit/mass coexist?
Question for you experianced crossfit people. I understand that the mentality of crossfit is to strengthen the whole body, cardio and anero. I have followed the program for about a month now but I seem to be losing some muscle mass. This is disturbing to me because work hard to keep myself larger than my ectomorph frame naturaly allows. My question then becomes, has anyone had sucess with a crossfit AND weight training program (along the lines of high weight/ low rep for mass) and still avoided the overtraining. If so please direct me to this info.
P.S. I eat at least 3000cal/day (w/ a macro breakdown of 40%pro 30%carb 30%fat) being 5'6 160 10%bf (so nutritionaly I think i'm ok)
Last edited by reservetech; 05-13-2008 at 10:16.
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reservetech is offline
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05-13-2008, 12:26
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#2
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Colorado Springs
Posts: 4,530
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I can't help you on the Crossfit thing, but I think the real question is why do you want to maintain lots of mass, assuming your strength/power remains somewhat stable?
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Razor is offline
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05-13-2008, 13:10
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#3
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Asset
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Boston MA
Posts: 15
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balance
My strength has been consistant, that much is true. Its the power that I'm losing (concurently with size). I want to know if anyone has been able to find an adequate ballance for the two. I have been training hard in both areas and I dont want to be shortchanging myself or overtraining.
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reservetech is offline
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05-13-2008, 13:24
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#4
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Wherever my ruck finds itself
Posts: 2,972
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I found that I leaned out greatly when I did nothing but crossfit. While some guys are fine being lean I find I carry a ruck much easier when I have more muscle mass. I am one of those guys who can be lean and fast or muscular and a pack-mule which I will take any day of the week over being a speed demon. I am 5'6" 180 and am working to get back to the 190-200lb range.
I mix cross fit into my other routines but never do CF alone anymore.
OMMV
Crip
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Surgicalcric is offline
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05-13-2008, 13:57
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#5
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Asset
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Boston MA
Posts: 15
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training
Crip, would you say that keeping a high mass would disable others or myself with this dilemma in the pipeline? I know that all shapes and sizes (besides fat bodies) make it through, so barring mental ability, what is the ideal SF body. We know what body makes a good linebacker, wrestler, sprinter and marathon runner, what is the formula for the SF soldier.
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reservetech is offline
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05-13-2008, 14:38
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#6
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SF Candidate
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: NYC
Posts: 66
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Are you training at a crossfit gym or on your own? I have been doing strictly crossfit for about 3 weeks now and havent lost any mass. I may have lost power, but I wouldnt know because I havent been under a bench during these three weeks. I am lean to begin with 6'0'' 165 pds. Great question regarding ideal body type, hope a QP gets a chance to answer.
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"The trick is to make yourself an instrument of your own policy. Whether you like it or not, that's the highest effectivness man has achieved" Norman Mailer
"Now go do PT" Surgicalcric
"You can cry, just don't quit" Andy Petranek
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JacobGL is offline
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05-13-2008, 21:05
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#7
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Asset
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Boston MA
Posts: 15
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answer
To answer your question GL, I am doing the cross fit and weight training on my own accord (albiet the weight training is in a fitness club, if thats what your asking). Razor, by power I think hes not refering to the physics definition, moreso the competitive powerlifting definition. Purely, how much weight you can sling for a given low # of reps.
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reservetech is offline
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05-13-2008, 22:04
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#8
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Colorado Springs
Posts: 4,530
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Actually, I'm not delving too deeply into physics, except for the basic understanding of power. I'm no powerlifter, but the fitness circles I frequent refer to power in terms of explosive movements, like an NFL lineman out of his stance, or a sprinter out of the blocks, or a boxer throwing a cross; in other words, functional, applicable power (often using a sports-related context). Think olympic lifts--cleans, snatches, jerks...moving a whole lot of weight explosively rather than slow, controlled reps. This translates into the ability to move quickly from a full stop, drive an obstacle out of your path while on the move, or deliver a decisive blow to a bad guy either dynamically or from a "sucker punch". Raw strength is good, but maximizing its delivery is a true force multiplier.
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Razor is offline
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05-13-2008, 23:05
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#9
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Asset
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Portland
Posts: 24
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Razor is correct. The sport of powerlifting is poorly named and really has little to do with power generation; it's more the ability to exert force, regardless of time, that is judged.
Compare to Olympic weightlifting, where power generation is the primary concern. In fact, power generation, not maximal strength generation, is probably the most important strength-related attribute for many competitive athletes.
The distinction between "maximal strength" and "power" is important to understand for training programming. Strength and power are intertwined with one another, but they are nonetheless unique and distinct strength qualities that need separate attention and training methods.
Last edited by S3Project; 05-13-2008 at 23:08.
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S3Project is offline
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05-13-2008, 23:30
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#10
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: New England
Posts: 178
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Here's my personal opinion on the ideal body type for SFAS and Q course and crossfit vs. weight training.
First off, I've always been a smaller guy. I graduated high school weighing about 125 lbs at 5'9". All through college I was no heavier than 130 lbs. I even went through ranger school weighing less than 130 lbs, 128 lbs to be exact. However, I never had issues with rucking and keeping up with the small or big guys during training and deployments. This continued on with SFAS and the Q course. Even though I tried to gain weight by lifting more and running less, I never got past 150 lbs because of the Q course schedule. Needless to say, I completed the course without much physical disadvantage even with the lack of "mass." So after this long winded explanation, my opinion is that there is no ideal size for SF, or any MOS for that matter.
As for crossfit and weight training, I've been mixing both for few months with more emphasis on weight training. So far, I've seen gain in strength, power, and mass but that's pretty easy in my case since I basically started out with none of those. I've also maintained or increased my overall fitness level. I attribute that to crossfit. By putting emphasis on what I think is more important to me, I've seen improvements without overtraining. Like anything else, I don't think you can have you cake and eat it too. So decide which one is more important to you and do a little more of that than trying to achieve balance, which can lead to overtraining and less improvement.
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sleepyhead4 is offline
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05-14-2008, 07:37
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#11
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SF Candidate
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: NYC
Posts: 66
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Quote:
Originally Posted by reservetech
To answer your question GL, I am doing the cross fit and weight training on my own accord (albiet the weight training is in a fitness club, if thats what your asking). Razor, by power I think hes not refering to the physics definition, moreso the competitive powerlifting definition. Purely, how much weight you can sling for a given low # of reps.
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I asked because CF gyms are good places to train. The environment is very competitive and this really gets the best out of me. Also, I wasn’t familiar with many of the workouts prior to starting i.e. muscle ups, burpees…
This is a gym in your city http://www.crossfitboston.com/. They tend to give military discounts at these gyms.
There is a CF gym at FT. Bragg as well.
- Jacob
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"The trick is to make yourself an instrument of your own policy. Whether you like it or not, that's the highest effectivness man has achieved" Norman Mailer
"Now go do PT" Surgicalcric
"You can cry, just don't quit" Andy Petranek
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JacobGL is offline
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05-14-2008, 08:31
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#12
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Colorado
Posts: 95
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Here is my .02 Lifting and being able to bench 300lbs does not equate to power. Ask my echo as he was lying on the ground bleeding out and our weight lifting bravo could not lift him into the vehicle. By all means to each his own and if you want mass that is cool. You have to realize that there are 11 brothers counting on you to be able to lift carry drag etc them to safety. I feel that as a SF team guy you should concentrate your PT program to incorporate every task you might have to perform. Shooting, climbing, driving patrolling carrying and the likes. Crossfit seems to be the rage right now and I do enjoy the intense short workouts. However I still ruck with the dogs 3 times a week (yes my dogs carry a ruck) and run a couple of times a week along with swimming. I am more impressed with a dude that has the endurance and power to get a teammate out of the fatal funnel when required. Relying on adrenaline is BS again ask my echo.
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